tvguy
Question anything the facts don't support.
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2003
- Messages
- 47,351
YupAs in available credit on a credit card?
YupAs in available credit on a credit card?
hope so otherwise I am very confused?As in available credit on a credit card?
If they have to charge it & aren't able to immediately pay it off, they can't afford it.Affordable isn't the issue for many middle class families planning a Disney trip, available credit is.
Not on the topic of Disney, but I guess I identify most with the 3rd guy. We are in no danger of ever being well off, but we get by. The thing I realized, especially since I have a son going off to college, is that the first 2 have no concerns about college because they have inveyes it was 'stole' it from another travel agent
yep we stayed at CBR 7 years ago. I remember I had a PIN that made the room $132 a night for preferred. You can hardly get a value for that price in June now.I started with the cheaperst ASSports ONe week, no park hopper, standard room, no food, 4 people. 2 adults and 1 kid 11 and 1 kid 12. August 2018 is 2992.00 upgrade to CBR standard 3432.00... sure you might get some discounts 20% etc.... add about 1500 at least for food plus transporation... at least 5 grand
7 years ago we had 2 parties with dining at CBR for a short week ( 6 nights) and I know 5 grand about covered both rooms. (4 adults, 2 kids). helped a bit that the kids were under 9.
Affordable isn't the issue for many middle class families planning a Disney trip, available credit is.
As in available credit on a credit card?
A lot of the points of the article aren't really even in Disney's control. They use children are expensive and paying more for every day things as a reason why Disney is unattainable and that seems unfair.
They also went the most expensive route for a vacation. Dinning plan, "extras", and base price of tickets. I'm not saying Disney is cheap or that everyone can afford to go I just think it is unfair to point to Disney as the problem.
We do this but not the cruise portion. Years off, we still use our dvc but we don't go to the parks. Don't miss them one bit either.I'm a dvc member and there is no way I'm going to pay them expensive park tickets. This is what I do. I get a annual pass and go usually three different weeks during the year., this year is 4. Than I take a year off or longer than do it again. During my off years I spend them on DCL.
This is a big thing people forget. Even when my parents were growing up they didn't pay for a cell phone, wifi package, satellite tv, amazon prime, hulu, netflix, etc. I just did a budget check on myself and realized how much I spend in a day on things I do not have to spend that much on including my morning coffee/breakfast, lunch during the work week, snacks, etc. I know I'm not an anomaly of the average middle class worker because if I was it wouldn't take 15 minutes at 8:30 to get my breakfast and coffee at Starbucks. So a lot of people are spending 5 or more a day on coffee. I have to think in 1960 my grandfather would have scoffed at the idea of paying someone else to brew his coffee when he was capable of doing it himself before he got in his truck to go to work every morning.
Granted, I don't know a lot about economics, but articles like this always make me laugh. I'm not sure what people expect Disney to do- despite price increase after price increase they are in ridiculously high demand. If they announced tomorrow ticket prices were being cut in half, how bad do you think that demand problem would get? If you think you have trouble getting a BoG ADR now.... consumers would not be happy and no one would have a pleasant experience.
Granted, I do think Disney will have to change their strategy as the millenials and generations younger than them come of parenting age here and are starting to have kids. My husband and I are very lucky that he got a fantastic job out of school because we pay the same in student loans every month as we do rent. We can afford Disney through living well below our means in other ways, but a lot of my friends weren't so lucky getting out of school and have spent the last two years working for $9 an hour with one or more college degrees. If that keeps up, they truly won't be able to afford Disney, but this remains to be seen.
Yep. Funded my last Disney trip on just my coffee money- tossed it into a jar as an effort to become less caffeinated. I have since fallen off the wagon, but it was eye opening to see just how much money I was spending on lattes.
Wifi isn't optional anymore, really. It was when I was a teen. Netflix is cheaper than cable and it's the only thing I subscribe to BUT my parents did without cable my entire childhood so I'm still spending $10 more that they would not have spent.
WiFi is not a necessity. You don't need it to live and survive. Sure having it in your home is great and convenient but you don't need it to live. There are a lot of public places with free wifi. While netflix costs 10 a month you still have to pay for fast enough wifi to make it work and the devices to use it on. I think one thing society as a whole has lost track of is what actually is a necessity/need and what is a want. With my wifi I brought up the fact I pay for faster wifi. That's a want not a need. If I had to redo my budget for needs or other wants that would be something I could easily save money on.
Except society has decided that many many many things rely on internet service. Heck in the school district that I grew up in (which is a neighboring school district to where I live now) elementary school kids have iPADs that they use rather than books and paper tests. At a certain grade they get to take those iPADs home...guess what they need those for--school work.WiFi is not a necessity. You don't need it to live and survive. Sure having it in your home is great and convenient but you don't need it to live. There are a lot of public places with free wifi. While netflix costs 10 a month you still have to pay for fast enough wifi to make it work and the devices to use it on. I think one thing society as a whole has lost track of is what actually is a necessity/need and what is a want. With my wifi I brought up the fact I pay for faster wifi. That's a want not a need. If I had to redo my budget for needs or other wants that would be something I could easily save money on.