Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This seems utterly ridiculous to me. They put a ton into building that place and it’s been booked pretty well solid. Can they really be losing money on it? If so, why not raise the rates? I have a family member that went for a milestone present and loved it.
It's definitely not booked solid anymore. After the initial surge/interest they haven't been able to keep it full - even with offering some (pretty limited) discounts.
The venn diagram of people who love Star Wars, enjoy cosplay, and can afford this hotel is pretty small.
If they lowered the price significantly I'm certain they could fill it. It's got to be quite expensive to run, though, given they have lots of equity actors involved in addition to normal hotel staff. So clearly they've done the math and the expense to run it isn't worthwhile at a significantly lower price point.
Anonymous wrote:This seems utterly ridiculous to me. They put a ton into building that place and it’s been booked pretty well solid. Can they really be losing money on it? If so, why not raise the rates? I have a family member that went for a milestone present and loved it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least in part it has to do with DeSantis declaring war on Disney.
Disney effed this one up on their own before DeSantis got involved.
I wouldn’t be so sure. They just pulled a $1 billion office park development because DeSantis. I would fully expect them to continue divesting from Florida.
They might be blaming DeSantis for canceling the project, but the decision to move Imagineering from Anaheim to Florida was a deeply unpopular one with the workers in that division. Nobody wanted to go. Diseny isn't divesting from Florida though. Didn't they just announce they're going to put in a fifth park?
This is correct. There's also been a lot of internet chatter over the last year that it was an employee revolt about having to move to Florida that helped to cause all of the DeSantis-Disney acrimony in the first place, in order to raise enough a stink that Chapek would have been forced to call it off. Instead, Chapek stayed the course. Once Iger came back, he had always planned to cancel the move because he was never in favor of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least in part it has to do with DeSantis declaring war on Disney.
Disney effed this one up on their own before DeSantis got involved.
I wouldn’t be so sure. They just pulled a $1 billion office park development because DeSantis. I would fully expect them to continue divesting from Florida.
They might be blaming DeSantis for canceling the project, but the decision to move Imagineering from Anaheim to Florida was a deeply unpopular one with the workers in that division. Nobody wanted to go. Diseny isn't divesting from Florida though. Didn't they just announce they're going to put in a fifth park?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least in part it has to do with DeSantis declaring war on Disney.
Disney effed this one up on their own before DeSantis got involved.
I wouldn’t be so sure. They just pulled a $1 billion office park development because DeSantis. I would fully expect them to continue divesting from Florida.
They might be blaming DeSantis for canceling the project, but the decision to move Imagineering from Anaheim to Florida was a deeply unpopular one with the workers in that division. Nobody wanted to go. Diseny isn't divesting from Florida though. Didn't they just announce they're going to put in a fifth park?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least in part it has to do with DeSantis declaring war on Disney.
Disney effed this one up on their own before DeSantis got involved.
I wouldn’t be so sure. They just pulled a $1 billion office park development because DeSantis. I would fully expect them to continue divesting from Florida.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least in part it has to do with DeSantis declaring war on Disney.
Disney effed this one up on their own before DeSantis got involved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read besides the pricing issue that the rooms had screens instead of windows and many people didn't like that. It works on the Hogwarts train at Universal, but I don't know if I would like that in a hotel room.
Wait, the rooms are windowless? You can't call it a "room" and it's against firecode.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s probably difficult to keep the cast members. I imagine there’s a degree of burnout working there and then you need to train-up new cast members, which is likely a very lengthy and expensive process. There’s a reason why most Broadway productions only run for 6-12 months max. The longer shows that last forever (Lion King, Wicked, etc.) can insert new actors like widgits, with an endless supply of actors in NYC and LA. They probably need to import talent into Orlando from other places.
They should’ve marketed this as a limited run experience. Maybe 2 years max. That would’ve created a scarcity mindset and they could positioned cast members for a set contract. At $2500/night I’m guessing that service expectations are sky-high. It’s got to be exhausting for the cast.
Very interesting and good point that highlights that staffing would have been a challenge even without the Great Resignation. The lack of good business judgment in this whole endeavor is astounding.
The pandemic upended a lot of businesses that relied on enough people onsite.