Anonymous wrote:The Star Wars Hotel was the biggest disappointment imaginable according to all the videos I saw. You were supposed to feel like you were in Star Wars but they staffed the place with college kids wearing what looked like nurses' scrubs and then had half a dozen actual actors roaming around every so often for immersion. But apparently paying those six actors was just too expensive so they scrapped the whole thing! Unreal
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don’t do it once when your kids are the right age you’ll regret it. If you do it a second time you are a fool.
I didn’t do it with my kids, who are now about to graduate.
I have regretted many things in my life, but not spending a fortune on an ersatz saccharine mouse-based vacation is not one of them. We had great trips to Thailand, Morocco, Italy etc instead.
As for adults who go without children, well, they are beyond redemption.
you sound like my delusional, narcissistic relative. When I suggested to his kids that we take all the cousins to Disneyworld their faces absolutely lit up with joy. Then he started to spout this claptrap about how Disneyworld is a filthy American lower class capitalist blah blah blah. His kids looked crushed.
Actually we gave our kids the choice, eg Italy or Disney. I just asked my son about it now (10 years later) and he said he had no regrets about his decision.
I have no problem with people going to Disney. In fact, I prefer it since it keeps all the culturally-impoverished vulgarians penned up in Central Florida where they can’t get in my way. What annoys me is the idea that you are denying your kids by not taking them. Whereas in fact you can have much more interesting non-corporate experiences.
Lol. God you’re insufferable. I know you think you’re being clever, but being a humorolous snob isn’t impressive. The funny thing is that I know my kid is being raised to be cultured and educated so I have no qualms about also enjoying mainstream entertainment!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don’t do it once when your kids are the right age you’ll regret it. If you do it a second time you are a fool.
I didn’t do it with my kids, who are now about to graduate.
I have regretted many things in my life, but not spending a fortune on an ersatz saccharine mouse-based vacation is not one of them. We had great trips to Thailand, Morocco, Italy etc instead.
As for adults who go without children, well, they are beyond redemption.
you sound like my delusional, narcissistic relative. When I suggested to his kids that we take all the cousins to Disneyworld their faces absolutely lit up with joy. Then he started to spout this claptrap about how Disneyworld is a filthy American lower class capitalist blah blah blah. His kids looked crushed.
Actually we gave our kids the choice, eg Italy or Disney. I just asked my son about it now (10 years later) and he said he had no regrets about his decision.
I have no problem with people going to Disney. In fact, I prefer it since it keeps all the culturally-impoverished vulgarians penned up in Central Florida where they can’t get in my way. What annoys me is the idea that you are denying your kids by not taking them. Whereas in fact you can have much more interesting non-corporate experiences.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think you can argue that Disney doesn’t require more detailed planning than most other trips. For example, on a trip to NYC, our plans might be: breakfast at 8 am, natural history museum 10-5, dinner at 6, show at 8 pm. But we don’t also have to figure out, in detail, which gallery of the museum to visit at what time, reserve it, etc. We enjoyed DL and I think it can be worth doing once. But yes, it was a lot of detailed planning.