A serious problem with all that research (although you'll never convince a bean counter of it) is that it's limited by what the subjects are familiar with. People will say they like things that sound comfortable and are wary of things that sound too out there. Hell, if Walt'd listened to market research they'd never have made Snow White (getting adults to sit still for 90 minutes to watch a cartoon full of creepy dwarves?!?) or even Disneyland (adults paying big money to see robot birds and pirates?!?). People didn't know they wanted Disneyland.DisBeamer wrote:They must have market research...
Many people will say "want heap big ride go real fast", but no one will say "ugh want intelligent exploration of complex topic". If you do it right, though, people will love it even though they didn't know they wanted to see it. Disney would rather just play it safe. Probably has a lot to do with money men refusing to release funds for something risky. That's when you need a leader with real vision, and it's been decades since Disney has had one of those.
If you've ever been to Mouse Surplus, you'll know that Disney does not treat its artifacts with respect. They rely on amateurs to document their attractions for them and really have no understanding of the value of that kind of thing.Magique wrote:Those pictures are amazing! They just store them like that? Is it smart to leave them out in the open, exposing them to the elements?
Mr. Toad should have been packed up and put on display at the Smithsonian, not stacked up in the corner of warehouse (or worse, a dumpster!).
By the way, fantastic detective work on those subs.
Here's a really nice desktop for fans of the lagoon. The sadness I feel when looking at this picture is just like the sadness I would feel if I returned to Epcot today:

As a side note, oh...my....god am I jealous of Japanese theme park fans:
