I just found everything about US crowded beyond description. I got there an hour before opening and the ticket line was huge. We hurried over to HP and not only were the lines long -- not only did they cram as many people into Olivanders so we could barely move -- the streets were crowded. You couldn't move very much. We waited 45 minutes for the Hippogriff ride, drank some butterbeer, bought our wands and were done. Everything about the place just felt small and tight. WDW feels like you've got room to breathe.
The other thing is -- and this is subjective, I know, but it feels a lot more transient, a lot more "right now" to me. The reason the Little Mermaid took 30 years to get built -- at least in my opinion -- is that Disney wanted to see if it had legs enough to be considered a classic years later. (Iknow they've been wrong a few times, too. Like the treehouse or the now departed 20,000 Leagues). And Disney doesn't put all it's eggs into a single basket -- there's no World of Toy Story over there. Harry Potter were pretty good movies and pretty good books, but will they resonate in 10 years like they do now? Maybe. I don't think it's a given. Same thing with things like Jurassic Park or the Simpsons or Transformers. They were hit movies or franchises, but those things all fade. I mean, would a Rambo ride catch any attention these days? Disney will spend the marketing money to keep their characters relevant -- I don't know whether US will do the same. About 10 yeas ago, the Six Flags franchise did a few things like that -- Looney Tunes themes everywhere. Those things don't register with kids anymore, but parents will always show their kids Snow White or Cinderella.
As for the princess-ification of WDW, I think that's true, but the reason is that it's something they can offer kids can't get anywhere else. I don't like it very much, but it makes sense. You can always find a thrill ride -- heck, add 3D to most video games now and you've practically got a thrill ride. But you can't hug Rapunzel anywhere else. That's what WDW offers -- something that feels like a lasting connection.
I'd love for WDW to shut down for a year and remake itself -- there are lots of things that could go away. But there's a permanence to WDW that Universal lacks.
Plus, like I said at the start. Very tight spaces and lots of people in them.
The other thing is -- and this is subjective, I know, but it feels a lot more transient, a lot more "right now" to me. The reason the Little Mermaid took 30 years to get built -- at least in my opinion -- is that Disney wanted to see if it had legs enough to be considered a classic years later. (Iknow they've been wrong a few times, too. Like the treehouse or the now departed 20,000 Leagues). And Disney doesn't put all it's eggs into a single basket -- there's no World of Toy Story over there. Harry Potter were pretty good movies and pretty good books, but will they resonate in 10 years like they do now? Maybe. I don't think it's a given. Same thing with things like Jurassic Park or the Simpsons or Transformers. They were hit movies or franchises, but those things all fade. I mean, would a Rambo ride catch any attention these days? Disney will spend the marketing money to keep their characters relevant -- I don't know whether US will do the same. About 10 yeas ago, the Six Flags franchise did a few things like that -- Looney Tunes themes everywhere. Those things don't register with kids anymore, but parents will always show their kids Snow White or Cinderella.
As for the princess-ification of WDW, I think that's true, but the reason is that it's something they can offer kids can't get anywhere else. I don't like it very much, but it makes sense. You can always find a thrill ride -- heck, add 3D to most video games now and you've practically got a thrill ride. But you can't hug Rapunzel anywhere else. That's what WDW offers -- something that feels like a lasting connection.
I'd love for WDW to shut down for a year and remake itself -- there are lots of things that could go away. But there's a permanence to WDW that Universal lacks.
Plus, like I said at the start. Very tight spaces and lots of people in them.


