Disney World PF Gathering and Tips for Disney Mania!

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A gathering for Disney enthusiasts is planned at Disney World during Memorial Day week (May 28 to June 5), inviting others to join for fun activities like measuring the drop rate at the Tower of Terror and pin trading. For those unable to attend, a return trip is already scheduled for Labor Day week (Sept. 3 to Sept. 11), with tips to find deals on the Disney website. The discussion includes a promise to share a shortlist of must-do attractions at Walt Disney World, encouraging contributions from others. Key tips for visiting include utilizing Disney's transportation, making reservations for dining, and understanding ticket expiration policies. The thread fosters community among Disney fans while providing practical advice for an enjoyable visit.
  • #3,211
ZapperZ said:
Jackie who? :)

I must plead ignorance on her. Even after doing a Google search, it still doesn't ring a bell. But then again, I hardly ever watch Network TV.

Zz.

You haven't had much time to hear about her as she's only eleven years old and was discovered at age ten! She is widely expected to become the premier lady of opera. In fact she has already performed a brief duet with Sarah Brightman [and possibly bested Brightman on stage].

She is the youngest person ever to be invited to peform at the Lincoln Center, which she did just recently. She also has a concert that will be appearing on PBS's Great Performances, next March - again, the youngest person ever to be featured.

She just released a new CD called Dream with Me.
http://www.target.com/p/Dream-with-...3487892&CPNG=&ci_src=14110944&ci_sku=13487892

It's no surprise that Disney snagged her very quickly.
 
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  • #3,213
How not to wear a Disney sweater.

sweatert.jpg


Poor Mickey!

Zz.
 
  • #3,214
ZapperZ said:
How not to wear a Disney sweater.

Poor Mickey!

Zz.

Oh my :smile:!
 
  • #3,215
ZapperZ said:
How not to wear a Disney sweater.

That's got to be photoshopped. Either that or Mickey passed out on a park bench by the Pirates of the Carribean ride, and this lady accidently sat on him.
 
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  • #3,216
I want to go there just to see if it's true. :biggrin:

tumblr_mka7keFs1U1qewacoo1_500.jpg
 
  • #3,217
Borg said:
I want to go there just to see if it's true. :biggrin:

Supposedly, this works elsewhere also, not just at Disneyland.

Zz.
 
  • #3,218
I have taken many photos of Cinderella Castle (well, duh!) under numerous lighting conditions. But the one that I took recently became one of my all-time favorite. It is a lighting on the castle that one doesn't get to see very often.

img7612j.jpg


And yes, I am still using my cheap Canon Digital Elph point-and-shoot camera.

Zz.
 
  • #3,219
I was just at DisneyLand this last Sunday. It was my first time going there, and I remember going to DisneyWorld when I was much younger. Which of the two would you say is the best?

EDIT: By the way, great photo :approve:
 
  • #3,220
ZapperZ said:
I have taken many photos of Cinderella Castle (well, duh!) under numerous lighting conditions. But the one that I took recently became one of my all-time favorite. It is a lighting on the castle that one doesn't get to see very often.

img7612j.jpg


And yes, I am still using my cheap Canon Digital Elph point-and-shoot camera.

Zz.
Wow, that's spooky! Love it, I never would have imagined the castle that way.
 
  • #3,221
AnTiFreeze3 said:
I was just at DisneyLand this last Sunday. It was my first time going there, and I remember going to DisneyWorld when I was much younger. Which of the two would you say is the best?

EDIT: By the way, great photo :approve:

WDW is certainly bigger than DL resort. So for me, that's a plus for WDW.

However, I've noticed that for many people, the park they prefer tend to be the one that they went to first, and certainly the one they went to as a child. Since my first introduction to a Disney theme park was WDW, it has become my favorite.

I certainly like DL. After all, it is historic, and the only theme park that Walt walked on. However, after being introduced to the Magic Kingdom at WDW first, the park looks a bit cramped and small. People who like DL find that aspect of the park to be an advantage. They call it charming. Sleeping Beauty castle certainly looks a bit underwhelming when compared to the majestic size of Cinderella Castle at the Magic Kingdom.

However, to me, the biggest problem I had with the DL resort when compared to WDW is the location and the neighborhood. At WDW, because of its size, there is a buffer between the theme park and "real world". If you are from off-site, it forces you to either drive, or take a form of transportation to get to the theme park. This gives the feeling that you are going somewhere, and somewhere different. If you are staying on-site and have to drive to get to the theme parks, it is the same. If you are at one of the resorts that are walking distance to one of the theme parks, then you are already being immersed in the Disney atmosphere. So by the time one gets to a WDW theme park, one has already, consciously or subconsciously, divorced oneself from the real world.

I couldn't do that at the DL resort. One could just cross S. Harbor Blvd., for example, and voila! One is already on Disney property. There isn't that buffer, and I couldn't get it out of my head that real life is just across the street from Disneyland. You get on, say, the old "sun wheel" at California Adventure, and you could see the surrounding neighborhood, which obviously ruins the "magic" and the theming that is so important in a Disney theme park. You don't get that at WDW.

So WDW is definitely my favorite Disney resort. Certainly, my familiarity with it is a big factor. Still, my biggest goal is to make a trip to Tokyo Disneyland resort (Tokyo Disneyland and DisneySea) and then go to Shanghai when the new theme park opens there in a couple of years.

Zz.
 
  • #3,222
Here's another example of where Disney and Physics meet.

A group called the Harvard Sports Analysis Collective (I fully expect a Borg to pop out any moment now) has analyzed the Disney animated movie "Hercules", and came up with a few scenarios which they deemed to be "ridiculous". This is even allowing for the fact that (i) it is an animated movie, which tends to take more liberty with reality than live-action movies and (ii) Hercules has significantly stronger abilities than a normal person.

Some of these might be considered as nitpicking, but a few, especially the first one involving the donkey, certainly produced an absolutely ridiculous scenario.

Zz.
 
  • #3,223
I posted this photo online elsewhere that I took a while back. Then someone pointed out that it appears as if the Starship Enterprise landed right next to Spaceship Earth! Look at it and see if you notice the same thing.

IMG_3179_zpsb949e286.jpg


I didn't notice it until it was brought to my attention! :)

What that really is is the lights from the Monorail ramp and station that is right outside of the main Epcot entrance. I suppose with the way other buildings and vegetation in front of it were blocking the lights, it definitely looks like the Enterprise!

Zz.
 
  • #3,224
So, you think you're stronger than Gaston? Not a chance. :oldtongue:

 
  • #3,225
7 days until my WDW trip!
Have a family suite at Shades of Green for 6 days with overlapping bookings on the first day at Art of Animation in a standard room for the younger ones on the trip so we could use DME and get magic-bands.

How many push-ups can Donald do on the Buckeyes, he might give Gaston a run for the money?
 
  • #3,226
nsaspook said:
7 days until my WDW trip!
Have a family suite at Shades of Green for 6 days with overlapping bookings on the first day at Art of Animation in a standard room for the younger ones on the trip so we could use DME and get magic-bands.

How many push-ups can Donald do on the Buckeyes, he might give Gaston a run for the money?

I don't know. I didn't see any one-handed pushups.
 
  • #3,227
Borg said:
I don't know. I didn't see any one-handed pushups.

You don't want the Duck to get angry.
angry-duck.gif

disney.jpg
 
  • #3,228
 
  • #3,229
I have often wondered if any of the "science" stuff they tried to do at Magic Kingdom's Tomorrowland and Epcot's Future World has any effect on the guests. Turns out, it certainly did! I didn't know, until recently, that biologist and popular columnist on Science, Adam Ruben, got into biology because of a trip to "The Land" at Epcot. You can read his hilarious account of his "scientists origin" here.

Zz.
 
  • #3,230
I was reading this and found something about the original lightning protection study for Disneyworld.

http://ethw.org/Archives:Transformers_at_Pittsfield,_part_2
Lightning Protection at Disneyworld
When Walt E. Disney Enterprises ("WED") was planning the new Disneyworld theme park near Orlando; Florida in the late 1960's, they were wise enough to be concerned about lightning protection there. Primarily, it was the safety of passengers on aerial rides in the event of a rapidly developing electrical storm which was of concern. However, protection of elaborate computer-driven animation displays and other electronic equipment was also a consideration. Thus, the High Voltage Laboratory was contracted to perform a lightning protection study for Disneyworld.

WED did not have to worry too much about lightning protection at the existing Disneyland theme park in Anaheim, California because that region has the lowest level of lightning activity in the United States; Florida, on the other hand, has the highest! Thus, it was to their credit that they recognized the potential problem beforehand.

This lightning protection contract included guidance in the placement of lightning rods and grounding conductors for the various structures at Disneyworld. It also involved specifications for placement of lightning arrester types of devices to protect sensitive electronic equipment from high voltage lightning surges. The preparation involved in producing these guidelines and specifications meant visitations to Disneyland in order to study the particular types of equipment and structures which would have to be protected in Florida. This required riding every attraction at Disneyland so as to achieve a clear understanding of the situations which passengers would be placed in. This was a tough job, but someone had to do it!
 
  • #3,231
This poor family had an unfortunate photo that has become the butt of people's jokes. :)

BQW2PJ.jpg


Zz.
 
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  • #3,232
Cinderella Castle, just with different colors. :)

jCACHD.jpg


Zz.
 
  • #3,233
I may be a Disney fanatic, but even *I* won't torture my pet dog like this, if I have a dog. This is just wrong! :)



There must be a law to prevent this type of animal cruelty! :)

Zz.
 
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  • #3,234
ZapperZ said:
...
...

Zz.
His feet are short but he is so quick, so when he runs, he looks so funny. :DD
 
  • #3,235
The one advantage of being an admitted Disney fanatic is that your friends often become your enablers. :)

A while back, Greg found this "deranged" Mickey and thought of me (hum, I wonder what he's trying to tell me?). So he graciously mailed this to me, which I currently have it proudly on display.

TebilE.jpg


Then about a couple of weeks ago, dlgoff contacted me asking if I'd be interested in receiving this plaque. I said yes very quickly.

HvfD6m.jpg


I had to do some background search because I wasn't aware of the existence of "Magic Kingdom Club", so it was quite educational to me. It disbanded in around 2000.

dlgoff mailed the plaque to me, and it arrived last week. I have it mounted on a wall already.

oCB5Sg.jpg


It's good to have enablers! :)

Zz.
 
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  • #3,236
ZapperZ said:
I had to do some background search because I wasn't aware of the existence of "Magic Kingdom Club", so it was quite educational to me.
Your search has educated me too. Thanks for the link. Now we need to find an old membership card. :oldsmile:
 
  • #3,237
It was so expensive to go then. Guess how many people. :cry:
We could get Club cards on base in San Diego when I went to school there in 76.
DisneyNews_Spring1970_prices_mkc_page.jpg
 
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  • #3,238
This is an example of some of the intricate details at a Disney theme park that many guests will miss.

0jikct.jpg


You see this head stoke in the queue line for the Haunted Mansion attraction at WDW's Magic Kingdom. Most of the time, her eyes are closed. But if you look at it long enough, it sometime will open and looks straight at you, and even moves here eyes quickly become closing them back. But this character isn't just confined to this. She was the "Ghost Host" before being replaced by a male ghost voice in the attraction. But she still holds court in the seance room scene in the attraction where her head is floating around in the crystal ball. It is such a neat effect that various Disney fans website have done careful analysis of this visual spectacle.

The Haunted Mansion, being one of the classic attraction at a Disney theme park, is one of the most thoughtfully-designed attraction that is full of side-stores. It is Disney theming at its best, and a clear illustration on how Disney doesn't make rides, they make attractions that tell stories.

Zz.
 
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  • #3,239
The end of an era?

If any of you longtime members followed and remember the memorable WDW trip that Moonbear and I took and that we blogged on here, you would have remembered the Osborne Spectacle of Lights (now called the Osborne Spectacle of Dancing Lights). That was back in early 2006! Oh how a lot of things have changed since.

Moonbear no longer participates in this forum anymore, the huge Sorcerer Hat is gone at Disney's Hollywood Studios (it was removed early this year), and now, Disney has just announced that the extremely popular, and what had become for many people a yearly tradition, the Osborne Spectacle of Dancing Lights will end after this year's holiday season. That area, called the Street of America, will straddle the new Star Wars land and Toy Story Land at the Studios, and so, it will be swallowed by probably the new Star Wars land that will break ground next year.

This show is wildly popular and draws huge crowd every single night to that theme park during the holidays. It will feel odd going to WDW during the holidays and not go to the Osborne lights.

I'm glad that I've already scheduled a trip there this December. I managed to say goodbye to The Hat last December when we knew that they were going to remove it in January this year, and looks like I'll be savoring every last second of the Osborne Lights this December before they go away.

For those of you who haven't seen it, here are a few videos of the show that I took:






Zz.
 
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  • #3,240
I went to Disneyland twice this summer at the Anaheim location. My friend works there and he showed me the fire station and how there is a light in the front window on the second story that is always lit, in memory of Walt Disney. I was impressed and I can't imagine how many Easter eggs are hiding in these parks
 

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