Its been on a long slow decline.
Disney was about big ideas like Monorails and dark rides.
In the last 40 years we've gone from completing a lot of Walt's unfinished plans and ideas, to slowly moving to where we find our self today... with more and more rides as roller coasters just like any other theme park. I like Tower of Terror, Rock-N-Roll, and Mt Everest, and the new Toy Story ride is a lot of fun also, but I'm not seeing bold new ideas. I'd argue that replacing 20,000 Leagues with Soarin is another example of how rides have become more about loading guest and logistics.
Soarin, Star Tours, and Spaceship Earth's (new updated ending) continue to use more TV screens and less animatronics.... as another trend towards less originality and more multimedia.
The loss of Epcot's premier E-ticket ride - Journey into Imagination (1983-1998)
to replace it with a cheaper version to save on the electric bill and maintenance cost... is just a perfect example of the loss of the big picture... and the transition to management by CPA and MBA. This is why plans for new monorails, are now replaced by simply adding more city buses.
Maybe Walt Disney was in the right place at the right time but he was developing ideas that were 20 years ahead of his time. Now I watch Imagineering take good ideas that are on par with Universal Studios instead of ground breaking or futuristic.
40 years ago the Monorail was a perfect example of what Walt was all about. The fact that we haven't been able to add another mile of track since... well that's just sad.
While I agree with some elements of your arguments .. I have to disagree strongly with others.
I agree the time from 84 to 99 was not a good 15 years in general for the parks and we're still living with the repercussions of a lot of bad decisions made during that time.. (Journey into Imagination is an EXCELLENT example here..) For our DL friends, "LightMagic" is a STELLAR example of bad, bad, bad show.
I have been very disappointed that the AudioAnimatronic development hasn't moved along as I would have expected. I think that the new AA's in the Hall of Presidents appear pretty good.. but why not start replacing the 60's models throughout the other attractions with more lifelike and technologically superior current models? I know they've done this some but the 'lifelike' part is missing for me on a lot of those..
However, I'm not sure that 20,000 Leages was ever replaced by Soarin in any park.. Last I heard in MK in FLA, 20,000 Leagues was replaced by what will be a new expanded Fantasyland.. A fair trade in my book.
At DL it was replaced by a similar NEMO themed attraction...
That makes sense when the 20,000 leagues movie is almost 50 years old and hasn't been 'huge' in popular culture since the 60's.. Queues remain an issue with that revamped attraction tho. Queues, logistics and crowd management DO matter. You can have the best rides in the world but if an average guest can't
reasonably have a chance to experience it -- what was the point?
Perhaps you were speaking generally/metaphorically?
Either way I think Soarin IS a good replacement for the slow loading 20,000 Leagues ride thru plastic fish.
As for adding miles of track in 40 years.. they added 7 to 10 during the 80's with the opening of Epcot. That was 27 or 28 years ago?
But I'm arguing semantics. The truth of the matter is .. Disney parks have grown way beyond what they were when they opened or even just 15 years ago..
As a result, load times, wait times and the logistics of moving people thru a tentative attraction or park or resort wide DO matter..
they matter a great deal. And Disney DOES have to be concerned with those things for every new attraction, park or addition to the property. To say that's what it's 'all' about is folly. It is part of the decision making process, as it should be, that's without question.
At the end of the day, Disney faces the same problem any number of 'heritage' companies face.. which is living up to the original credo when the business grows in leaps and bounds beyond the original dreamer's ideas.
Have they done that perfectly? Oh no way. But they've done it better than most and have retained a great number of the things that have always made "Disney" ... Disney for a large number of guests.
I just returned from 9 days at WDW and spent as much time outside the parks ferrying around the resort property as I did inside the parks on this trip.
My initial thought after a few days of my trip was "WOW.. the transportation is really pretty good when you think about the sheer volume of potential guests, potential destinations and the peak travel period volumes around park openings and closings etc."
I know that's a favorite for people to complain about on the DIS but I left the MK headed for the Dolphin and despite the second showing of MSEP just finishing at exiting crowds being absolutely ridiculous.. we still did not wait for a bus and we were back at our resort in under 25 minutes.
I wish my local 'city bus' transportation was that good.
Toy Story Mania is a groundbreaking attraction in my book. Worthy of the history of great ideas that have occasionally come out of the Imagineering group. And ultimately it can be freshened up or updated with new games at relatively low cost... and the underlying concepts could be ported to other themes/brands and even other WDW Parks world wide and still feel like a completely new or different attraction.
And personal tastes aside, attractions like Soarin, TSM and even Spaceranger Spin .. give guests a UNIQUE experience that can't be had easily elswhere ...
together as a family. Exactly as Walt intended when he was putting together his first park -
Disneyland.
Whether or not Disney chooses to spend a few billion dollars expanding the monorail will ultimately not make that great a difference in a lot of the guest experience. Yes, monorails are cooler than buses. But in the end, Guest "A" and their family will still end up waiting for one.. or waiting to board one.. and still be upset that the handicapped get to board first etc etc.
So...
I'd far rather they embarked on a one billion dollar program to properly train CM's and fix the many other things that HAVE slipped like :
- Dining menus throughout the property
- General cleanliness, maintenance and attention to detail
- GOOD, updated and detailed crowd management plans for when the parks do near capacity (whatever they're doing now ain't workin for many guests)
- Fixing Pleasure Island / DTD and investing properly propertywide
- Reducing the overall amount of outsourcing for EVERY thing
ALL things that have
far more impact on the guest experience than whether a monorail or a bus gets me to my destination at the start and end of each day.
My personal gripes are in details that have slipped a huge amount. Burnt out light bulbs that go on for days - maybe weeks? (on the marquee the theatre on MS-USA even!) .. signs on Pop Century walk ways with gramatical errors that have persisted since the resort opened 7 years ago ... despite at least one person (me) bringing it to their attention over 2 year ago.. and completely absent customer service ... when it used to be stellar because proper training was included in the CM hiring process.
Disney used to do better at all those things. And now a days it seems if they have a shot at making you go away by throwing you a couple of Fastpasses or One_Day tickets.. that's the answer to everything.
I don't take issues with the latest rides or attractions.. and I definitely don't take issue with not spending a billion to expand the monorail.. when they already have an investment in buses that work out to be better financially and probably in terms of the overall guest experience.
Why would I say that about the guest experience? I've yet to see a property wide monorail plan / concept / idea that (ignoring cost for a moment) avoids the 'no go' swamplands, avoids the nature conservation lands without chewing up miles of pristine potentially developable land AND avoids taking guests on a long convoluted journey way out of their way... and one that would meet the transporation needs now and into the future.
That's probably the biggest hurdle to expanding the monorail etc.. Far more so than the actual dollars and cents.
K