Merida DunBroch
Taste the wind and touch the sky!
- Joined
- Aug 7, 2012
- Messages
- 128
I would've loved to see Disney's Toontown Fair...and 20k Leagues Under the Sea!
Wow everybody. What a depressing thread.
I can say I agree with almost everything mentioned by OP and PPs. I know I haven't hit that mark yet where I wont want to visit, but i agree that much of what created the memories that keep me coming back is now gone or a very pale comparison to what it once was.
Geez. I'm gonna go cry now.
SpectroMagic. I miss it immensely.
We were just at WDW and I really did miss the original future world attractions. Imagination and Figment were my favorite things abotu Epcot as a kid--many memories.
I also miss Alfredos in Italy--my family always ate there whenever we went to WDW and they were so sad to learn its goneI remember when you made your dining reservations when you arrived at Epcot in the morning--you used kiosks and spoke with a CM via video. I thought that was the coolest thing as a kid.
I also miss when there was actual low crowd times at WDW. We used to go in May as a kid and it was noteably less crowded then. This past May visit was more crowded than I expected it to be.
And lastly, I miss not being so scheduled. I found we were often running from place to place to make sure we didn't miss our fast pass slots.
Deidre
Wasn't there a boat ride at AK in the beginning?
Would also miss Jungle Jammin Parade were to go back.
Mickey and Minnies houses!!!
I miss quite a few attractions, mainly in Epcot, and also a simpler time when characters could appear anywhere in the parks...
--Legacy FP
--Four For A Dollar
I also miss the open space that used to be in front of Spaceship Earth. You used to be able to see everything. I'm not fond of the stone monuments. I know people paid money for that. I try not to dwell.
I miss PUSH!
The ORIGINAL proposal for the Fantasyland Expansion
I totally miss Mr. Toad. I am also sad to see the build-up around the MK lakes, plus all the buildings and deforestation of Disney in general. It also makes me sad that the value resorts look so very "value", like a motel 6. Would it kill Disney to make beautiful value hotels? That could be lovely and fit into the environment? I worked at the Frank Lloyd Wright home and Studio, and he believed in creating buildings that flowed with the environment and looked good - and that cheap could be beautiful. Why doesn't Disney do that? No, we get ugly huge value hotels. Ick.
For example, can anyone imagine now that there was once a time when characters just roamed the park, and you might run into them any number of different places? Compare the 3+ hour line for Anna and Elsa, or even a 30-45 minute wait for one of the Fab Four, to just chancing upon the characters on the sidewalk, with only a handful of people lining up with cameras. Seems nuts, in retrospect. Today, they'd be mobbed.