Congrats on your award winning performance! LOL
I don't know about award winning. They haven't even announced the other nominees yet
Ohhh DO I know ALLLL about the torture of Tower of Terror... but in my defense - I had never been on it before. Yes, I knew what went on, but do you REALLY know what goes on if you've never been on it before?! Long story short - Madi and I went on it for the first time (for both of us) on our last trip.
Notice how I didn't go on right? I hate that ride, and I have a good reason (with a story) as to why......but that's going to come up later in the TR.
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NIKON SIDE NOTE: Any good, bad, otherwise advice to give a wannabe photographer that is seriously looking into the D5000 within the next month?
Where do I begin
Best piece of advice is to go to the store and hold a couple different ones. You'll know which one is meant for your hands.
It does do video pretty well but doesn't autofocus while taking video.
The 2 lenses that usually come with the "kit" are the 18-55mm (Equivalent to a 3x zoom on a point and shoot) and the 55-200 (10x zoom.) They are fine to start with but I switched over to a Sigma 18-250 lens. I got it used from www.bhphotovideo.com for under $400 and it looks, acts, and feels brand new. It's sharper and the one lens has a longer reach than the two did combined, so now I never have to switch lenses which I hated how often I did it.
Every manufacture has some kind of image stabilization. Nikon calls it Vibration Reduction (VR). Unless you have really steady hands, always get the VR.
One of the biggest advantages to having a DSLR is being able to shoot in a raw format (Nikon calls it NEF) instead of a compressed JPG. If you decide to shoot in raw, you need some piece of software that lets you open/edit/save-to-jpg like Adobe Lightroom, Photoshop, or Photoshop Elements. Lightroom is the standard, I use Photoshop Elements because it was familiar to me.
If you know how Aperture, Shutter Speed, and ISO work together, you're set. If not, check out the book Understanding Exposure by Bryan Peterson. Good read and makes it pretty easy to understand.
A wireless remote on ebay goes for $5 from China and works just fine.
Tripods are your friend.
My prediction is the next lens you by will be a Nikon 35mm 1.8 
After all this, I could have done another update
I am in some desperate need of coffee. Hope that helped a little. I'm no expert but I'll gladly pass on what I've learned or what I'm doing at any time. Don't hesitate to ask 
Oh yea, you need to use the camera if you want to learn the camera. When I first got it, I loved it the first week and thought I wasted a lot of $$$ by week 2 because I didn't like the pictures I was getting. After I learned how to really use the camera, I fell in love.