ThurlFan said:"hollywood that never was and always will be."
MGM isn't nearly as far away from this ideal as Epcot is from Walt's original concept, but I guess that's neither here nor there. If it's about Movies or Moviemaking I don't mind it's inclusion in the Studios too much. But I agree on Drew Carey and Playhouse Disney.
The swift careening ride on the Southern California freeways is close enough to this theme for me, as is the Muppets (but then I've always been a diehard Muppet fan), although the 3D show I'll admit could be better. The CGI 3D critter is definitely irritating, and a shame that it's the focus of the show.
The thing I'm stunned nobody has mentioned is the game show - Who Wants to be a Millionaire - Play It. This is a tribute to all that's crass and exploitative in television and frankly is an insult to Hollywood Past, Present, AND Never Was.
ThurlFan said:The thing I'm stunned nobody has mentioned is the game show - Who Wants to be a Millionaire - Play It. This is a tribute to all that's crass and exploitative in television and frankly is an insult to Hollywood Past, Present, AND Never Was.
ThurlFan said:The thing I'm stunned nobody has mentioned is the game show - Who Wants to be a Millionaire - Play It. This is a tribute to all that's crass and exploitative in television and frankly is an insult to Hollywood Past, Present, AND Never Was.
YoHo said:Ooo, You've just taken your first step out of the Dis (Disney 101)
To advanced Disney theory (Disney 405)
Epcot and DL/MK have exactly 1 theme/Story.
Another Voice said:The real theme of the Disney/MGM Studio was "beat Universal" - the only reason the park exists at all is because MCA announced it was opening just up the road and Michael Eisner was going to do anything to ruin that project. Disney/MGM was hastily thrown together and thats caused problems since the beginning.
But the theme of the park was supposed to be a celebration of all forms of entertainment. The park opened with a working radio station, the youre in a television show show and a replica of the Hollywood Bowl to present stage shows. Yes, it wasnt really a lot but again there wasnt a lot of deep thinking that went into the park. The place was never to focus just on movies, but since most of the areas were copied from Universal Studios Hollywood and that it was supposed to be an actual film making location, movies tended to dominate.
And whats really funny was that at the time the studio was built, Disney management thought so little of Disneys reputation that they went out of their way to avoid Disney. They leased the MGM name because they thought more people associated it with movies than Disney, they filled the park with all kinds of non-Disney movies and TV shows, and they hired a gaggle of Hollywood stars to provide street cred to the place.
That's a little corporate fib which was created after the fact when Universal started screaming that Disney was copying their business plans. EPCOT Center already had the Imgination pavilion with a various movie exhibits in it. Eisner thought theme parks were a horrible investment - he'd rather put the money into actually making movies. But he took Universal's move into Orlando as a personal insult by the CEO of Universal at the time (a feud that became really, really nasty). And like everything else that Eisner took personally, he was willing to throw company money around to keep his ego intact.I had heard that originally they were planning on making a Movies themed pavillon in Epcot that just grew into a whole theme park.
WOW! Great pic! I never knew about this hidden Mickey. IMHO, MGM need MAJOR improvements. It's not a park I visit anymore with my play 3 days FL pass. Wish I could find a new reason to visit.Greg K. said:I couldn't resist. If you haven't seen it, here it is: the world's largest hidden Mickey, at MGM! How cool is that???![]()
![]()
How do you know that its a little fib?