You’re SO much better than they are. |
I guess. But forcing my college student to do a “worthwhile” experience someplace she doesn’t want to go in her very, very limited time off seems pointlessly pedantic. If you’re interested in hiking, the Grand Canyon and the Napali Coast are the place to go. If archaeology, maybe Pompeii and Chichen Itza. (All places we’ve been.). But if you’re interested in set design, fictional world building, and engineering …., WDW has a lot to offer. Everyone has different interests in life, and that’s okay! Different strokes move the world. Personally. I think the people that do things like climb K2 are beyond nuts. |
Spot on. There’s so many people on DCUM who don’t understand Theory of Mind. It’s unsettling. |
+1 I’d also like to add that Disney is very accessible to all physical ability levels and is a very easy trip from our area. You could pack a lot into 36 hours. Most DCUM travel darlings don’t offer that ease. |
Why would you need to tip $100 an hour for a service for which you already pay (and what you are paying for is already just the person's time) $450-950 an hour? |
Nothing about tipping is rational. It’s all social norms. And the norm for VIp tour at WDW is either 20% of cost, or cost of an hour tour. The guides get paid the basic disney rate — they are very good, very well trained, and are working for the tips. Your argument is basically like — if you go to an expensive restaurant, why should you tip the server? Because that’s the thing to do. If you are spending that kind of money on a tour but don’t have the money to appropriately tip your guide, who are mostly hard working you folk saving up for grad school or a house, you need to reexamine your priorities. |
Yeah, no. Disney is certainly not alone in this, but they have conditioned people who are paying an insane amount for services that they also need to pay for the wages of the people who are hired to provide the service. Let’s assume Disney pays $20/hr to the tour guide. For an 8-hour tour that costs $3600, Disney will pay something like $200-$300, give or take, to the benefit of the employee providing it. Even recognizing that the VIP tour program has some back office cost, Disney is profiting over $2k from that individual tour. And yet we still need to pay the employee to make sure they can eat?! I can afford a VIP tour and it’s the sort of thing my family would really enjoy, but honestly, the nickel and dining crap ticks me off so much I’d never do it. Does the VP of Parks expect to get paid in tips, or does he demand (and get) a fair pay package? If you value your tour guides as the best of the best, PAY them like it, Disney. |
The people i know who have done it are pretty well traveled. I think some of you just can’t wrap your mind around the idea that if they spend $10K on this they don’t have $10k for something else. There are no tradeoffs. |
That’s a fair decision, provided you decide that you will opt out rather than endorse this kind of pricing arrangement. I just don’t like people that go in planing on stiffing the guide. It is the way it is, is either accept it and act appropriately or don’t. |
Are you my sister? She worked as a contractor for their shows right out of college over 30 years ago and thinks she is the only knowledgeable person about Disney. She also thinks this about everything in life. |
This so much. People aren’t one dimensional and money opens up your world in terms of options. Liking Disney doesn’t mean you can’t also like visiting Bhutan or whatever. |
People just don’t understand how the other half lives. The 10K isn’t breaking the bank, they can still ski, scale mountains, sail, and taking cooking classes in Vietnam. The world is their oyster. |
| We have done them 2x. No desire for a 3rd. If you have young kids it is fun. |
You have described my life, haha. And I'm in my 30s. |
Yeah 10k is very reasonable. Honestly it is the minimum we generally budget for on our vacations, and we are a family of 2 adults and a 5 year old. |