This weeks podcast discussed the value of the 2012 dining plans... And wow....
These Disney experts really despise the plan. I'm not a huge fan, but I look like a ddp fanboy compared to them.
Their take was that the plans are not really a "value" and that people still book the plan because they want to mentally "check out."
They made some valid points, but for so-called Disney experts, but they missed many others:
-- they questioned the value of the plan, saying "who really thinks that Disney restaurants are worth doing a $30 TS meal every night?"-- truthfully, lots of people do like Disney restaurants, like sit down, and are willing to stomach Disney pricing.
-- They made no mention of the value of children's pricing. While I tend to agree with them about the lack of value of the adult plans, it's pretty clear the kids plans still can save money.
-- they made no distinction between using the plan for regular TS versus character meals. (character meals are ridiculously over priced, but if you want to do them, the plan starts to form "value."
-- they dismissed the DxDP with minimal discussion, saying 3 meals is too much food, and too much time eating. No discussion of using it for nightly signature dining.
Essentially -- they worked under the assumption that Disney restaurants are not worth the money, whether on the plan or not. Thus, who would want lots of expensive TS meals?
So they seemed to be discussing the case of an adult who visits Disney for a week, wants 2-4 TS meals, and just eat on the go, the rest of the time.
And I agree, that for such a person, all the dining plans would be a bad value.
But they made the fundamental error of ignoring that dining habits differ significantly. While I think the plans make sense for less and less people each year, there are still some cases where they make sense.
But it was amusing to listen to them trash the plans.
These Disney experts really despise the plan. I'm not a huge fan, but I look like a ddp fanboy compared to them.
Their take was that the plans are not really a "value" and that people still book the plan because they want to mentally "check out."
They made some valid points, but for so-called Disney experts, but they missed many others:
-- they questioned the value of the plan, saying "who really thinks that Disney restaurants are worth doing a $30 TS meal every night?"-- truthfully, lots of people do like Disney restaurants, like sit down, and are willing to stomach Disney pricing.
-- They made no mention of the value of children's pricing. While I tend to agree with them about the lack of value of the adult plans, it's pretty clear the kids plans still can save money.
-- they made no distinction between using the plan for regular TS versus character meals. (character meals are ridiculously over priced, but if you want to do them, the plan starts to form "value."
-- they dismissed the DxDP with minimal discussion, saying 3 meals is too much food, and too much time eating. No discussion of using it for nightly signature dining.
Essentially -- they worked under the assumption that Disney restaurants are not worth the money, whether on the plan or not. Thus, who would want lots of expensive TS meals?
So they seemed to be discussing the case of an adult who visits Disney for a week, wants 2-4 TS meals, and just eat on the go, the rest of the time.
And I agree, that for such a person, all the dining plans would be a bad value.
But they made the fundamental error of ignoring that dining habits differ significantly. While I think the plans make sense for less and less people each year, there are still some cases where they make sense.
But it was amusing to listen to them trash the plans.
