You know what putting up all of these Walt statues reminds me of? How Chef Skinner used Gusteau's image to sell cheap, corporate products and frozen foods after his death in Ratatouille
I love how out of touch Disney leadership is with their IP sometimes. I find it funny that they emphasized that Tiana's has an employee owned co-op, yet Iger went out of his way to condemn the writer's strike.
That Walt statue needs to be removed immediately. I went and saw it earlier this year and the location is...terrible. The background is a building obscuring half of Spaceship Earth, and Walt is literally looking out at the worst renovation ever done to Epcot. Multiple times, there was a cast member stationed there to take photos of guests, but barely anyone wanted their picture there so there wasn't even a line. Embarrassing.
@@PoseidonEntertainment oh definitely, it's sterile and somewhat calming. I do wonder though if the sentiment of 'this is Disney being lazy' would be the same had Disney done this first decades ago before airports took on this general look. A 'who did it first/got to it first' kind of scenario.
Disney seems so obsessed with immediate revenue, to the point where it feels like NOTHING they're building now has any staying power. The IP-driven attractions are an attempt to capitalize off of hype, which will inevitably die down. Epcot used to be such an antithesis of what parks were typically like, offering incredibly deep and rich experiences. This overhaul is just a reflection of Disney's crooked attitude towards its guests.
While I would agree that there seems like they don't know what to do with Epcot (what is was meant to be, what it is now, and what they want it to be seems to result in a mish-mash of themes) there is a lot of Disney IP that withstands trends/time. Literally have IP themed things that have been around for decades and some that don't last long (but you don't know until you build it and see if it has legs or not with the customer base).
Even Universal's Epic Universe, whilst IP driven seems to be more considered - either using properties with historical strong appeal (Harry Potter, Super Nintendo, Universal Horror) or a strong thematic appeal (How to Train your Dragon is essentially a viking/dragon land for non-fans of the film series). Plus the execution is incredibly imaginative. I doubt once the MCU fizzles the bland Avengers Campus will have lasting appeal.
@@candidapm2474Totally. I’m not saying IP doesn’t have a place in Disney, in fact, Disney is built off of nostalgia for its IPs. It just seems to be done in a cash-grabby, hype-driven sort of way these days. With rides like Splash Mountain, Tower of Terror, Peter Pan’s Flight, the IPs were introduced to create compelling stories and experiences, not just make the ride a billboard for a certain movie, brand, or streaming service.
@@candidapm2474 Totally. I’m not saying IP doesn’t have a place in Disney, in fact, Disney is built around nostalgia for its IPs. It just seems to be done in a cash-grabby, hype-driven sort of way these days. With rides like Splash Mountain, Tower of Terror, Peter Pan’s Flight, the IPs were introduced to create compelling stories, not just make the ride a billboard for a certain movie, brand, or streaming service.
I think it's insulting the intelligence of children to say EPCOT wasn't interesting to kids. I went as a little kid and was OBSESSED with Spaceship Earth and Innoventions (the science-nerdy part of the park) and the Kim Possible (later Phineas and Ferb) spy games at World Showcase and the Kidcot sections. Disney thinks kids are stupid, and it really shows not just in their more recent films, but in the parks as well.
Epcot was also my favourite park as a kid! I had a blast in all the pavilions that no longer exist. I went back recently as an adult with my kids: I was disappointed and the kids were bored 🥲
I agree. It was always my favorite park, I loved The Land and the original Living Seas. I love museums and EPCOT was really like a museum theme park initially.
Sure, but I'm assuming you were a kid before the invention of the iPad and TikTok. Most kids today don't have the attention span to take interest in anything that isn't loud, colorful, and obnoxious.
Oh, I KNOW that's what Bobby Eager wants to do next. I sincerely don't understand all the record-breaking crowds. There is nothing to see! The rides don't even look interesting. I don't understand why people are still flocking BACK to Disney World if they've been there before with all this IP oversaturation and corporate garbage infesting the parks.
Spaceship Earth is my favorite ride in the park, and while it could definitely use some love, my favorite part of the Epcot overhaul (even above Cosmic Rewind) is that they scrapped the planned re-theme of SSE.
If they touch Spaceship Earth with intention of anything but some fresh damn paint and updated animatronics (not new, updated) I swear I will riot. I’ve been riding that with my dad since I was 4. I love it still at 30. Why do they not understand, it’s not something you outgrow, and it’s not something kids/adults can’t both enjoy. It totally captured me as a kid and I still enjoy it as an adult. We are smart human beings who aren’t so freaking dull we need IP in every ride thrown in our face to make it fun for us. How much hate mail must Iger receive?????? A solid ride is a solid ride. Chris Pratt isn’t what makes gardians a solid ride. I can’t. Rant over.
Counterpoint: What if public parks have taken so many design cues from Disney over the years that it makes it harder to stand head and shoulders over the "competition?"
@@ChiefBlueScreen With all due respect that seems highly unlikely. Disney has always been head-and-shoulders above the competition, at least in the past
@ChiefBlueScreen justifying the digression from the worlds premier theme park to any old public park (with Disney's admission price) is insane levels of disneycope
What's crazy is 90's culture is making a major comeback. If they had made these spaces ultra-tacky/kitschy, with bright colors everywhere, the younger generation would have loved it. And those of us that miss that decade would too. It would be interesting to dig into *why* this happened. Does it have a lot to do with laying off imagineers and hiring architects from a huge CA firm? I have to assume so. Also, do the designers in CA just never visit FL? I get that CA has perfect weather all the time but most of the rest of the world does not. The lack of shade structures at new rides and outdoor queues, just baffles me.
It seems like you know the answer, they definitely hired architects from California and Las Vegas firms. It's not that there's anything necessarily wrong with that work, but rather that Disney property is the last place that you should ever find current design trends.
It’s pretty hot in California. Probably due to climate change. Still, a lot of the businesses in my neighborhood didn’t have AC but had fireplaces. They didn’t have ceiling fans either. When it has heat waves in the 90s, even the beach won’t save you. If you easily burn, even a 70 degree day in the summer, which isn’t the norm, could blister burn you if you have lighter skin. I lived in an older neighborhood that had character, but there is a lot of flat rectangular buildings, probably because the heat warps wood and everything has to be earthquake stable…but that is a more modern thing. 80s surf culture for one, is very bright.
The imagineers, who work in California, have always had this issue when developing attractions for WDW. There's never any shade. Toy Story Land and the Tron queue are two easy examples.
It's never anything but sunny here either and we don't even have shade at bus stops. These goons are trained when their brains are young and squishy that the only goal in architecture and design is to keep people moving and making their owners money. Taking a break in the shade doesn't do that.
What I have always respected about Poseidon is that he is not hating to hate , he is hating because of a passion for what used to be and what COULD be.
@RandomGamerCory yeah but sometimes people hate on things bc it's profitable on YT & this falls into some channels content I enjoy lol. Poseidon always articulates his opinion as objectively as possible & explains his positions extremely well
I get why you say this, but when it comes to a universally known company like Disney, it's almost impossible not to be aware of what they're doing and have an opinion on it. Everyone shitting on Disney for their handling of Star Wars, the MCU, and even their own properties are typically doing it because they don't want these things to be ruined. I can't imagine the parks being a much different story.
i appreciate how your tone has increasingly gone from "i think disney could turn this around" to "am i going insane?? do you people not see this?? why are you praising these parks??" these past few years. insane how people will tolerate this continual corporatization of everything they love and get angry when people point it out.
Channels like this are increasingly important for lighting a fire under this company and it's increasing laziness. Coupled with the absolutely damning video by Jenny Nicholson on the absolute failure that was the star wars hotel, it makes me wonder if anyone at Disney is listening to this increasing dissent and starting to sweat. I hope so, because it seems we're just getting less and less, and being charged more and more. They aren't even consistently cleaning their attractions (Tron is disgustingly filthy) and apparently the CMs who work there have put in tons of work orders to have it cleaned. Just falling on deaf ears.
as a German I am very oriented in being critical and enjoy this channel very much while most Disney TH-camrs will bend reality to continue praising anything new
The juxtaposition between Universal's creative and rapid expansion with increased levels of customer service and positive expirences, next to Disney's stagnation and increasingly poor expirences for parkgoers...it's just getting sad.
Its crazy how universal listened to their fans in regards to making too many screen rides and they went away with that. And, opted to boost the customer experience and not being afraid to heavily invest in world class rides to be built. Where disney, half asses everything now and takes 2x as long for basic stuff like this at Epcot. In addition, it’s all about how much they can nickel and dime customers while offering less than before. Disney is truly in a sad state!
Which is supremely ironic to me because malls in America are dying from being strangulated by suburbia and car-dependency, whereas malls in the rest of the world that people can access by transit are doing just fine.
How did Universal make two world class rollercoasters, the interactive fantastic Nintendo world and break ground on a third theme park in the time it took Disney to make a public park. Ik that it’s done to death that Universal is better but I think it’s true now.
It wasn't always this way. But the top dog lost what got it there in the first place, and the scrappy second place was forced to still play catchup to the startling behemoth until it finally eclipsed it in all but brand power.
Modern Disney does not have passion. All the people who care about the story, the art, and the craft were chased out years ago. Disney is now a company run by bean counters and Disney fan artists. We're so far from parks made by people who want to make something new and world class.
@@satellafelix4597 Yes. Chapek downsized Imagineering by almost 50% in 2020/2021. There's even rumors that Joe Rhode's resignation was NOT voluntary, and was MANDATORY because he's known as an "expensive" imagineer. But that's just a rumor. But yeah, Chapek's gutting of Imagineering was the single worst move they've probably made. Plenty of others left just because they realized how bad Disney was getting, and plenty of them went to the place that was hiring: Universal Creative. Although, I don't think too many of them are working on Epic Universe because these projects take SEVERAL years, maybe on expansions?
I don't know this for a fact. But I suspect there still ARE people who care about artistry around. But one can't build on wishes (no matter what the marketing says). It takes money to run a project - and they're not getting that. And where they do get green-lit... the project gets knee-capped by cost-cutting.
I can't get over how sterile and generic Epcot looks now. Most of these new spaces look like they are ripped right out of an Apple Store and suburban mall. Everything just look so uninspired and generic.
At least outside this central area, its mostly untouched. World Showcase is still Worldshowcase, and the other pavillions are there still. But this central area is just so bland and indistinguishable.
@@triciaizzo4825 My brother works for the House of Mouse so we get steep discounts on resorts and free park passes. If people are paying full-price for the experience, they have more money than sense.
I mean I still go, not because I'm happy with the direction they're going in, but because of the great artistry there that still survives, especially in Animal Kingdom. (For now, at least) At least Disney has left World Showcase mostly untouched so far
Out of all of the abysmal changes they've made to this once amazing theme park, the absolute worst is changing the music. Thank you for talking about that because it is SO crucial to EPCOT for me and so many others. Truly heartbreaking all around :(
AGREED, easily the best part! And did it have to change? Was it truly holding EPCOT back? Nope….. just a pointless change that proves how much they don’t understand their history & fans.
I’m upset they changed the music too, but what we have now isn’t actually that bad. It still sounds inspiring and makes me happy when I’m walking into the park. Now what they did ruin was putting that stupid stage next to communicore and have this super loud band playing music, and at night there’s spotlights going everywhere. It completely ruins the immersion. It’s so awful.
All they did was rip out a great fountain. Year down a building, then rebuild half of it and put in a walk through water exhibit, that has issues days after opening
I visited Epcot in 1985 for the first time and was blown away by its outlook on the future and how well conceived everything was. I even remember seeing a sign advertising the upcoming opening of the Spain pavilion (my country). Sadly, the idea was abandoned and it was never built.
If there ever was a physical manifestation of Disney's stunning incompetence in recent years, it's this flower patch they put in Epcot. What a disaster!
Those fountains were so iconic that I remember scenes from TGIF shows that took place at them. It's bizarre that the park that was so iconic and treasured that it became the go-to place for a bunch of major sitcoms to spend time at...and they just shit all over it to where you'd not even be able to tell if a show shot some footage there. Nothing stands out besides Spaceship earth now.
Consumers need to start punishing Disney with their dollars. But I know that won’t happen with the influencer culture and hyper Disney fans that do more harm to the brand than good.
Even in its zombie-like state, 2000s EPCOT is my favorite theme park of all time, as I wasn’t alive to see 80s or 90s EPCOT. Future World, while outdated, had such a nostalgic aura that I can’t even describe in text, and the Fountain of Nations was an obsession of mine. And World Showcase, despite the changes to the Mexico ride was, in my opinion, the greatest land of all time in any theme park. The park of my childhood, while imperfect, exuded innocence, and there was still a lingering feeling of the ideals of the parks early years. That’s gone now. Complete sterility.
1970's Florida child, grew up going to Disney World, remember the ticket system, the day EPCOT opened, spent honeymoon week there and celebrated my own child's 3rd birthday at Cinderella's castle. Haven't been back in over 15 years. The magic is gone. It's all about $$ now because the company is no longer run by innovators. It's run by corporate businessmen who only care about next quarter profit, no matter the cost.
@@robertruffo2134 You're correct, in a way, I noticed after a few years of going, some attractions weren't 'busy' anymore, very short lines to get in. THAT'S a reason for a change I suppose, when millions of people have experienced something so many times, they're not interested in it anymore and management 'bean counters' realized the truth. The CORE fans don't matter; let's make this a Macy's and $ell, $ell, $ell merchandi$e for profit. I realized early on that in Disney parks, EVERYTHING is FULL RETAIL price or beyond!
They made a once interesting park into something even more boring than what others considered boring in the first place. I went two weeks ago and was amazed at how empty the area was and seeing how much seating was added for what? Not a single person was using the space that was put there. The music they put in was already putting me to sleep and now the whole area makes that feeling even more present. What was once my second favorite Disney park is now a place I can skip and really do not want to visit. Same thing with Animal Kingdom once they get rid of Dinosaur. They need to build upon what is already there rather than take it all away. Epcot has been a great example of this.
All the money in the world? Lol..Disney is in DEBT up to three A$$, because of the massive loans from around the world they had to take because of Covid..Do your research
It blows me away that they're not counting every dollar they have left. 2023 was significant historically: for the very first time, Universal's films outperformed Disney's at the box office. If I was a Disney exec, I'd hand in my resignation and run run ruuuun for the hills...
Meanwhile Epic Universe will have over 50 fountains throughout the parks. I mean honestly, Disney could recirculate their water features, and build more places to cool off and enjoy the sounds of such. But no. Here's some more benches, lights, and ground effects that don't work. Enjoy! 😒
Fountains get expensive to operate. Anything with water gets expensive. Anywhere they can cut costs is what gets changed, including getting rid of those pesky humans who work there. That is why you don't see any shows with live performers any longer.
So they tore down beloved EPCOT rides and put up corporate business park plop art that harkens back to the beloved rides. That is hyper reality squared. Taking an already hyper real space and somehow inverting it, what a distopian nightmare.
One word that should NEVER be used to describe a Disney park is "Corporate"; Identity-less, sterile, numbing, constricting, counter-creative. It's unfortunate that "corporate" has become the only apt descriptor of every Disney park aside from Disney Sea (which I believe the company doesn't even operate anyway) and a few select sections of Animal Kingdom (at least for now)
The parks in Japan have a local company involved, making major financial (and creative) decisions that seem to prioritize quality experiences and innovation over profits.
Spoiler, Iger and Chapek are to blame for a majority of the issues disney has seen recently. Their care for bottomline and shareholders over guests is what has put disney is the downward spiral its been in for years.
Iger more so than Chapek, honestly. Iger caused all the financial issues due to all of his vanity projects, while Chapek is just incompetent and panicking over damage control. Honestly, wouldn't be surprised if Iger had investments in the construction industry and had companies that he invested in doing all the work, putting money into his pockets.
And the sad thing is it sounds like the theme parks are the most profitable commodity they own currently and seem destined to permanently screw that up.
The EPCOT overhaul has been a big mess. There were some stuff I liked, but overall it’s a big mess. It took Disney 5 years to demolish Innoventions West just to essentially rebuild half it, and made exterior boxy, and made the interior plain, removed the Fountain of Nations, gave Mouse Gear, and Electric Umbrella plain interiors, and made the whole plaza look essentially like an office park. It took less time to build all of EPCOT than redoing that entire middle area in World Celebration.
@@_harveyd Reminds me of a funny thing I saw in Madame Tussaud's in London. They had an exhibit with all wax figures of evil dictators like Hitler and Saddam. Many tourists would stand in front of "Saddam" and give him the finger or pretend they were punching him or kicking him in the testicles!
My kids renamed "Ellen's Energy Adventure" to "Dad Takes a Nap." I hated that ride, but I loved the length of time it allowed me to sit in an air conditioned environment. 😆
"The original framing of this statue looked as if Walt was sitting on a toilet, which I thought was appropriate symbolism for how he would view the park and company executives today". LMAO. Touché
It should've been such an easy overhaul with adding rides and experiences, but this leadership just doesn't care and it's sad. Disney's been on a decline and it needs an overhaul of leadership and creativity.
Great video!!! I cannot state this enough but I miss the Walt/Roy Disney and Eisner/Wells eras of Disney theming. This Communicore Hall looks like a mall and/or hospital food court and I sadly get the impression that it was purposely designed this way so that it could serve as a multi-purpose space for festivals and other events. The entire Epcot "overhaul" is such a missed opportunity and it's going to do serious harm in the long run because the Disney Co. thinks they actually did something here and can move on to the other parks now.
Guardians should have gone goofy and the plot should have been them visiting a Space Theme Park that was so oddly similiar to Disney that Peter is just perpetually confused while everyone else is having fun on rides. Maybe even him Peter think some Theme Park "Villain" was real and you're there to help him, only to see we just destroyed a theme park on our journey.
@@wildmarjoramdieselpunk6396 I had no idea they did that - that actually annoys me. ToT is fine the way it is. Disney just wants to IP everything with current day stuff that it's ruining what made it special
@@wildmarjoramdieselpunk6396 So much this. I haven't been back to Disney in a decade, and now I probably never will. Why do that when I can go to a place like Knott's Berry Farm, who actually kinda care a little about the customer experience, their roots, and has better food than Disney on average for 100 bucks or less?
I would have given anything to experience attractions like Horizons. Old Epcot was truly magnificient. It's a shame I never got to experience it. Everything had a purpose. There was an ambiance of wisdom, a showcase of humanitys achievements and a positive outlook on the future. The park is just an ip mess now. No theme,everything feels lifeless and magicless.
It was just glorious. I went as a kid opening year and a decade later I was there most days working. I knew it was going to change when they took out World of Motion. It hurts to see now. I used to work in the ATT center in Communicore they tore down. And for what? This?!?
@@ocalicreek I love that song. Memories of working unload at Spaceship. I would tune out a lot of the background music when I worked at Magic Kingdom but not Epcot. So many bangers on that loop.
@@ocalicreek Same. I lived in FL in the 80s-90s as a kid, and am so grateful that I got to experience Horizons, Spaceship Earth, OG Imagination, Communicore/Innoventions many times over. Epcot shaped me, made me a humanist, a creative, a futurist, an optimist. I wish all kids could've had the chance to see it.
The weird problem is they are so focused on looking to the future with these large plans but when it’s time to deliver, they have nothing to show for it. Like how did some of these projects take nearly a decade? They announce expansions and ideas for immediate profits without thinking how it’ll work out in the long run even though they are planning so far ahead it’s incomprehensible to me. Despite Michael Eisner’s shortcomings and failures he at least had a vision and saw things through rather than half baked concepts that they just straight up abandon for their bottom dollar.
I like Eisner a lot in retrospect, but I also don't want to give him false credit. California Adventure, Walt Disney Studios Park and Hong Kong Disneyland are pretty significant examples of not seeing things through.
@@PoseidonEntertainment Yeah I certainly agree, he wasn’t an “architect” he didn’t know how to make his vision happen. But at the very least it seemed like he did want the best for Disney even if he had a fantastical view of what was actually going to happen. Compared to modern Disney’s corp greed. Though he did green light Superstar Limo so what do I know 😂 However I will always give more credit to expansion and building from new ideas even if they don’t pan out rather than just retro fitting and demolition especially if it is for far a inferior product (maelstrom to Frozen) etc
I agree about Eisner, nobody is perfect so not excusing his flaws, but he had a style of "grand vision" that approximated Walt Disney much closer than any other company leader. He was a showman, understood audiences and genre and theme. This is a weird take, but even California Adventure is an example of how he lead a big vision -- a park all about California built on a tight budget -- and delivered a fully realized PROJECT true to its goals. Now, it was a BAD GOAL, but it was a complete wholistic result. Compare that to the tentative, piecemeal way that Disney operates nowadays with individual random projects trickled in and we wonder "is there a plan?", "are the different teams talking to each other?", "will we eventually see an amazing overall vision come together?"
I feel like Epcot was in an impossible situation. I think your average park goer today would be pissed if they spent $150 per person to go to the original Epcot. So Disney felt like they had to do something to "pump up" the experience and they couldn't figure out how to do that and keep the original spirit. So now it's a mishmash of junk that we're going to have to deal with for the next 20 years.
You have said the honest truth that nobody seems to want to admit. The original EPCOT was a snooze fest for the majority of park goers and only appealed to a niche set of people. For most it was one and done and It had to change. Not saying that the way they went about changing it was a good way because it's honestly been a disaster. But let's not pretend that the original EPCOT would be a crowd pleaser today
I haven't been to Disney world in a long time, but I used to really love Epcot. People go to Disney partly to experience a miniature walkable city...but they turned Epcot into the business parks we're trying to escape from.
I think having a “corporate” architect as the president of imagineering, who designs office buildings and retail space is the reason it looks so boring and bland and Apple Store like
The mismanagement of Epcot and the Disney parks as a whole has just been unbelievable. I'm truly appalled. I hate to be such a cynic but I think Disney is too far gone. Its completely botched and the glory days aren't coming back.
An adventure through inner space theme would have been perfect instead of Guardians! The preshows could have given layman's explanations of the current state of physics theory and could have been updated based on current research. To a nerd like me, that would rock.
I definitely picture something that is both exciting and educational. Even the "learning is boring" kind of people could probably find value in an epic attraction about flying through inner space.
@theyip1218 For sure that's what current Disney execs think. Elitists think the general public is stupid. Our culture is pretty lame sometimes, but I'd like to give us normies more credit.
I think the most telling part about the new Walt statue is how generic it is. It's literally just him sitting, this statue could fit anywhere nothing about it is specific to Epcot.
@@TheInflicted They literally just put on here because all the other parks have one too, it's so lazy. They couldnt even think about a meaningful pose so he just sits there like those statues of Ronald McDonald they used to have at every McDonalds.
They could spice it up with an added caption, “Here sits an immortalized Walt Disney, forever to watch as any and all hopes and dreams he once had wither away into nothing.”
So they spent all this money to make the park more generic and boring. I think I will stay with the version I saw in 1992 with that futuristic and hopeful look it had back then. Compare to now where it’s a stale kind of boring hospital feel to it
It's refreshing to see an honest and thoughtful analysis from a TH-cam channel instead of 500 "Disney is Woke; Tiana's Adventure Brie Larson Kathleen Kennedy etc" videos. It feels like there are only two types of videos: the ones from people who think Disney can do no wrong, and the kind that nitpick every little thing the company does and push a personal "anti-woke" agenda nobody asked for. This lazy, rushed project deserves much more scorn than Tiana's Bayou Adventure is getting. At least that ride had some colorful set design and good looking animatronics. But it feels like most of the internet would rather nitpick the hell out of that ride because of the circumstances behind Splash Mountain's removal. It's more "cool and hip" to criticize anything PC or "woke" than it is to actually analyze what Disney is doing wrong. Disney's issues aren't "wokeness," they are laziness.
I’m a conservative who for sure has a problem with some of Disney’s recent political takes but I COMPLETELY agree with this comment! Laziness (and I dare to say greed as well) is the real problem people are experiencing. It is wide-spread across all parks and platforms.
I'd like to imagine an alternate timeline where instead of epcot becoming a billboard it actually adapted to the modern day to what other visions of what the future would look like for example world of energy dives into renewable energy and not just fossil fuels
I believe that Disney is ruining all it's parks right now. They are destroying beloved places, not to introduce something new and interesting, but to shoehorn in recognizable IPs.
Having been in some of the areas, not the full product yet. I can say this, It feels like a medical campus, stale, sterile, and mildly depressing. I don't know who signed off on this, but they should be fired for wasting this money and highlights Disney's and Imagineering's complete lack of vision and leadership. to again put no shade in that area is criminal, and it in fact ruins EPCOT.
@@jasonbaylor9865 It's a new Space Mountain that uses tricks already seen in Universal parks. Disney paid Vekoma to develop a coaster with turning capabilities, which Intamin had already invented for Universal with Gringotts. The teleportation chamber was also obviously done on a much larger scale in Poseidon's Fury 25 years ago. "Revolutionary" is not a word I would use for Disney playing catch-up technologically.
To be fair, it's a pretty solid roller coaster. But I find it hilarious that Disney put all this money into the theming, including the pre-show, only for it to be so blatantly obvious that people are riding it for the layout due to the fact that guests are _literally trying to push through the doors of the preshow room just to get to the actual ride quicker._
It's baffling to see such shoddy work here, especially when you look at Fantasy Springs just opening in Tokyo DisneySea and how truly mindblowing its aesthetic and details are (and yes I know Disney doesn't run that park but that just furthers my point)
Your idea for Cosmic Rewind would totally work, and if they really wanted to slap an IP on it they could just use Ant Man. Some sort of quantum showcase or subatomic testing kind of thing
Disney leadership has spent so much of Epcot's history desperately trying not to age the park that they keep making decisions which only age the park more. Truly the "how do you do, fellow kids" of theme parks
THANK YOU I'm so glad someone else said it. Walt and Roy would HATE what Disney has become. I'm so sick of them.pretending like theyre still holding up to Disney expectations cause the parks are pitiful and depressing in comparison to when I was a kid. I remember when I had a huge dream of being an imagineer.. what wishful thinking I had but now going to the parks just hurts.
I had a College Program that ended right before the Communicore building opened. In the middle of the park there are a bunch of lights on the ground that was part of the renovation... that immediately broke, and instead of fixing, they turned the lights that WERE working into a strobe effect. True story you can go and see for yourself.
You know I gotta say - I didn't mind IP popping up in World Showcase where it seemed to fit the country, mostly because I'm too young to have nostalgia for the rides they replaced. I didn't get it until I started looking at the plans for Animal Kingdom, and how absolutely nothing they have to do with the theme of the park. I understand now how the Epcot people have felt for years.
I do actually like the Xandar pavilion as a conceit for the Guardians coaster. I suspect like you said about Ratatouille, if it were the only one in the park you may not hate it so much. I thought it was a cute attempt to tie things in, but I do agree that making it a Big Bang coaster would have been much better.
ugh. the IP anywhere is what’s ruined the place. back in the day, the only IP you’d see is Figment and before that, just the occasional character meet and greet at the Odyssey. the idea of being able to avoid all that crap was one of the best things about it. they literally had Magic Kingdom and MGM to ram that down people’s throats.
I strongly feel that IP is totally fine in the world showcase as the park has to appeal to kids in some way and i've always felt that the showcase was a separate experience than the rest of EPCOT. However it should not bleed out into other parts of EPCOT where the theming should be intact
I don't like theme parks, but I do like logistics and engineering, so you've got something for everybody. I really appreciate how you try to be as fair as humanly possible, there's undoubtedly a lot of very frustrated people behind a lot of these disasters, and I always feel that you give them a fair shake
Spot on. As I watch, I am angered, distraught, and eventually devastated when considering the previous potential and the consequential waste in Epcot. While costly, this generational mistake should be acknowledged and fixed. What worries me most is how nostalgia seems to be the unifying theme, not only in Epcot, but resort wide. It's as if there's nothing to look forward to in the future, so a look at the past is what we get. It feels like a requiem. Thank you for making THE video that gives a voice to so many of us.
None of their parks have direction anymore. Take Hollywood Studios for example. What exactly is it now? It's definitely not about movies. Now it's just another generic park used to showcase IPs like Toy Story and Star Wars.
I remember after a visit circa 2012, my brother and I, who grew up going to MGM from the time we were very young, talked about how the old movie studio/"how movies are made" theme just didn't work so well anymore in an era of DVD special features and stuff like that, and we basically figured that it should be converted into Disney's version of Islands of Adventure - keep a central area themed around a timeless "vintage Hollywood" aesthetic, but surround it with lands themed for different properties. But yeah, looking at how they've approached it so far, yeesh, it's not great. Galaxy's Edge is pretty underwhelming, Toy Story Land is about as generic as it can get, the Muppets courtyard is being left to languish, etc. Meantime, rather than using that park to be the place where they let those movie-themed properties run wild, instead they're slapping them all over the other parks, too, so what is there to make Hollywood Studios feel distinct from anywhere else on property?
Yesterday I saw a post about Disney sycophants being excited over the leaks that DAK's new south American section /might/ have animals. Like. You mean to tell me Disney's ANIMAL KINGDOM just *might* have animals in their encanto/Coco slop? It's so over man
@@uni_meadows That's sad. South America with wonders like the Amazon Rainforest and Galapagos Islands, has the greatest diversity of animal species on the planet and hearing that there might not be animals present at DAK's proposed "Tropical America" is disappointing. At minimum I'm expecting exhibits dedicated to the continent's iconic animals like toucans, sloths, capybaras, Galapagos tortoises, and the Andean condor to name a few.
After going to Epcot this year for my birthday I literally said “I think Epcot is my least favorite park in Disney world” and that shocked my whole family I just think that what happened to the center of future world is awful, the park should have taken more inspiration from the original opening day park rather than putting a picture of the butler from horizons on a wall
When you think back to the innovative and over the top architecture of the original buildings in future world and compare them to the box that is Communicore Hall, you can’t even convince yourself it’s the same company that built them.
Honestly, they should rename the park IP-COT. Excellent, and well-rounded video!! And YES, originality, and “out-of-the-box” thinking left EPCOT years ago. Buying a relatively recent and semi popular IP to add to your company portfolio, does NOT guarantee any staying power, or emotional connection with fans of either the new IP, or the original brand. Disney has proven this, though they themselves do not recognize it. Epcot has turned into a really expensive “State Fair”, and nothing more.
It feels so dystopian to hear that all the creative, ingenious, educational, and cultural ideas are just being replaced with insert disney ip here. Its like that apple commercial we just got.
Epic Universe is going to win the theme park war. Celestial Park should set the standard for how original theming should be utilized. Its space, astronomy, and it’s turn of the century Worlds Fair aesthetics have sold me.
The statue of Walt Disney is so tasteless and insulting that it's almost unbelievable. It's screaming "here's the man whose vision we are actively disrespecting". I didn't expect to be actually angry but that statue is disgusting. Obscene
Maybe the point was to make Epcot a giant art piece to comment on the deterioration of society under the burden on late stage capitalism. Who wants a new brighter future when we could have more IP? 😂
I think you hit the nail on the head about the music - the old entrance loop and Future World theme were absolute gems that did such a good job of establishing an atmosphere of simultaneous grandeur and fun (also not to mention the Future World loop is insanely catchy). I actually enjoy the new music, but I totally agree it fails to create any source of wonder and it does feel generic. Guess I'm using my earphones when I walk around in the park!
While there's nothing in the Ratatouille ride for me (I have non-binocular vision and can't see 3D projections) I feel like it's a better fit than a lot of the newer IP-based EPCOT attractions since World Showcase has been a dining hub since opening day, and a ride set in a French restaurant just feels natural.
I only ever really liked Epcot for the Japanese section of the world showcase. When I was a kid, I got a Pokemon plush there that was otherwise only sold in the Nintendo store in NYC in the US. These days they don’t sell those plushes any more, and the area really just makes me want to visit the actual Japan instead lol.
I used to work at the Japan pavilion at Epcot and oh boy did those plushies sell QUICK! We got 4-6 boxes of them once a month and they're gone the next day. Wonder if it's gotten worse 😅
@@alexnight4144 Not surprised, Pokémon’s a high in demand brand, and like I said at that time those official plushies could only otherwise be bought at the Nintendo store in NYC without going to Japan or buying from resellers online. I’ve been to Epcot a couple times over the past couple of months (not my choice lol I wouldn’t give Disney a cent if it was up to me), and I haven’t seen any of that merch during that time, just a few Pikachu and Kanto starter plushes, maybe some Gengar stuff, the most commonly produced merchandise. The plush I bought was of Giratina, the mascot of Pokemon Platinum which I think was the current mainline game at that time; still popular, but much more niche. I haven’t seen anything that niche, not even from the current mainline games (neither Sword and Shield, nor Scarlet and Violet). My theories for why are: The Pokemon Center official online store was created after my childhood visit, providing a way to buy official merch without going to one of the only two physical stores in the US. No need to buy it while you’re at Disney anymore. Universal cozying up to Nintendo I’m sure does no favors to Disney acquiring and selling Nintendo merch. Though if I understand correctly, the Japanese store is managed independently from Disney? Still, maybe the park is still influencing them to keep Nintendo merch low as it leans towards their competition.
Your calm tone and speech makes the criticism so much more burning. I'm not even in to disney stuff and I just keep thinking "Daaaaaaang, he just said that!"
The biggest problem is that Epcot was designed and built as a "permanent" World's Fair - something that people still remembered and cared about at the time. It did this very well, but as the Internet made all the information on technological advances and world cultures much easier to access at home, world's fairs became obsolete. As corporate sponsors for the educational attractions subsequently dropped away, Disney had to scramble and that has left us a park that basically has two halves that no longer make any sense together.
I agree but futurism is a very popular aesthetic still even if just for looks and some especific features the public doesnt have acess to regularly especially kids high speed chases, flying without a airplane, highly immersive ambients blending of virtual reality and physical sets, a balanced blend of tech and nature and people like intercultural spaces the food to see people from different places together and good attractions based on cultures i think would be popular on the pavillions( even if they should assume they are not the only source the guest will have of the culture and honestly this is a good thng they should lean into that to avoid steriotyping) i agree they had to make some changes and it is not easy but i think both concepts still could work with a proper overhaul if they really wanted to
You're not wrong on the fact that Worlds Fairs don't generate excitement they way they did in the 60s-80s, but I think that's when you maybe put that aspect of it aside and just focus on what the actual topics are that the park sought to explore: whatever the setting, there are *endless* possibilities for the kinds of attractions you can make exploring themes like undersea and space exploration, environmentalism, transportation (would *love* to a move away from cars and into all kinds of transit, but car companies keep sponsoring Test Track, soooo...), hands-on exhibits like a really good science museum, distinct world cultures, etc. It's one thing to learn about those online, it's another to be in a deeply themed environment that utilizes sounds, sights, smells, tastes, and tactile surfaces to really transport and entertain you. Like, those are HUGE topics, with, again, countless potentially fascinating attractions you can make out of them! No, it wouldn't directly market a Disney movie or Disney+ subscription, but it'd just be interesting and fun, and something no other major theme parks are doing, so it'd be the kind of thing Disney could use to set themselves apart from the rest. Instead, Disney is following now, instead of innovating, and they're just gonna slap more IPs around as band-aid fixes.
Disney definitely could have continued to lean into the educatainment angle of the original Epcot, and guests would still have been happy to come and pay if they did it well. The problem is that the incentive structure changed- If Exxon or United Technologies isn't willing to bankroll an attraction to put a positive spin on their industrial activities, Disney has no reason to not commit more fully into their own corporate synergy- any attraction that doesn't serve as an advertisement for a Moana/Groot/Elsa doll or T-shirt is a wasted opportunity to them. The ride sells the merch, the merch sells the show, the show sells the ride, and any interruption there is a "waste".
@@TheInflicted Amazing how hated Paul Pressler is among park fans, but his whole idea of “calculate the parks based on how much each square foot has been monetized” is now the official credo in Disney management.
World's fairs are by no mean obsolete. They still hold them in Europe and elsewhere, and they are attended by millions of people, in fact more people than before. World's Fairs were not just information - they were and are spectacular experiences. I mean even 200 years ago, they had libraries with information. You are missing the point.
It's funny seeing Disney's most hardcore fans trying to defend the EPCOT overhaul. For five years of construction this overhaul is disappointing. It's generic and probably would have been acceptable if this was just a year but five? For what's not much more than what is typically seen in modern "lifestyle center" style developments? Not even the covid excuse can save them.
You’re so obsessed about how long it took that you’re judging the final product based on construction times. If it was made in 6 months you would’ve said “why didn’t they spend more time on it”
Disney has really fallen. It shocks me that ANYONE still bothers with it anymore. I’m Australian, so trips to the US are very few and far between, so we have to make the most of our travels - My whole family went to Disneyworld in 2008/2009ish and loved it, but by the time 2019 rolled around, we all saw the absolute state of it and collectively wanted to visit Universal instead, not even bothering with a single day at Disney, lol. It’s shocking to see that it’s gotten even worse since then.
The company is broken and has been for years. You get glimpses of the what disney is capable of (Rise of the Resistance) but sadly those are few and far between in the past 10 years.
@user-li2yv5je5e No, don't be silly, it's not the sequel trilogy that makes the ride break down. I know the toxic element of the fandom likes to blame the sequels for some crazy stuff, but this is a new extreme.
I don't really like Rise very much. Beyond the novelty of certain elements like going up an elevator or the drop pod with the motion base, there's not really much going on in the ride. It's fun the first few times but I've come to see it as hollow and empty. It's something that doesn't have a lot substance and in my opinion, loses re-ridability.
Great review. I have loved Epcot since my first visit in 1988. It was like no other park - Disney or otherwise. It was charming and fun and magical in its own way. The renovations would be funny if they weren't so sad. The garden center area, the roasting outdoor stage, and the ridiculous Communicore, which reminds me of a hotel ballroom between conventions. It's actually sad to watch the life being surgically removed from such a great place.
Epcot’s overhaul is the equivalent to a mall developer that decided to demolish their anchor stores with a very boring plaza that’s gentrified for a redevelopment complex with lower overhead costs!
@@BobPagani or cities like Phoenix and San Francisco. There was a strip mall I went to on vacation that once had big name stores and arcades, then the one in Phoenix was redeveloped into a restaurant plaza with condos on the upper floors. It’s a boring place that’s made for real estate owners.
I'd love to see a comprehensive video focusing on the rise and fall of educational tourism destinations. Early Disney and Epcot was entirely rooted in the idea that entertainment should be educational as well, as were numerous other vacation destinations during the 60s and into the 70s. I remember visiting numerous attractions like Pioneer Village in Nebraska during family road trips in my youth.
Let me say this, you are on the money with your videos. I can't tell you enough how much I agree with you on these topics. Disney has gone the other way, and it's sad.
I love your content. For years it's been difficult to find someone who has genuine criticism on the Disney Parks. Most people I'd seen up until I found this channel pointed out a few things they didn't like here and there, but never to the incredibly detailed degree like you do. As the years went on, I always felt somewhat strange because it seemed like I was the only one with these kinds of issues with the parks because nobody was ever really talking about them (at least not that I could ever find). So thank you so much for these types of videos!
You know what putting up all of these Walt statues reminds me of? How Chef Skinner used Gusteau's image to sell cheap, corporate products and frozen foods after his death in Ratatouille
I love how out of touch Disney leadership is with their IP sometimes. I find it funny that they emphasized that Tiana's has an employee owned co-op, yet Iger went out of his way to condemn the writer's strike.
@@PoseidonEntertainmentThat’s the OTHER thing. They don’t realize how ridiculous they are being
Yeah, Walt wouldn’t want his name or image on what the company is now.
That Walt statue needs to be removed immediately. I went and saw it earlier this year and the location is...terrible. The background is a building obscuring half of Spaceship Earth, and Walt is literally looking out at the worst renovation ever done to Epcot. Multiple times, there was a cast member stationed there to take photos of guests, but barely anyone wanted their picture there so there wasn't even a line. Embarrassing.
You could've showed 54 minutes of modern minimalistic airport B-Roll and I wouldn't have been able to tell the difference.
Airports are actually exactly the kind of place that I think this kind of architecture and aesthetic should exist lol
@@PoseidonEntertainment oh definitely, it's sterile and somewhat calming. I do wonder though if the sentiment of 'this is Disney being lazy' would be the same had Disney done this first decades ago before airports took on this general look. A 'who did it first/got to it first' kind of scenario.
🤣🤣🤣
Damn 😂
Fancy office canteen was the vibe I got the most, at least airports are kind of exciting.
Disney seems so obsessed with immediate revenue, to the point where it feels like NOTHING they're building now has any staying power. The IP-driven attractions are an attempt to capitalize off of hype, which will inevitably die down. Epcot used to be such an antithesis of what parks were typically like, offering incredibly deep and rich experiences. This overhaul is just a reflection of Disney's crooked attitude towards its guests.
It's apparent to many people that Disney is creatively bankrupt at this point. There is almost no "imagineering" going on.
While I would agree that there seems like they don't know what to do with Epcot (what is was meant to be, what it is now, and what they want it to be seems to result in a mish-mash of themes) there is a lot of Disney IP that withstands trends/time. Literally have IP themed things that have been around for decades and some that don't last long (but you don't know until you build it and see if it has legs or not with the customer base).
Even Universal's Epic Universe, whilst IP driven seems to be more considered - either using properties with historical strong appeal (Harry Potter, Super Nintendo, Universal Horror) or a strong thematic appeal (How to Train your Dragon is essentially a viking/dragon land for non-fans of the film series). Plus the execution is incredibly imaginative. I doubt once the MCU fizzles the bland Avengers Campus will have lasting appeal.
@@candidapm2474Totally. I’m not saying IP doesn’t have a place in Disney, in fact, Disney is built off of nostalgia for its IPs. It just seems to be done in a cash-grabby, hype-driven sort of way these days. With rides like Splash Mountain, Tower of Terror, Peter Pan’s Flight, the IPs were introduced to create compelling stories and experiences, not just make the ride a billboard for a certain movie, brand, or streaming service.
@@candidapm2474 Totally. I’m not saying IP doesn’t have a place in Disney, in fact, Disney is built around nostalgia for its IPs. It just seems to be done in a cash-grabby, hype-driven sort of way these days. With rides like Splash Mountain, Tower of Terror, Peter Pan’s Flight, the IPs were introduced to create compelling stories, not just make the ride a billboard for a certain movie, brand, or streaming service.
I think it's insulting the intelligence of children to say EPCOT wasn't interesting to kids. I went as a little kid and was OBSESSED with Spaceship Earth and Innoventions (the science-nerdy part of the park) and the Kim Possible (later Phineas and Ferb) spy games at World Showcase and the Kidcot sections. Disney thinks kids are stupid, and it really shows not just in their more recent films, but in the parks as well.
Yeah, as a kid it was my favorite park for sure. I liked how unique it was
Epcot was also my favourite park as a kid! I had a blast in all the pavilions that no longer exist. I went back recently as an adult with my kids: I was disappointed and the kids were bored 🥲
I agree. It was always my favorite park, I loved The Land and the original Living Seas. I love museums and EPCOT was really like a museum theme park initially.
I was gonna say, I loved old Epcot
Sure, but I'm assuming you were a kid before the invention of the iPad and TikTok. Most kids today don't have the attention span to take interest in anything that isn't loud, colorful, and obnoxious.
Oh, it's themed. Themed to an Apple Store, a Marriot Extended stay and a pretty good-sized Kohls.
A Marriott in the Philippines has more theming than whatever Epcot has
Well said
An overpriced entrance to them for sure 😂😂😂😂
lol good one!
Actually,Apple stores having theming in their layout
if they touch my dusty janky animatronics in Spaceship Earth and replace them with IP slop i swear to god i will vomit blood
Oh, I KNOW that's what Bobby Eager wants to do next. I sincerely don't understand all the record-breaking crowds. There is nothing to see! The rides don't even look interesting. I don't understand why people are still flocking BACK to Disney World if they've been there before with all this IP oversaturation and corporate garbage infesting the parks.
😂😂😂 I bet they will. Get the bucket and washclothes out now.
they wanna make it pixar globe, it will be a slow dark ride that just projects movie clips at every scene.
Spaceship Earth is my favorite ride in the park, and while it could definitely use some love, my favorite part of the Epcot overhaul (even above Cosmic Rewind) is that they scrapped the planned re-theme of SSE.
If they touch Spaceship Earth with intention of anything but some fresh damn paint and updated animatronics (not new, updated) I swear I will riot. I’ve been riding that with my dad since I was 4. I love it still at 30. Why do they not understand, it’s not something you outgrow, and it’s not something kids/adults can’t both enjoy. It totally captured me as a kid and I still enjoy it as an adult. We are smart human beings who aren’t so freaking dull we need IP in every ride thrown in our face to make it fun for us. How much hate mail must Iger receive?????? A solid ride is a solid ride. Chris Pratt isn’t what makes gardians a solid ride. I can’t. Rant over.
They spent 5 years and millions of dollars to build a generic looking public park 😂
Counterpoint: What if public parks have taken so many design cues from Disney over the years that it makes it harder to stand head and shoulders over the "competition?"
On brand for modern Disney, lol
@@ChiefBlueScreen With all due respect that seems highly unlikely. Disney has always been head-and-shoulders above the competition, at least in the past
Damn. Haha facts
@ChiefBlueScreen justifying the digression from the worlds premier theme park to any old public park (with Disney's admission price) is insane levels of disneycope
What's crazy is 90's culture is making a major comeback. If they had made these spaces ultra-tacky/kitschy, with bright colors everywhere, the younger generation would have loved it. And those of us that miss that decade would too.
It would be interesting to dig into *why* this happened. Does it have a lot to do with laying off imagineers and hiring architects from a huge CA firm? I have to assume so.
Also, do the designers in CA just never visit FL? I get that CA has perfect weather all the time but most of the rest of the world does not. The lack of shade structures at new rides and outdoor queues, just baffles me.
It seems like you know the answer, they definitely hired architects from California and Las Vegas firms. It's not that there's anything necessarily wrong with that work, but rather that Disney property is the last place that you should ever find current design trends.
It’s pretty hot in California. Probably due to climate change. Still, a lot of the businesses in my neighborhood didn’t have AC but had fireplaces. They didn’t have ceiling fans either. When it has heat waves in the 90s, even the beach won’t save you. If you easily burn, even a 70 degree day in the summer, which isn’t the norm, could blister burn you if you have lighter skin. I lived in an older neighborhood that had character, but there is a lot of flat rectangular buildings, probably because the heat warps wood and everything has to be earthquake stable…but that is a more modern thing. 80s surf culture for one, is very bright.
The imagineers, who work in California, have always had this issue when developing attractions for WDW. There's never any shade. Toy Story Land and the Tron queue are two easy examples.
It's never anything but sunny here either and we don't even have shade at bus stops. These goons are trained when their brains are young and squishy that the only goal in architecture and design is to keep people moving and making their owners money. Taking a break in the shade doesn't do that.
@@hadrianryan4179 I thought it was more “OMG sun is SO good for you!”. That was my experience. People in CA are supposed to love sun at any cost.
What I have always respected about Poseidon is that he is not hating to hate , he is hating because of a passion for what used to be and what COULD be.
@RandomGamerCory yeah but sometimes people hate on things bc it's profitable on YT & this falls into some channels content I enjoy lol. Poseidon always articulates his opinion as objectively as possible & explains his positions extremely well
golden age fallacy
Nah.
He hates just for the sake of hating.
I get why you say this, but when it comes to a universally known company like Disney, it's almost impossible not to be aware of what they're doing and have an opinion on it. Everyone shitting on Disney for their handling of Star Wars, the MCU, and even their own properties are typically doing it because they don't want these things to be ruined. I can't imagine the parks being a much different story.
@@REfan001do you need a gold star for incorrectly throwing around a term you just learned?
i appreciate how your tone has increasingly gone from "i think disney could turn this around" to "am i going insane?? do you people not see this?? why are you praising these parks??" these past few years. insane how people will tolerate this continual corporatization of everything they love and get angry when people point it out.
Channels like this are increasingly important for lighting a fire under this company and it's increasing laziness. Coupled with the absolutely damning video by Jenny Nicholson on the absolute failure that was the star wars hotel, it makes me wonder if anyone at Disney is listening to this increasing dissent and starting to sweat. I hope so, because it seems we're just getting less and less, and being charged more and more. They aren't even consistently cleaning their attractions (Tron is disgustingly filthy) and apparently the CMs who work there have put in tons of work orders to have it cleaned. Just falling on deaf ears.
as a German I am very oriented in being critical and enjoy this channel very much while most Disney TH-camrs will bend reality to continue praising anything new
The juxtaposition between Universal's creative and rapid expansion with increased levels of customer service and positive expirences, next to Disney's stagnation and increasingly poor expirences for parkgoers...it's just getting sad.
Universal is more inspirational than Disney now, who would have ever thought.
Its crazy how universal listened to their fans in regards to making too many screen rides and they went away with that. And, opted to boost the customer experience and not being afraid to heavily invest in world class rides to be built. Where disney, half asses everything now and takes 2x as long for basic stuff like this at Epcot. In addition, it’s all about how much they can nickel and dime customers while offering less than before. Disney is truly in a sad state!
@@NamesSimbathat’s because Disney is lowbrow and now people are finally seeing it
@@bostongeis5123 UNIVERSAL IS NOTHING BUT IPs. ZERO CREATIVE.
I heard a lot of Imagineers have apparently jumped ship and started working for Universal.
EPCOT becoming an IP riddled mall says a lot about the limited imagining of these suits and how they envision the future. A big dead mall.
Perhaps modern Disney wanted to capture and preserve the spirit of the suburban shopping malls, since they are dying everywhere else.
🤣🤣🤣... If I had been drinking anything, it would be everywhere now😂.
This made my day thank you
Which is supremely ironic to me because malls in America are dying from being strangulated by suburbia and car-dependency, whereas malls in the rest of the world that people can access by transit are doing just fine.
How did Universal make two world class rollercoasters, the interactive fantastic Nintendo world and break ground on a third theme park in the time it took Disney to make a public park. Ik that it’s done to death that Universal is better but I think it’s true now.
It wasn't always this way. But the top dog lost what got it there in the first place, and the scrappy second place was forced to still play catchup to the startling behemoth until it finally eclipsed it in all but brand power.
Modern Disney does not have passion. All the people who care about the story, the art, and the craft were chased out years ago. Disney is now a company run by bean counters and Disney fan artists. We're so far from parks made by people who want to make something new and world class.
When you say fan artists, are you talking about artists who reuse whats already been made to an obsessive extent?
didn’t all the chased out imagineers go to universal instead? 🤔
that probably explains a lot
@@satellafelix4597 Yes. Chapek downsized Imagineering by almost 50% in 2020/2021. There's even rumors that Joe Rhode's resignation was NOT voluntary, and was MANDATORY because he's known as an "expensive" imagineer. But that's just a rumor. But yeah, Chapek's gutting of Imagineering was the single worst move they've probably made. Plenty of others left just because they realized how bad Disney was getting, and plenty of them went to the place that was hiring: Universal Creative. Although, I don't think too many of them are working on Epic Universe because these projects take SEVERAL years, maybe on expansions?
I don't know this for a fact. But I suspect there still ARE people who care about artistry around. But one can't build on wishes (no matter what the marketing says). It takes money to run a project - and they're not getting that. And where they do get green-lit... the project gets knee-capped by cost-cutting.
Nah, even fan artists would've had a lot more talent and passion for their work, than these... people... that they've employed now.
I can't get over how sterile and generic Epcot looks now. Most of these new spaces look like they are ripped right out of an Apple Store and suburban mall. Everything just look so uninspired and generic.
At least outside this central area, its mostly untouched. World Showcase is still Worldshowcase, and the other pavillions are there still. But this central area is just so bland and indistinguishable.
If Disney fans that can’t admit the parks are really shitty rn bc they’re blinded by the Disney name don’t got me I know Poseidon entertainment got me
@@triciaizzo4825 My brother works for the House of Mouse so we get steep discounts on resorts and free park passes. If people are paying full-price for the experience, they have more money than sense.
As an EPCOT Disney Adult this makes me hate the park. I still go but instead of around 1 a month now its once every 4 months. its so sad
lmao😭
I mean I still go, not because I'm happy with the direction they're going in, but because of the great artistry there that still survives, especially in Animal Kingdom. (For now, at least) At least Disney has left World Showcase mostly untouched so far
@@Syrup-n3t Stop looking at a mirror. Then we can talk.
Out of all of the abysmal changes they've made to this once amazing theme park, the absolute worst is changing the music. Thank you for talking about that because it is SO crucial to EPCOT for me and so many others. Truly heartbreaking all around :(
One of the worst things is not hearing the Ellen's Energy theme, which to me, really represented inspirational Epcot more broadly
AGREED, easily the best part! And did it have to change? Was it truly holding EPCOT back? Nope….. just a pointless change that proves how much they don’t understand their history & fans.
I’m upset they changed the music too, but what we have now isn’t actually that bad. It still sounds inspiring and makes me happy when I’m walking into the park. Now what they did ruin was putting that stupid stage next to communicore and have this super loud band playing music, and at night there’s spotlights going everywhere. It completely ruins the immersion. It’s so awful.
The loss of the future world theme is what does it for me, I tear up when I listen to it now.
They took the dancing fountain. Taking the music was just the rotten cherry on top.
All they did was rip out a great fountain. Year down a building, then rebuild half of it and put in a walk through water exhibit, that has issues days after opening
Ignorant and idiotic
Ok but, why does EPCOT look like a community college now if it's not even going to educate?
Spot on thank you 😂😂
The inside of Communicore Hall is the most basic convention center looking thing I've ever seen.
Yea with murals of old Epcot attractions just to tease us and piss us off remembering how it used to be
A place for a lot of people to sit and look at their phones
I guess that's fitting, since EPCOT is so driven by special events and festivals these days.
@@RyRySoup should rename it to Journey Into Imagination (Of Your Own Nostalgia)
I've seen convention centers and hotels that look WAY more visually striking than this
I visited Epcot in 1985 for the first time and was blown away by its outlook on the future and how well conceived everything was. I even remember seeing a sign advertising the upcoming opening of the Spain pavilion (my country). Sadly, the idea was abandoned and it was never built.
If there ever was a physical manifestation of Disney's stunning incompetence in recent years, it's this flower patch they put in Epcot. What a disaster!
Getting rid of those fountains was a big mistake. Brought that area to life
They were so beautiful.
Right? They did this at all the malls in the past too. Took away the character of the spaces.
Those fountains were so iconic that I remember scenes from TGIF shows that took place at them. It's bizarre that the park that was so iconic and treasured that it became the go-to place for a bunch of major sitcoms to spend time at...and they just shit all over it to where you'd not even be able to tell if a show shot some footage there. Nothing stands out besides Spaceship earth now.
Consumers need to start punishing Disney with their dollars. But I know that won’t happen with the influencer culture and hyper Disney fans that do more harm to the brand than good.
The only one im still subscribed to is DFB. I like AJ
The only one I like is Tom Corliss. He is honest and not over the top or obnoxious.
DFB is the worst. Watching that feels like I’d imagine sitting through a timeshare spiel is like.
You don't have to worry too much, Disney keeps doing that for them
@@shepherdjohnsonva that's totally fair 😅
Even in its zombie-like state, 2000s EPCOT is my favorite theme park of all time, as I wasn’t alive to see 80s or 90s EPCOT. Future World, while outdated, had such a nostalgic aura that I can’t even describe in text, and the Fountain of Nations was an obsession of mine. And World Showcase, despite the changes to the Mexico ride was, in my opinion, the greatest land of all time in any theme park. The park of my childhood, while imperfect, exuded innocence, and there was still a lingering feeling of the ideals of the parks early years. That’s gone now. Complete sterility.
1970's Florida child, grew up going to Disney World, remember the ticket system, the day EPCOT opened, spent honeymoon week there and celebrated my own child's 3rd birthday at Cinderella's castle. Haven't been back in over 15 years. The magic is gone. It's all about $$ now because the company is no longer run by innovators. It's run by corporate businessmen who only care about next quarter profit, no matter the cost.
I always knew when you see EPCOT Center fall from grace it was truly over and Disney was just another company in it for the $.
They even fail at that. The stock is still where it was 10 years ago.
Was excited originally Disney world??
The entire Epcot “overhaul” cost a little less than what it cost to build Fantasy Springs in Tokyo Disney Sea… Epcot got robbed
Im betting more on embezzlement
Epcot does not inspire anymore. Its bland and unimpressive. Disney has lost their way.
@@robertruffo2134 You're correct, in a way, I noticed after a few years of going, some attractions weren't 'busy' anymore, very short lines to get in. THAT'S a reason for a change I suppose, when millions of people have experienced something so many times, they're not interested in it anymore and management 'bean counters' realized the truth. The CORE fans don't matter; let's make this a Macy's and $ell, $ell, $ell merchandi$e for profit. I realized early on that in Disney parks, EVERYTHING is FULL RETAIL price or beyond!
It's the reason why I don't want to go to Disney anymore.
U5y😊
Then stop crying and don't go..Simple
@@BAKER22-l4uthey’re lamenting that the place they made childhood memories with their families no longer exists.
They made a once interesting park into something even more boring than what others considered boring in the first place. I went two weeks ago and was amazed at how empty the area was and seeing how much seating was added for what? Not a single person was using the space that was put there. The music they put in was already putting me to sleep and now the whole area makes that feeling even more present. What was once my second favorite Disney park is now a place I can skip and really do not want to visit. Same thing with Animal Kingdom once they get rid of Dinosaur. They need to build upon what is already there rather than take it all away. Epcot has been a great example of this.
It’s wild that despite having practically all the money in the world, Disney can’t utilize it in any meaningful way
All the money in the world? Lol..Disney is in DEBT up to three A$$, because of the massive loans from around the world they had to take because of Covid..Do your research
It blows me away that they're not counting every dollar they have left. 2023 was significant historically: for the very first time, Universal's films outperformed Disney's at the box office. If I was a Disney exec, I'd hand in my resignation and run run ruuuun for the hills...
@@largol33t12 .....I think you underestimate how much money we are exactly talking about between all sectors of the company......
It's almost as if being rich make you a shallow depthless person with no irrevocable worth or sense of life in a society.
They don't want to inspire you to a new, brighter future. That would distract you from CONSUME.
Still miffed they took out the insanely awesome fountain of nations to put in... a planter?!
Did Disney fire all the water feature staff? Hearing that the Imagination Pavilion jumping fountains aren't 100% either is heartbreaking
Meanwhile Epic Universe will have over 50 fountains throughout the parks. I mean honestly, Disney could recirculate their water features, and build more places to cool off and enjoy the sounds of such. But no. Here's some more benches, lights, and ground effects that don't work. Enjoy! 😒
Fountains get expensive to operate. Anything with water gets expensive. Anywhere they can cut costs is what gets changed, including getting rid of those pesky humans who work there. That is why you don't see any shows with live performers any longer.
legit they couldve planted full grown trees there to provide more shade that fountain was so sick
@@RariettyC They had been broken in Splash Mountain for at least a year before they shut it down too.
So they tore down beloved EPCOT rides and put up corporate business park plop art that harkens back to the beloved rides. That is hyper reality squared. Taking an already hyper real space and somehow inverting it, what a distopian nightmare.
One word that should NEVER be used to describe a Disney park is "Corporate"; Identity-less, sterile, numbing, constricting, counter-creative. It's unfortunate that "corporate" has become the only apt descriptor of every Disney park aside from Disney Sea (which I believe the company doesn't even operate anyway) and a few select sections of Animal Kingdom (at least for now)
The parks in Japan have a local company involved, making major financial (and creative) decisions that seem to prioritize quality experiences and innovation over profits.
“Epcot is now just a big Apple Store.” Is really such an accurate comparison.
I would have LOVED a dark ride for Mary poppins. You start in a carousel and then it detaches and you fly over the Mary poppins world.
That would never have happened, although it would be an interesting fit for Fantasyland.
I would love that.
Trackless + all the seam-hiding techniques from all the haunted mansions around the world? Ah, the possibilities!
@@tulinfirenze1990 Tony Baxter right?
How did you come to personally know him?
Spoiler, Iger and Chapek are to blame for a majority of the issues disney has seen recently. Their care for bottomline and shareholders over guests is what has put disney is the downward spiral its been in for years.
Iger more so than Chapek, honestly. Iger caused all the financial issues due to all of his vanity projects, while Chapek is just incompetent and panicking over damage control.
Honestly, wouldn't be surprised if Iger had investments in the construction industry and had companies that he invested in doing all the work, putting money into his pockets.
And the sad thing is it sounds like the theme parks are the most profitable commodity they own currently and seem destined to permanently screw that up.
Did we really think the executives responsible for killing the Disney Renaissance in the 90s really wouldn't do the same to the parks?
The Apple Store detail changed my entire view, it’s so true! Epcot thinks the future is generic and soulless, bring back Frutiger aero 😭
The EPCOT overhaul has been a big mess. There were some stuff I liked, but overall it’s a big mess. It took Disney 5 years to demolish Innoventions West just to essentially rebuild half it, and made exterior boxy, and made the interior plain, removed the Fountain of Nations, gave Mouse Gear, and Electric Umbrella plain interiors, and made the whole plaza look essentially like an office park. It took less time to build all of EPCOT than redoing that entire middle area in World Celebration.
At this point I’d take Wallcot back. At least then I’d still live in the delusion that when the walls came down, I’d be amazed
And they gave us Epcot Forever which helped feed into that illusion.
I like the statue personally, he's sat there where you can sit with the big man and a beer and ask to yourselves where it all went wrong.
If people started taking photos with Walt with beer in hand, the statue would be removed quickly.
@@PoseidonEntertainment I have a buddy who loved holding a cigarette with his bust in Hollywood Studios
@@_harveyd Reminds me of a funny thing I saw in Madame Tussaud's in London. They had an exhibit with all wax figures of evil dictators like Hitler and Saddam. Many tourists would stand in front of "Saddam" and give him the finger or pretend they were punching him or kicking him in the testicles!
My kids renamed "Ellen's Energy Adventure" to "Dad Takes a Nap." I hated that ride, but I loved the length of time it allowed me to sit in an air conditioned environment. 😆
"The original framing of this statue looked as if Walt was sitting on a toilet, which I thought was appropriate symbolism for how he would view the park and company executives today". LMAO. Touché
It should've been such an easy overhaul with adding rides and experiences, but this leadership just doesn't care and it's sad. Disney's been on a decline and it needs an overhaul of leadership and creativity.
How did the stars align so utterly wrongly that a failed weather anchorman became the boss of all things Disney for decades?
You can blame Eisner for buying ABC lol
Great video!!! I cannot state this enough but I miss the Walt/Roy Disney and Eisner/Wells eras of Disney theming. This Communicore Hall looks like a mall and/or hospital food court and I sadly get the impression that it was purposely designed this way so that it could serve as a multi-purpose space for festivals and other events. The entire Epcot "overhaul" is such a missed opportunity and it's going to do serious harm in the long run because the Disney Co. thinks they actually did something here and can move on to the other parks now.
Probably also designed that way so you don't stick around all that long either.
Guardians should have gone goofy and the plot should have been them visiting a Space Theme Park that was so oddly similiar to Disney that Peter is just perpetually confused while everyone else is having fun on rides. Maybe even him Peter think some Theme Park "Villain" was real and you're there to help him, only to see we just destroyed a theme park on our journey.
I am tired of Guardians taking over rides, like the Tower of Terror. :/
@@wildmarjoramdieselpunk6396 I had no idea they did that - that actually annoys me. ToT is fine the way it is. Disney just wants to IP everything with current day stuff that it's ruining what made it special
@@wildmarjoramdieselpunk6396 So much this. I haven't been back to Disney in a decade, and now I probably never will. Why do that when I can go to a place like Knott's Berry Farm, who actually kinda care a little about the customer experience, their roots, and has better food than Disney on average for 100 bucks or less?
I would have given anything to experience attractions like Horizons. Old Epcot was truly magnificient. It's a shame I never got to experience it. Everything had a purpose. There was an ambiance of wisdom, a showcase of humanitys achievements and a positive outlook on the future. The park is just an ip mess now. No theme,everything feels lifeless and magicless.
it was the best. i still miss Horizons 3 decades after it closed. that one hurt the most.
It was just glorious. I went as a kid opening year and a decade later I was there most days working. I knew it was going to change when they took out World of Motion. It hurts to see now. I used to work in the ATT center in Communicore they tore down. And for what? This?!?
@@ocalicreek I love that song. Memories of working unload at Spaceship. I would tune out a lot of the background music when I worked at Magic Kingdom but not Epcot. So many bangers on that loop.
I… yeah. Epcot was always my favorite park growing up. Last time I went the only good things were Mission Space and the international area
@@ocalicreek Same. I lived in FL in the 80s-90s as a kid, and am so grateful that I got to experience Horizons, Spaceship Earth, OG Imagination, Communicore/Innoventions many times over. Epcot shaped me, made me a humanist, a creative, a futurist, an optimist. I wish all kids could've had the chance to see it.
The weird problem is they are so focused on looking to the future with these large plans but when it’s time to deliver, they have nothing to show for it. Like how did some of these projects take nearly a decade? They announce expansions and ideas for immediate profits without thinking how it’ll work out in the long run even though they are planning so far ahead it’s incomprehensible to me.
Despite Michael Eisner’s shortcomings and failures he at least had a vision and saw things through rather than half baked concepts that they just straight up abandon for their bottom dollar.
I like Eisner a lot in retrospect, but I also don't want to give him false credit. California Adventure, Walt Disney Studios Park and Hong Kong Disneyland are pretty significant examples of not seeing things through.
@@PoseidonEntertainment Yeah I certainly agree, he wasn’t an “architect” he didn’t know how to make his vision happen. But at the very least it seemed like he did want the best for Disney even if he had a fantastical view of what was actually going to happen. Compared to modern Disney’s corp greed. Though he did green light Superstar Limo so what do I know 😂
However I will always give more credit to expansion and building from new ideas even if they don’t pan out rather than just retro fitting and demolition especially if it is for far a inferior product (maelstrom to Frozen) etc
I agree about Eisner, nobody is perfect so not excusing his flaws, but he had a style of "grand vision" that approximated Walt Disney much closer than any other company leader. He was a showman, understood audiences and genre and theme. This is a weird take, but even California Adventure is an example of how he lead a big vision -- a park all about California built on a tight budget -- and delivered a fully realized PROJECT true to its goals. Now, it was a BAD GOAL, but it was a complete wholistic result.
Compare that to the tentative, piecemeal way that Disney operates nowadays with individual random projects trickled in and we wonder "is there a plan?", "are the different teams talking to each other?", "will we eventually see an amazing overall vision come together?"
Oh my God, it's the Tomorrowland problem all over again. But it's real. And worse. 💀
It literally looks like one of those mid 2010s sketchup renders
I feel like Epcot was in an impossible situation. I think your average park goer today would be pissed if they spent $150 per person to go to the original Epcot. So Disney felt like they had to do something to "pump up" the experience and they couldn't figure out how to do that and keep the original spirit. So now it's a mishmash of junk that we're going to have to deal with for the next 20 years.
You have said the honest truth that nobody seems to want to admit. The original EPCOT was a snooze fest for the majority of park goers and only appealed to a niche set of people. For most it was one and done and It had to change. Not saying that the way they went about changing it was a good way because it's honestly been a disaster. But let's not pretend that the original EPCOT would be a crowd pleaser today
I haven't been to Disney world in a long time, but I used to really love Epcot. People go to Disney partly to experience a miniature walkable city...but they turned Epcot into the business parks we're trying to escape from.
I think having a “corporate” architect as the president of imagineering, who designs office buildings and retail space is the reason it looks so boring and bland and Apple Store like
The mismanagement of Epcot and the Disney parks as a whole has just been unbelievable. I'm truly appalled. I hate to be such a cynic but I think Disney is too far gone. Its completely botched and the glory days aren't coming back.
Lol..then stop going
@@BAKER22-l4u I’m not going, smart guy.
An adventure through inner space theme would have been perfect instead of Guardians! The preshows could have given layman's explanations of the current state of physics theory and could have been updated based on current research. To a nerd like me, that would rock.
I definitely picture something that is both exciting and educational. Even the "learning is boring" kind of people could probably find value in an epic attraction about flying through inner space.
That’s not how you make money
@theyip1218 For sure that's what current Disney execs think. Elitists think the general public is stupid. Our culture is pretty lame sometimes, but I'd like to give us normies more credit.
I think the most telling part about the new Walt statue is how generic it is.
It's literally just him sitting, this statue could fit anywhere nothing about it is specific to Epcot.
It shouldn't even be a statute of Disney. It should be a statute of Card Walker.
@@TheInflicted They literally just put on here because all the other parks have one too, it's so lazy.
They couldnt even think about a meaningful pose so he just sits there like those statues of Ronald McDonald they used to have at every McDonalds.
They could spice it up with an added caption, “Here sits an immortalized Walt Disney, forever to watch as any and all hopes and dreams he once had wither away into nothing.”
Idiotic
@@jonusaguilar8156 "He wanted an experimental prototype community of tomorrow, so we built him a shopping mall food court of today."
The Japan pavilion was also slated to get a Mt. Fuji ride that would have essentially been its Matterhorn. There's still room to build it.
So they spent all this money to make the park more generic and boring. I think I will stay with the version I saw in 1992 with that futuristic and hopeful look it had back then. Compare to now where it’s a stale kind of boring hospital feel to it
It's refreshing to see an honest and thoughtful analysis from a TH-cam channel instead of 500 "Disney is Woke; Tiana's Adventure Brie Larson Kathleen Kennedy etc" videos. It feels like there are only two types of videos: the ones from people who think Disney can do no wrong, and the kind that nitpick every little thing the company does and push a personal "anti-woke" agenda nobody asked for.
This lazy, rushed project deserves much more scorn than Tiana's Bayou Adventure is getting. At least that ride had some colorful set design and good looking animatronics. But it feels like most of the internet would rather nitpick the hell out of that ride because of the circumstances behind Splash Mountain's removal. It's more "cool and hip" to criticize anything PC or "woke" than it is to actually analyze what Disney is doing wrong. Disney's issues aren't "wokeness," they are laziness.
I’m a conservative who for sure has a problem with some of Disney’s recent political takes but I COMPLETELY agree with this comment! Laziness (and I dare to say greed as well) is the real problem people are experiencing. It is wide-spread across all parks and platforms.
Yeah god forbid you don’t want Disney shoving their agenda down your kids throat
I'd like to imagine an alternate timeline where instead of epcot becoming a billboard it actually adapted to the modern day to what other visions of what the future would look like for example world of energy dives into renewable energy and not just fossil fuels
Been calling the planter in the middle of EPCOT the EPCUSSY because it looks like..... yeah
I thought of that immediately for some reason.
Glad I'm not the only one to notice that...
I believe that Disney is ruining all it's parks right now. They are destroying beloved places, not to introduce something new and interesting, but to shoehorn in recognizable IPs.
Having been in some of the areas, not the full product yet. I can say this, It feels like a medical campus, stale, sterile, and mildly depressing. I don't know who signed off on this, but they should be fired for wasting this money and highlights Disney's and Imagineering's complete lack of vision and leadership. to again put no shade in that area is criminal, and it in fact ruins EPCOT.
It’s funny how I only view the overhaul as “what changed? A new rollercoaster? That’s it?”
“A new first of its kind, revolutionary, huge budget indoor coaster, heralded as the best Disney ride by many who have ridden it?” “That’s it?”
@@jasonbaylor9865no one has ever called it revolutionary. Sit down.
@@jasonbaylor9865 It's a new Space Mountain that uses tricks already seen in Universal parks. Disney paid Vekoma to develop a coaster with turning capabilities, which Intamin had already invented for Universal with Gringotts. The teleportation chamber was also obviously done on a much larger scale in Poseidon's Fury 25 years ago. "Revolutionary" is not a word I would use for Disney playing catch-up technologically.
@@jasonbaylor9865 weird that your comment history shows you're obssessed with defending a company who literally couldnt give less of a shit about you
To be fair, it's a pretty solid roller coaster. But I find it hilarious that Disney put all this money into the theming, including the pre-show, only for it to be so blatantly obvious that people are riding it for the layout due to the fact that guests are _literally trying to push through the doors of the preshow room just to get to the actual ride quicker._
"doesn't meet the disney standard" i don't think disney has a standard anymore
It's baffling to see such shoddy work here, especially when you look at Fantasy Springs just opening in Tokyo DisneySea and how truly mindblowing its aesthetic and details are (and yes I know Disney doesn't run that park but that just furthers my point)
Your idea for Cosmic Rewind would totally work, and if they really wanted to slap an IP on it they could just use Ant Man. Some sort of quantum showcase or subatomic testing kind of thing
Perfect
Epcot used to be my favorite park as a kid. Its a shame how much its changed what made it unique. ):
Disney leadership has spent so much of Epcot's history desperately trying not to age the park that they keep making decisions which only age the park more. Truly the "how do you do, fellow kids" of theme parks
THANK YOU I'm so glad someone else said it. Walt and Roy would HATE what Disney has become. I'm so sick of them.pretending like theyre still holding up to Disney expectations cause the parks are pitiful and depressing in comparison to when I was a kid. I remember when I had a huge dream of being an imagineer.. what wishful thinking I had but now going to the parks just hurts.
I had a College Program that ended right before the Communicore building opened. In the middle of the park there are a bunch of lights on the ground that was part of the renovation... that immediately broke, and instead of fixing, they turned the lights that WERE working into a strobe effect. True story you can go and see for yourself.
You know I gotta say - I didn't mind IP popping up in World Showcase where it seemed to fit the country, mostly because I'm too young to have nostalgia for the rides they replaced. I didn't get it until I started looking at the plans for Animal Kingdom, and how absolutely nothing they have to do with the theme of the park. I understand now how the Epcot people have felt for years.
I do actually like the Xandar pavilion as a conceit for the Guardians coaster. I suspect like you said about Ratatouille, if it were the only one in the park you may not hate it so much. I thought it was a cute attempt to tie things in, but I do agree that making it a Big Bang coaster would have been much better.
ugh. the IP anywhere is what’s ruined the place. back in the day, the only IP you’d see is Figment and before that, just the occasional character meet and greet at the Odyssey. the idea of being able to avoid all that crap was one of the best things about it. they literally had Magic Kingdom and MGM to ram that down people’s throats.
I strongly feel that IP is totally fine in the world showcase as the park has to appeal to kids in some way and i've always felt that the showcase was a separate experience than the rest of EPCOT. However it should not bleed out into other parts of EPCOT where the theming should be intact
Final ad break and I got a Disney ad showing all of the elements wrong with Epcot. Chefs kiss moment. 😂
😂
I love the irony
Only $99 per day!
I don't like theme parks, but I do like logistics and engineering, so you've got something for everybody. I really appreciate how you try to be as fair as humanly possible, there's undoubtedly a lot of very frustrated people behind a lot of these disasters, and I always feel that you give them a fair shake
Spot on.
As I watch, I am angered, distraught, and eventually devastated when considering the previous potential and the consequential waste in Epcot. While costly, this generational mistake should be acknowledged and fixed.
What worries me most is how nostalgia seems to be the unifying theme, not only in Epcot, but resort wide. It's as if there's nothing to look forward to in the future, so a look at the past is what we get. It feels like a requiem.
Thank you for making THE video that gives a voice to so many of us.
None of their parks have direction anymore. Take Hollywood Studios for example. What exactly is it now? It's definitely not about movies. Now it's just another generic park used to showcase IPs like Toy Story and Star Wars.
The new theory of HS is that you are stepping INTO the movie. However , Galaxy’s edge missed that mark because in no movie did we ever see Batuu.
I remember after a visit circa 2012, my brother and I, who grew up going to MGM from the time we were very young, talked about how the old movie studio/"how movies are made" theme just didn't work so well anymore in an era of DVD special features and stuff like that, and we basically figured that it should be converted into Disney's version of Islands of Adventure - keep a central area themed around a timeless "vintage Hollywood" aesthetic, but surround it with lands themed for different properties.
But yeah, looking at how they've approached it so far, yeesh, it's not great. Galaxy's Edge is pretty underwhelming, Toy Story Land is about as generic as it can get, the Muppets courtyard is being left to languish, etc. Meantime, rather than using that park to be the place where they let those movie-themed properties run wild, instead they're slapping them all over the other parks, too, so what is there to make Hollywood Studios feel distinct from anywhere else on property?
Yesterday I saw a post about Disney sycophants being excited over the leaks that DAK's new south American section /might/ have animals. Like. You mean to tell me Disney's ANIMAL KINGDOM just *might* have animals in their encanto/Coco slop? It's so over man
@@uni_meadows That's sad. South America with wonders like the Amazon Rainforest and Galapagos Islands, has the greatest diversity of animal species on the planet and hearing that there might not be animals present at DAK's proposed "Tropical America" is disappointing. At minimum I'm expecting exhibits dedicated to the continent's iconic animals like toucans, sloths, capybaras, Galapagos tortoises, and the Andean condor to name a few.
In fairness, Hollywood and movies in general are dying now too. Maybe the park is just ahead of the curve.
After going to Epcot this year for my birthday I literally said “I think Epcot is my least favorite park in Disney world” and that shocked my whole family
I just think that what happened to the center of future world is awful, the park should have taken more inspiration from the original opening day park rather than putting a picture of the butler from horizons on a wall
When you think back to the innovative and over the top architecture of the original buildings in future world and compare them to the box that is Communicore Hall, you can’t even convince yourself it’s the same company that built them.
Honestly, they should rename the park IP-COT.
Excellent, and well-rounded video!! And YES, originality, and “out-of-the-box” thinking left EPCOT years ago. Buying a relatively recent and semi popular IP to add to your company portfolio, does NOT guarantee any staying power, or emotional connection with fans of either the new IP, or the original brand. Disney has proven this, though they themselves do not recognize it. Epcot has turned into a really expensive “State Fair”, and nothing more.
80s Epcot was the best version and I am glad that I got to experience it! Sad to see what it looks like now...
It feels so dystopian to hear that all the creative, ingenious, educational, and cultural ideas are just being replaced with insert disney ip here. Its like that apple commercial we just got.
Epic Universe is going to win the theme park war. Celestial Park should set the standard for how original theming should be utilized. Its space, astronomy, and it’s turn of the century Worlds Fair aesthetics have sold me.
The statue of Walt Disney is so tasteless and insulting that it's almost unbelievable. It's screaming "here's the man whose vision we are actively disrespecting".
I didn't expect to be actually angry but that statue is disgusting. Obscene
Maybe the point was to make Epcot a giant art piece to comment on the deterioration of society under the burden on late stage capitalism. Who wants a new brighter future when we could have more IP? 😂
Replacing corporate sponsorship and a worship of industrialism (the original EPCOT) with IP might be a slight upgrade, ethics-wise.
Obviously that wasn't the intent but that's exactly what it achieves.
I think you hit the nail on the head about the music - the old entrance loop and Future World theme were absolute gems that did such a good job of establishing an atmosphere of simultaneous grandeur and fun (also not to mention the Future World loop is insanely catchy). I actually enjoy the new music, but I totally agree it fails to create any source of wonder and it does feel generic. Guess I'm using my earphones when I walk around in the park!
Poseidon:im gonna put some dirt in your eyes
While there's nothing in the Ratatouille ride for me (I have non-binocular vision and can't see 3D projections) I feel like it's a better fit than a lot of the newer IP-based EPCOT attractions since World Showcase has been a dining hub since opening day, and a ride set in a French restaurant just feels natural.
I only ever really liked Epcot for the Japanese section of the world showcase. When I was a kid, I got a Pokemon plush there that was otherwise only sold in the Nintendo store in NYC in the US. These days they don’t sell those plushes any more, and the area really just makes me want to visit the actual Japan instead lol.
I used to work at the Japan pavilion at Epcot and oh boy did those plushies sell QUICK! We got 4-6 boxes of them once a month and they're gone the next day. Wonder if it's gotten worse 😅
@@alexnight4144 Not surprised, Pokémon’s a high in demand brand, and like I said at that time those official plushies could only otherwise be bought at the Nintendo store in NYC without going to Japan or buying from resellers online.
I’ve been to Epcot a couple times over the past couple of months (not my choice lol I wouldn’t give Disney a cent if it was up to me), and I haven’t seen any of that merch during that time, just a few Pikachu and Kanto starter plushes, maybe some Gengar stuff, the most commonly produced merchandise. The plush I bought was of Giratina, the mascot of Pokemon Platinum which I think was the current mainline game at that time; still popular, but much more niche. I haven’t seen anything that niche, not even from the current mainline games (neither Sword and Shield, nor Scarlet and Violet). My theories for why are:
The Pokemon Center official online store was created after my childhood visit, providing a way to buy official merch without going to one of the only two physical stores in the US. No need to buy it while you’re at Disney anymore.
Universal cozying up to Nintendo I’m sure does no favors to Disney acquiring and selling Nintendo merch. Though if I understand correctly, the Japanese store is managed independently from Disney? Still, maybe the park is still influencing them to keep Nintendo merch low as it leans towards their competition.
Your calm tone and speech makes the criticism so much more burning. I'm not even in to disney stuff and I just keep thinking "Daaaaaaang, he just said that!"
The biggest problem is that Epcot was designed and built as a "permanent" World's Fair - something that people still remembered and cared about at the time. It did this very well, but as the Internet made all the information on technological advances and world cultures much easier to access at home, world's fairs became obsolete. As corporate sponsors for the educational attractions subsequently dropped away, Disney had to scramble and that has left us a park that basically has two halves that no longer make any sense together.
I agree but futurism is a very popular aesthetic still even if just for looks and some especific features the public doesnt have acess to regularly especially kids high speed chases, flying without a airplane, highly immersive ambients blending of virtual reality and physical sets, a balanced blend of tech and nature and people like intercultural spaces the food to see people from different places together and good attractions based on cultures i think would be popular on the pavillions( even if they should assume they are not the only source the guest will have of the culture and honestly this is a good thng they should lean into that to avoid steriotyping) i agree they had to make some changes and it is not easy but i think both concepts still could work with a proper overhaul if they really wanted to
You're not wrong on the fact that Worlds Fairs don't generate excitement they way they did in the 60s-80s, but I think that's when you maybe put that aspect of it aside and just focus on what the actual topics are that the park sought to explore: whatever the setting, there are *endless* possibilities for the kinds of attractions you can make exploring themes like undersea and space exploration, environmentalism, transportation (would *love* to a move away from cars and into all kinds of transit, but car companies keep sponsoring Test Track, soooo...), hands-on exhibits like a really good science museum, distinct world cultures, etc. It's one thing to learn about those online, it's another to be in a deeply themed environment that utilizes sounds, sights, smells, tastes, and tactile surfaces to really transport and entertain you.
Like, those are HUGE topics, with, again, countless potentially fascinating attractions you can make out of them! No, it wouldn't directly market a Disney movie or Disney+ subscription, but it'd just be interesting and fun, and something no other major theme parks are doing, so it'd be the kind of thing Disney could use to set themselves apart from the rest. Instead, Disney is following now, instead of innovating, and they're just gonna slap more IPs around as band-aid fixes.
Disney definitely could have continued to lean into the educatainment angle of the original Epcot, and guests would still have been happy to come and pay if they did it well. The problem is that the incentive structure changed- If Exxon or United Technologies isn't willing to bankroll an attraction to put a positive spin on their industrial activities, Disney has no reason to not commit more fully into their own corporate synergy- any attraction that doesn't serve as an advertisement for a Moana/Groot/Elsa doll or T-shirt is a wasted opportunity to them. The ride sells the merch, the merch sells the show, the show sells the ride, and any interruption there is a "waste".
@@TheInflicted Amazing how hated Paul Pressler is among park fans, but his whole idea of “calculate the parks based on how much each square foot has been monetized” is now the official credo in Disney management.
World's fairs are by no mean obsolete. They still hold them in Europe and elsewhere, and they are attended by millions of people, in fact more people than before. World's Fairs were not just information - they were and are spectacular experiences. I mean even 200 years ago, they had libraries with information. You are missing the point.
Shade does help in Florida. You just need a lot more canopy. It keeps the ground from getting as hot.
It's funny seeing Disney's most hardcore fans trying to defend the EPCOT overhaul. For five years of construction this overhaul is disappointing. It's generic and probably would have been acceptable if this was just a year but five? For what's not much more than what is typically seen in modern "lifestyle center" style developments? Not even the covid excuse can save them.
But but but COVID they’ll say. Yeah when the parks were closed and they should’ve got even more done faster
You’re so obsessed about how long it took that you’re judging the final product based on construction times. If it was made in 6 months you would’ve said “why didn’t they spend more time on it”
@@jasonbaylor9865 Hello Disney Diehard Fan, out here in the wild. You don't belong here.
Good job missing the point of the comment.
@@jasonbaylor9865I'm obsessed with seeing Disney shills lose that shine in their eyes and accept the reality that Disney is garbage
@@M50A1 Disney does indeed suck at the moment but you also just sound like a miserable person
Disney has really fallen. It shocks me that ANYONE still bothers with it anymore.
I’m Australian, so trips to the US are very few and far between, so we have to make the most of our travels - My whole family went to Disneyworld in 2008/2009ish and loved it, but by the time 2019 rolled around, we all saw the absolute state of it and collectively wanted to visit Universal instead, not even bothering with a single day at Disney, lol.
It’s shocking to see that it’s gotten even worse since then.
The company is broken and has been for years. You get glimpses of the what disney is capable of (Rise of the Resistance) but sadly those are few and far between in the past 10 years.
And it sounds like even that was kinda half-assed with how often some of the mechanisms misfire.
@user-li2yv5je5e No, don't be silly, it's not the sequel trilogy that makes the ride break down. I know the toxic element of the fandom likes to blame the sequels for some crazy stuff, but this is a new extreme.
I don't really like Rise very much. Beyond the novelty of certain elements like going up an elevator or the drop pod with the motion base, there's not really much going on in the ride. It's fun the first few times but I've come to see it as hollow and empty. It's something that doesn't have a lot substance and in my opinion, loses re-ridability.
Great review. I have loved Epcot since my first visit in 1988. It was like no other park - Disney or otherwise. It was charming and fun and magical in its own way. The renovations would be funny if they weren't so sad. The garden center area, the roasting outdoor stage, and the ridiculous Communicore, which reminds me of a hotel ballroom between conventions. It's actually sad to watch the life being surgically removed from such a great place.
Epcot’s overhaul is the equivalent to a mall developer that decided to demolish their anchor stores with a very boring plaza that’s gentrified for a redevelopment complex with lower overhead costs!
Amen, Brother!
@@BobPagani it’s like an eyesore community plaza that has nothing fun to do!
@@Markimark151 Good analogy. It reminds me of a town up near Microsoft HQ I saw years ago. It was clean, sterile, and boring.
@@BobPagani or cities like Phoenix and San Francisco. There was a strip mall I went to on vacation that once had big name stores and arcades, then the one in Phoenix was redeveloped into a restaurant plaza with condos on the upper floors. It’s a boring place that’s made for real estate owners.
I'd love to see a comprehensive video focusing on the rise and fall of educational tourism destinations. Early Disney and Epcot was entirely rooted in the idea that entertainment should be educational as well, as were numerous other vacation destinations during the 60s and into the 70s. I remember visiting numerous attractions like Pioneer Village in Nebraska during family road trips in my youth.
Let me say this, you are on the money with your videos. I can't tell you enough how much I agree with you on these topics. Disney has gone the other way, and it's sad.
I love your content. For years it's been difficult to find someone who has genuine criticism on the Disney Parks. Most people I'd seen up until I found this channel pointed out a few things they didn't like here and there, but never to the incredibly detailed degree like you do. As the years went on, I always felt somewhat strange because it seemed like I was the only one with these kinds of issues with the parks because nobody was ever really talking about them (at least not that I could ever find). So thank you so much for these types of videos!