Thursday, August 30, 2007

Daily Figment 53 It's In the Details

daily_figment_02Who doesn't equate Main St. USA with the sound of horses clopping and the smell of fudge from the Main St. Bakery?

It is also the first place you run across popcorn--another park staple! In Disneyland: Dreams, Traditions and Transitions on page 53, is this great little sidebar. It is another example of the amount of detail that the Imagineers put into everything they do.

popcornAlthough these miniature popcorn vendors appear at Disneyland, it should be pretty obvious to most Disney Geeks where they reside throughout the park, in their respective Hot Fresh Popcorn carts.

Can you guess?

All we have for prizes is left-over popcorn from our 1998 trip to Disneyland. What is weird is that the popcorn is starting to turn green. Did I buy it at the Haunted Mansion?

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Hanging out at the Library in Mickey's Toontown at Disneyland in 1998.

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Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Daily Figment 52 MouseFest MGM Style

daily_figment_02MouseFest is getting closer.

Day-by-day (Check out the counter at the far right).

We mentioned earlier that The Disney Geeks will be there in Full Force!

A good friend of the Geeks is Matt Hochberg, over at (do we really have enough space for this?):

Whew! He is almost in more places than Jonathan Dichter.

mgmdotorgAnyway, Matt has written a great piece about MouseFest 2007 over at MGM Studios.org. The article details his plans for hosting events at MouseFest and what newcomers (like The Disney Geeks) can expect. The Disney Geeks will be attending the Star Tours Meet with MGM Studios.org

Here's the down-low, uh, right below:

Friday, December 7, 2007

Time: 2:00 - 3:00pm

Walt Disney World 1994Location: Disney-MGM Studios: Just Outside Star Tours

Host: Matt Hochberg of MGMStudios.Org

What: Have you ever filled an entire StarSpeeder 3000 with all your friends? That's the plan for this meet. We want to fill an entire StarSpeeder 3000. Join Matt Hochberg for a fun ride to Endor.

As a tease, here is the first paragraph of Matt's article (he run's a great site, by the way):

It’s still about 4 months until Mousefest and the temperatures are still in the 80’s but I can’t help but think about Mousefest this year and wanted to tell you what MGMStudios.Org has in store for this annual December gala of Disney Internet fans.  Believe it or not, if you’re planning on going to Mousefest, you may have to start planning now as not to be overwhelmed by the entire event when you get down there.

Get the rest of the article here.

Don't forget to register for the forums and share some Geek love with Matt.

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Daily Figment 51 Contemporary Construction

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The Contemporary Resort is one of the iconic buildings of Walt Disney World. You could show most people a picture of it and they would be able to guess that it is "that A-frame Disney hotel"; "the one with the monorail".

Okay, kids, let's take a look at page 34 of our textbook for today: The Story of Walt Disney World (1973). The topic for today? The modularity of the Contemporary juxtaposed to the sanguine ruminations of the Polynesian.

The exciting innovations Walt Disney envisioned when he said Walt Disney World would be "a showcase to the world for the ingenuity and imagination of American free enterprise," are nowhere better illustrated than in construction of the first two hotels. Here, steel-framed unitized or modular construction has been given its first major showcase.lot All 1500 rooms of the Contemporary Resort-Hotel and Polynesian Village were fabricated by United States Steel at an assembly plant three miles from the hotels , trucked to the building site, and lifted into place by giant cranes (illustrated at the 14-story A-frame Tower Building of the Contemporary Resort-Hotel). Before leaving the on-the-job assembly plant, these light-weight steel rooms had been completely outfitted-walls covered, bath fixtures installed, mirrors in place and lights ready to be "plugged in."

p. 34, The Story of Walt Disney World - 1973 Commemorative Edition: A Behind the Scenes Visit to the Vacation Kingdom

 

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Moving the rooms from the US Steel site to the construction site.

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Working on the exterior of the Contemporary.

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Rooms being lifted into place by crane at the Contemporary.

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The cover of this amazing book. This is a very rare edition that even Scrooge McDuck would covet.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Daily Figment 50 "All that Glitters, Ain't Gold"

daily_figment_50Well, many said we could never do it.

A few said we would end up in a fist fight.

Some said it would never last.

I would like to quote from Lloyd Dobbler:

"You just described every great success story."

Of course I am referring to our fiftieth Daily Figment. That's right, we hit the big 5-0. Now we know how Mike Scopa feels.

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The Disney Geeks Pre-Disney (circa 1982). Check out the shorts!

mousefest2007logoThe other big mile marker is that we are 100 days out from MouseFest. Yes, the Disney Geeks will be taking part in MouseFest this year. We aren't hosting anything, but we will be attending and stalking our favorite blogger/podcaster celebrities. We will also be looking at the possibilities of some heckling.

We are going to be lodging at the Pop Century Resort.

If you're new to MouseFest, check out some of these podcasts:

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Disney Geek George meets the Uber Disney Geek (Lou Mongello) in 2006.
George is on the left and Lou is on the right. They look so similar that it is almost like a reverse negative. Which means what?

Some of our favorite moments from the first 50:
  • George persuading Andrew to eat Strawberries and Cream for breakfast during a trip to Washington, D.C. because George had the same thing at Bonfamilles' at Port Orleans' the year before. Until George's wife pointed out that they were actually eating strawberries and milk. (Confounding Cream, always looking and acting like milk...)
  • Meeting a thousand cool new people (well, the people were not new, but you know what we mean).
  • Our first video post.
  • Finding a way to sneak The Simpsons into the blog. Andrew still thinks this clip is pee-in-your-pants funny (that is a certified Disney Geek term).
  • Andrew eating a whole block of near-rancid cheese and drinking two gallons of kool-aid on a dare. This had nothing to do with the blog, but it will always rank as one of our favorite moments. The few moments after this favorite moment are not so favorite.

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The Disney Geeks discuss the intricacies of the Disney Dining Plan.

Keep those cards and letters coming; Thanks for being a part of our community.

Obviously, you rock!

George and Andrew

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Daily Figment 49 - The Beginnings

daily_figment_02No one will ever really know when Walt first dreamt up the idea of a theme park (which would eventually spawn this cottage industry of bloggers, podcasters and forums). The following is an excerpt from Neal Gabler's biography of Walt Disney. He doesn't challenge the traditional story told by Walt (mentioned in the excerpt by Diane Disney), but offers several other thoughts and ruminations.

It is impossible to say exactly when, but Walt Disney had decided to build a theme park.

Rudy Ising, an old Kansas City friend and one of the Laugh-a-Gram employees, recalled his and Walt's visits to Electric Park, an amusement complex, and how on one of these excursions Walt had told him, "One of these days I'm going to build an amusement park-and it's going to be clean!" Diane Disney thought the inception took place during the Sunday afternoons when Walt picked the girls up from religious services-he never attended them himself-and took them to the Griffith Park merry ­go-round, where they would spend houdl_pre_01rs. "He'd see families in the park," Diane would recall, "and say, 'There's nothing for the parents to do .... You've got to have a place where the whole family can have fun.' " Diane thought he used those afternoons and later ones with Sharon at a small amusement park at La Cienega and Beverly in Los Angeles as a "sort of research project." Roy thought that it had all begun with the model trains. Once Walt began building his locomotive, Roy told an interviewer, "he always wanted to build a big play train for the public," though it was unclear whether Walt built the model trains because he had the park in mind or whether he had the park in mind because he built the model trains. Wilfred Jackson said that Walt had first broached the idea for an amusement park during the Snow White premiere, where Walt had a dwarfs' cottage erected outside the theater as a display. As they walked past it, Walt told Jackson that he wanted to build a park scaled to chil­dren's size. Ben Sharpsteendl_pre_02 said he first heard about a park in 1940 when he accompanied Walt to New York for a demonstration of Fantasound and Walt discussed his plans for setting up displays on a strip of land across the street from the studio between Riverside Drive and the Los Angeles River-"just something to show people who wanted to visit the Disney Studio," Walt said. Dick Irvine, an art director at the studio, remembered Walt coming into the office during the war and describing a public tour of the studio that Irvine felt later expanded into the amusement park. And John Hench, an animator and layout man, recalled Walt in the 1940s pacing out the parking lot and imagining the boundaries for an amusement park there.

pp 483-484, Walt Disney: the Triumph of the American Imagination, Neal Gabler, 2006.

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Daily Figment 48 - Special Weekend Edition

daily_figment_02We wanted to post a special weekend edition of the Daily Figment. We've had some new visitors coming from Jeff's post over at 2719 Hyperion.

Welcome!

And to our regular visitors: we still think you guys absolutely rock!

The reason for the special weekend edition is that I received a belated birthday present from my wife.

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Window on Main Street: 35 Years of Creating Happiness at Disneyland Park by Van Arsdale France

This has been on my Disney Geek wish list for a long time. I didn't get the opportunity to buy it when it was published and like so many other Disney-related titles, the street value has sky-rocketed. My wife had been scouring  E-bay and other sites (half.com, etc) since June to get it for me.

I just got it today, so this is not an official review.

DSC00948A little information about Van Arsdale France.

He was hired in March of 1955 to create a training program for Disneyland cast members, which was called the University of Disneyland.  He hired Dick Nunis as his personal gofer and was eventually brought back to Disneyland by Dick to change the initial training to Disney University. Eventually, the Disney University morphed into Traditions, which all Disney cast members receive now.

He officially retired in 1978 but went to work as a special consultant for Dick Nunis. He was inducted as a Disney Legend in 1994. Van passed away in 1999.

Van's Window on Main St. reads:

Van Arsdale
France

Founder
and
Professor Emertius
Disney Universities

I can't wait to start this book!

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Van in his office at Disneyland

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Van walking to his office at Disneyland

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The back cover of Window on Main Street

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Daily Figment 47

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New Hidden Mickey Alert!

Someone needs to let Steve Barrett, author of Hidden Mickeys: A Field Guide to Walt Disney World's Best Kept Secrets, know about this latest Hidden Mickey.

Actually, before we get into this new Hidden Mickey, I need to preface it with a statement:

It takes true Disney Geek-ness to have a dog with a Hidden Mickey.

Maxine by Connery

Maxine, the Disney Geek Dog.

I can hear the anguished cries from all over the interweb.

"But, George! What Hidden Mickey?"

I am so glad you asked. Typical Hidden Mickeys on animals are usually found like this:

Walt Disney World 1994

Minnie-Moo

Of course, this isn't Maxine. This is the famous (or was she fa-mouse?) Minnie Moo. This picture was taken in 1994 at Mickey's Starland at the Magic Kingdom. A farmer discovered the markings and sold her to Disney. (I really hope he got more than three magic beans.) Minnie-Moo retired to Ft. Wilderness where she passed away in 2001.

Anyway, back to Maxine.

She does have a Hidden Mickey. Are you still not sure what a Hidden Mickey is? This should help (from Steve Barrett's Online Hidden Mickeys Guide):

What are Hidden Mickeys?
A hidden Mickey is a partial or complete impression of Mickey Mouse placed by the Imagineers and artists to blend into the designs of Disney attractions, hotels, restaurants, and other areas.

The most common Hidden Mickey form is the tri-circle Mickey frontal silhouette: three circles that form Mickey’s round head and adjoining round ears.

Since we don't have Maxine's lineage (beagle-sheltie-what?), we can't verify that an Imagineer put the Hidden Mickey there. We can use the Minnie-Moo defense, however; live animals are exempt from the Imagineering clause.

Still need more proof? Okay, here it is...

hidden_maxine

I would love to see Lou top this!

Unless, of course, he has his own Hidden Mickey. If so, I will just have to take his word for it.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Daily Figment 46

daily_figment_02This denial of the seasons opened up unlimited possibilities for importing exotic seeds, trees, plants and flowers and for integrating them into the gardens, homes and workplaces of all who prized them for their beauty. And, as the interest in indoor greenery became more widespread, conservatories came into being. These were places to "show off" the many exotic tropical species. Today, following in this tradition, conservatories, sunrooms, and atriums bring the outdoors of the tropics indoors.

cp_01

The Crystal Palace of the Magic Kingdom was inspired by the magnificent Crystal Palace, designed in 1850 by Sir Joseph Paxton for the Great Exhibition in Hyde Park, London.Its delicate, ballooning outline and pane after pane of diamond-like glass made it seem like more a mirage than an actual edifice. In our Crystal Palace, which actually serves as a garden restaurant, the intent of the conservatory has not been lost. Towering fishtail palms, bright green coffee trees, and other tropical plants bring the garden indoors.

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P. 138, The Gardens of the Walt Disney World Resort, 1988.

I love the Crystal Palace for the outside--the views, architectural details and the scene that is sets from the Adventureland bridge and the Central Hub. I have never eaten there, and I don't have the gumption to, either. Pooh is not very big in this Disney Geeks' household, so we have chosen other venues for food. The Victorian styling of the Crystal Palace is a functional transition point from several areas in the Magic Kingdom, though.

As you leave Main St. and head towards Adventureland, the Crystal Palace sets the tone for what is to come. You get a sense of excitement and as you pass into Adventureland, the feeling of the building changes, as well. The green canopies hide the building and close it off from the world and from your view. You are passing the last remnants of civilization. Your last view of the Crystal Palace, as you cross over the bridge, shows overgrown vegetation and water coming right up to the building. You are leaving what is known and entering the unknown. Because, honestly, you never know how bad the skipper's jokes are going to be. And the badder they are--the better the Cruise.

cp_03

This is one of my favorite spots in all of Walt Disney World. To me, it is the place where the Imagineers got everything right. The sights, sounds and general atmosphere.

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(Disney Geek Grandma, Andy's obviously better half and me. 2001)

Standing on the bridge to Adventureland is a Zen moment. It is something that I look forward to and is a part of every vacation.

Thanks for letting me share it with you.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Daily Figment 45: Book Review - The Art of Disneyland

daily_figment_02Book Review:

The Art of Disneyland by Jeff Kurtti and Bruce Gordon. 2006, ISBN: 1423104595

Released to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of Disneyland, The Art of Disneyland is a visually stunning and historically amazing work. The large scale of the book (almost 11" X 13") forces you to turn the book sideways to enjoy the art. This is by no means an issue. More page space set aside for the artwork is what makes the book truly shine.

DSC00750

Paintings, concept art, layouts and sketches fill out this impressive volume. What I truly love about The Art of Disneyland is the amazing conceptual art. The book starts with Main St and ends with Tomorrowland. And yes, it does include Mickey's Toontown!

The Imagineering roll call is inspiring: Ken Anderson, Claude Coats, Mary Blair, John Hench, Harper Goff, Marc Davis, Peter Ellenshaw, Sam McKim, Herbert Ryman and so many more. Seeing all of this artwork in one place, by so many different artists, is like having a conversation about what Disneyland might have been. But then we actually know how it turned out. Most of the artwork is so true to what was developed, though. If you have ever spent any time at Disneyland, you will enjoy this book.

I've pulled a couple of the images from the book to share. They speak so much better than I do.

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Main St. USA, Center Street, Sam McKim, 1967
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Main St., USA, Coffee Garden, Unknown Artist, 1957
DSC00753
Main St. Snow Scene, Unknown Artist, 1978
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Splash Mountain, Dan Goozer, 1987

My favorite section would actually end up as a fist fight between Fantasyland and Tomorrowland. The artwork for both sections is astounding and they both have the unique honor of being the two lands at Disneyland to have been re-done, so to speak. In the case of Tomorrowland, it has had several minor revisions, including the big mid-1990's re-do. The famous Mary Blair Tomorrowland murals are also reproduced in the book.

The front endpaper of the book presents the Fun Map of Disneyland done in 1957 by Sam KcKim. The rear endpaper has the Fun Map of Disneyland by Nina Rae Vaughn in 2000. They hug the book; reverently and figuratively.

The Art of Disneyland is filled with beautiful paintings, ride concept sketches and amazing bird's eye views of the various lands. At $49.99 retail, it is rather expensive, but you can find it on Amazon much cheaper. This is a great addition to any Disney Geeks library collection.

Monday, August 20, 2007

Daily Figment 44

Birthday Contest: The Lesser Known Geek


Ah yes, I know three of you have been salivating, wringing your hands, and waiting with baited breath for this Geek's answers to the questions John Frost posted on his blog, The Disney Blog. Patience grasshoppers.....
Clearly, John has the best name for a blog out there and has asked us to pronounce it Thee instead of Thuh. For those of you that have followed his work for sometime, you know the quality of work John does. For those of you who are not familiar, finish reading this, cry a single tear, and then go check out John's stuff. You will not be disappointed. He is Geek Approved.



1. Have you ever celebrated your birthday at a Disney theme park? If so, tell us about it. I have not celebrated my birthday at Disney. However, I have celebrated vicariously through The Grumptser over at Grumpy's Hollow. He left a good picture of him and Sleeping Beauty that I get a kick out of. I do feel like everyday is a celebration at Disney, so to have a birthday there would be Grumptastic. I would eat 9 times that day instead of the usual 7, and I would
sing happy birthday to myself in every queue for the entertainment of 'the simpler folk'.
Truthfully, this question did make me fantasize about going on my birthday next year until I realized the temps in mid Florida on May 31st are usually chaffing hot.
(Ed. Note- Chaffing hot is a very technical and scientific term that falls right above Sweaty Pits Hot and right below Ebola Hot)


2. What is your favorite or most useful tip for guests of Disney's theme parks?

My favorite tip is to do less better. For someone who is going to Disney for three days and may not go again for five years, the surest way to invite misery into your trip is to CRAM everything into those few days. Seriously, stop and ask any father who is screaming at his four year old about how he doesn't deserve this trip why he is yelling and he will tell you his kid is an spoiled brat. The real issue here is that dad has kept a four year old out in 98 degree heat for 15 hours a day. Not to mention that both almost suffocated on the bus ride home after Wishes. The kid can't enjoy being yanked by the arm every time he wants to stop and soak in some mind blowing attraction with the dad yelling "COME ON GUSTAFF, WE STILL HAVEN'T SEEN TEST TRACK YET!!!!".
Please slow down, smell the turkey legs, breathe deeply, and enjoy each thing you do. You will have a better overall experience, and in turn an better overall vacation. And Gustaff will have two arms the same length...


3. What is your favorite Disney theme park attraction or show and why?
Splash Mountain ain't no ordinary mountain... It reeks of bear butt and chlorine.

I love Splash Mountain. Disney gives us amazing attractions that submerse you in fantasy and give escape at the most perfect levels. Splash Mountain does this as well as any attraction at Disney.....FOR TEN MINUTES! It's lengthy ride time, coupled with the Zip-A-Dee Lady payoff (which no other log flume ride in the world bothers with, basically, you drop and you exit), and the amazing buildup with the ultra kinetic water and screams combination you see and feel on approaching the attraction make it tops in my book. Albeit, it is a very wet book from the Laughing Place. I could go on and on about this attraction but I will save it for the tome I am currently penning entitled "The Laughing Place and You: Six Minutes to Tighter, Firmer Abs"

I am hoping the abs part will sell it.

Happy Birthday John's yet to be named four year old!

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Daily Figment 43

daily_figment_02John Frost, over at The Disney Blog, has initiated a birthday contest for all of his readers: answer the questions, put a link to his blog and e-mail him when it is posted. Of course, the Disney Geeks have answered the call (even though Grumpwurst beat us to it here and here)!

Oh, yeah. You can win one of three really cool prizes.

  1. Have you ever celebrated your birthday at a Disney theme park? If so, tell us about it.
    Nope. I have not had the opportunity to visit during August. But I will celebrate each member of my family's birthday as the years pass.
  2. What is your favorite or most useful tip for guests of Disney's theme parks?
    Read. Whether it is your favorite guidebook (ding), blog, or forum. Read, read, read. Also, don't hesitate to contact people that write blogs and post in forums. They are people just like you and me, but with a little more theme park experience. (I should add that you should listen, too. Lou; Eric & Dan; Nathan, Tim and Jackie O. But reading is way more important and it is fundamental.)
  3. What is your favorite Disney theme park attraction or show and why?
    I will need to answer theme park attraction and show. Splash Mountain is my favorite (with the Haunted Mansion and Star Tours coming up close). Splash is one of those perfect rides. Great theming throughout (even the queue), incredible music and wonderful show elements. Plus, everyone remembers the first time they saw the Zip-A-Dee Lady. Talk about the ultimate finish.
    For shows? Gosh. I really love Mickey's Philharmagic but the winner is Muppet Vision 3D, flippers down. Why? Best. Pre-show. Ever. Seriously. Muppets and Disney. Probably the only thing better is Star Wars and Disney. Oh wait; Star Wars, Muppets and Disney. Now, that would rock.

tdblogo

 

By the way, if The Disney Blog is not on your daily Disney to-do, it should be. John writes one of the best Disney blogs for news, original content and links to other great Disney-related blogs. You have no idea how excited I was the first time I made it into one of John's Morning Roundups. Besides, he is super nice!

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Daily Figment 42

daily_figment_02Go Disney Channel!

Disney's Mouse Is Ratings Big Cheese


Anthony Crupi


AUGUST 14, 2007 -


Disney Channel racked up its fifth consecutive ratings win, topping all basic cable networks in prime time with an average delivery of 3.06 million viewers.

According to Nielsen Media Research data for the week ended August 12, the Mouse continued its two-year streak in the kids 6-11 and ‘tweens 9-14 demo, averaging 1.29 million and 1.07 million viewers respectively.


The non-ad-supported Disney Channel notched eight of basic cable’s top 20 rated programs last week, posting its biggest numbers with the Friday night premiere of the theatrical Ella Enchanted, which drew just under 5 million viewers between 8 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. The net also continued to draw a crowd with its original series, Hannah Montana and The Suite Life of Zach & Cody.

MediaWeek

So, even though I am no where near this demographic, it is a good sign for the Walt Disney Company. The Teen and Tween demographics are two of the hottest properties out there. Snagging those two is great for the company; not only for advertising dollars and brand recognition, but for future growth.

I still wish that the Disney Channel would start re-running the old Vault Disney shows, though.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Daily Figment 41 - Puzzle Watch

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puzzle_logo

My sons and I bought this torture device, er, puzzle for mommy.

I don't remember if it was a Christmas, birthday or just because present. I just remember seeing the puzzle and convincing the 8 year old that he and mommy would have fun with it.

A word of warning: I am not a puzzle aficionado. I can hardly stand the chunky cardboard puzzles that my children played with when they were toddlers. You know, the puzzles with only eight or nine pieces. So, this one is a Mickey photomosaic puzzle, and I quote from the box: "Thousands of miniature Disney Movie Frames combine to make one awesome portrait!" Well, alright-ey, then! Thousands. Thousands of tiny little pieces. Each with a different scene from a Disney film. I will stick to reading books, thank you very much!

She's been working on this in her spare time (about once a month--ha!) and we think that she started in February 2007.

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This picture is from last night. I would have given up long before I even opened the box! I will keep everyone updated on the progress. I can't wait to frame it and hang it somewhere in the house. But not in our Mickey Mouse bathroom.

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Daily Figment 40 - 2719 Hyperion

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Matt Hochberg from MGMStudios.org and the WDW Today podcast has a great article and audio interview with our neighbor and good buddy, Jeff Pepper.

As if you haven't heard his voice enough on the WDW Radio Show, you get another 5 minute interview on the page as well. Jeff explains the reason he chose 2719 Hyperion for his blog title and how he churns out daily blog posts.

My favorite part of the audio interview? When Jeff humbly mentions that a year ago he was listening to all of these great Disney podcasts and now he is rubbing shoulders with all of these amazing people. Especially, how excited he is to share his knowledge and meet all of these wonderful Disney people.

Jeff has also posted on his own site about the name 2719 Hyperion:

If you are a Disney Geek (and I know you are) you check Jeff's blog several times a day.

Go there--now-- and introduce yourself. Say, "Hot Dog!" or leave a complimentary "Oh Boy!" And whatever you do, don't say anything bad about The Three Caballeros or Goofy. Or you will be visited by the Disney Geek's hit squad, also known as Grumpwurst. He will make you an offer you can't refuse! Many a weary traveler has been lured to Grumpy's Hollow by the Enchanted Rose only to be met by the chant "Grumptastic" over and over again. We really don't know what it means, but we have ordered t-shirts. And buttons. And pantaloons. And those really cool red pants with really big yellow buttons.

MouseFest, here we come!

Monday, August 13, 2007

Daily Figment 39 - Becoming a Disney Geek

daily_figment_02Becoming a Disney Geek.

Lesson 1.

Read.

I know, it sounds easy.

For a book professional like myself, I do spend a lot of time reading. I also spend a lot of time helping people find the book they need or want.

You don't have to just read books: blogs, Internet forums and Disney-related websites. Didier over at Disney History has created The Ultimate Disney Books Network.

Didier has broken the site into three areas: All Books, Books by Language and Books by Theme. In the Books by Theme section, he has created further delineation with ten sub-areas. Any beginning Disney Geek will want to make their first foray by checking out some of the titles in the Books About Disney Parks section.

My recommendations for Disney Geeks that are just trying on their ears:

For the Disney Geek that has been there and done that:

For the Uber Disney Geek (approaching Lou Mongello level):

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Daily Figment 38 Happy Birthday














HAPPY BIRTHDAY GEORGE!!!!!!

Happy Birthday to Disney Geek Biblioadonis, AKA my brother George, AKA "MOM, George won't stop looking at me!!!!!"

I have been fortunate enough to share this passion for Disney with George, who is an endless resource of enthusiasm and knowledge. I am very happy to say that he has served as a peer AND a mentor, and I am proud for all that he has accomplished (insert single tear here). I will have to say that if it came right down to it, I could probably kick his butt though. The emphasis is on probably, because you can NEVER trust a Master of Librarian Sciences. If all else on this planet fails, George, we will always have the Dewey Decimal system to fall back on.

For those of you out there that read his posts regularly, here are a few things you should know about the birthday boy:

  • He has read two books a week, every week, since he was fifteen years old. I won't tell you how old he is, but that is more than 2,200 books.
  • He is an excellent mixed martial artist. I used to consider myself the athletic one in our family (I think George probably would agree with that). A few year ago, George began taking a mixed martial arts class. He had been in the class for a year when it happened. On Easter at our Mom and Dad's house three years ago, he pushed me around the house like I was a rag doll with two left feet and a broken backbone. I joined the class the next week and George and I have been 'fighting' ever since.
  • George and I went to see Prince in concert in 1984 (Purple Rain). I was 10. George was not much older but he acted 21. We scored beers and girls and had a great time. This is completely true, except for the beers and the girls.
  • George played in a band called Vertigo Joyride in college that toured all over the East Coast and was featured in a big screen film Immortal. Of course, it was crazy to see him and his long hair (yes, I said long) on the big screen.
So raise your glass and share in a birthday salute to my OLDER and smellier sibling, Bilioahontas. Thank God my birthday is more than nine months off.

Friday, August 10, 2007

Daily Figment 37

daily_figment_02The news has traveled pretty quickly around the interweb: the Disney-MGM Studios will officially be re-named the Disney Hollywood Studios as of January 2008.

I love this change for several reasons:

  1. It harkens to the early days of filmmaking. Not only historic Hollywood, but early Disney animated films. There is a certain glamour associated with the name.
  2. Hollywood Boulevard, Sunset Boulevard and Echo Lake are already perfectly themed for the name change.
  3. Choosing this name over the Pixar and ABC compilations that have been bandied about makes a lot more sense. After all, Pixar and ABC are both owned by Disney. Would choosing Pixar be regarded as calling the park The Disney-Disney Studios? Choosing Pixar as a name would have branded the park a little too narrow-ly. Especially since Pixar characters (which are actually Disney characters) have made it into all of the parks.

dhs_post

So, what do you think about the change? I think that this re-aligns the park. Sort of like what they did to Tomorrowland in the late 1990's. The Hollywood that never was. Disney can move away from the idea of the park as an actual working production studio and into the theming of a movie and television theme park.

dmgm_ded

Photographs courtesy of the ETM Photo Explorer.

Gorillas Don't Blog about Plastic Houses

Check out Major Pepperidge's post about an April 1956 Popular Science article about a plastic house.

What's so important?

It just happens to look exactly like the Monsanto House of the Future from Disneyland. Major poses some interesting questions and presents scans of the article. Gorillas Don't Blog offers pictures and slides of Disneyland from long ago. Seeing guests in suits and dresses walking around a theme park is worth the price of admission. Seeing the differences that 50 years will make in a theme park is mind boggling.

Thursday, August 9, 2007

Daily Figment 36 - Best. Ride. Ever

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Best. Ride. Ever.


I experienced the Indiana Jones Adventure at Disneyland for the first time in 1996. I was able to do it again in 1998. On both occasions, I rode it multiple times. Hands down, it is the best total ride experience that I have ever had. Splash Mountain and the Haunted Mansion still reign as my favorites, but the Indiana Jones Adventure is the most amazing. The queue is so long and so well themed that it actually takes you about 10 minutes of walking just to reach the ride vehicles. The queue actually changes as you progress into the Temple of Mara. You delve deeper and deeper into the ruins and the excavation. Artifacts and sprung traps line the walkways and walls. Eventually, you make it to the ride vehicles. The queue for Pirates in Orlando could almost be compared to Indy.

Almost.


Explaining the ride is difficult. Music, sounds and danger! You hear the heroic film score and you squeal around corners. Blow darts whistle pass your head.

Snakes. Why'd it have to be snakes?


Snakes, why does it always have to be snakes...


I hate snakes, Jock! I hate 'em!


The Temple of the Forbidden Eye.


Looking at the concept art, you get a great feel for an absolutely perfect Blue Sky ride design. Looking clockwise from the left, you see: the Indy ride vehicles, the Disneyland train, the Jungle Cruise boat and the proposed runaway mine car attraction.

indy_collage

So, not only would we have the Indy ride, but you would have seen a glimpse of it from the train and the Jungle Cruise. Can you imagine the jokes from the Jungle Cruise Skipper. "Yeah, so if you don't start laughing now..."; "My last crew ended up working somewhere in here...when they didn't laugh at my jokes!", "We're not out of danger yet--this is headhunter territory. Remove your jewelry please. The natives have been complaining of indigestion."; "See that guy, he'll whip you into shape!"

And a really cool mine car roller coaster with loops!


This artwork and a lot more can be found in The Art of Disneyland. Full-color illustrations showing the genesis of attractions and rides at Disneyland. A must for any theme park enthusiast or collector.

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Daily Figment 35 Happy Birthday!!!!












In honor of the Disneyland Haunted Mansion's 38th birthday tomorrow, I thought I would pay homage by pointing out one of the treats of opening day in 1969. Disney partnered with Carnation to create themed sundaes called I Scream Sundaes. This Disney Geek loves only one thing more than Doritoes: Ice Cream. So raise your spoon and consume a shreiking sherbert in a cryptic cone with whacko whipped cream and a chilling cherry on top to one of the most complete attractions ever built.


For some amazing backstory, great concept art, and comparions to the other Haunted Mansions around the Disney world, check out Jason Surrell's The Haunted Mansion: From the Magic Kingdom to the Movies (Disney Editions, October 2003).

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Daily Figment 34 - Book Review: The Disney War

Media Review


There has been so much talk lately about the rekindled flame between Disney and Pixar with some even referring to Lasseter as 'Uncle Lasseter'. I am a true Lasseter believer but have so much caution for coronating him after reading Disney War, by James B Stewart. The references to Eisner being the second coming of Walt early in his tenure at Disney are prevalent in the media at the time. Certainly the buzz on the internet recently has often fallen in the vein of John the Saviour. This book serves as the grandest of cautionary tales, carefully laying out the history of failure at its most visible levels.

Those who know me well know I have been obsessed with this book recently. At over 590 pages, it felt like a relationship. Admittedly, one of my longer relationships.

In the past few months I have read five or six books about Disney, ranging from biographies to field guides, and none of them has captivated me like this book. James Stewart displays an amazing ability to make the non-fiction seems like fiction. Chapters flushed with facts and details are steadily crafted in a digestible and organized manner, sometimes a problem for non-fiction works. Most of all though, the sheer volume of insider information that you feel privileged to read is overwhelming. In the end, the book serves as a scathing indictment of Michael Eisner. Stewart completely reveals the arc of Eisner, painting him early as the genius that saved Disney, and then as any tragic Shakespearean character, as one who lets power intoxicate judgment. The following passage illustrates some of how deep this feeling of coronation ran in Eisner as Stewart recalls a conversation he had with him in his final years as CEO and Chairman:

After some more conversation, and just before we leave for dinner, Eisner gets a pen and a piece of paper. "Disney is a French name, not Irish," he reminds me. "Now look at this." He writes "D'Isner," "Deez-nay," as the French would pronounce it, "is Eisner without the D."

Uh, Mr Eisner, Walt is tired of turning over in his grave. Would you please refill your prescription for crazy pills and stop playing Boggle with the alphabet to tie yourself to the Disney family? Thank you....Oh yeah, back to the book.

The book is divided into three sections: The Wonderful World of Disney, The Disenchanted Kingdom, and Disney War. No explanation needed to reveal the general tone of each section. This is the simplest way to describe the arc of Eisner's career. As a testament to Stewart, I felt each section was more addictive than the previous. The deep, detailed accounts of his relationships with Katzenberg and Ovitz dominate the landscape and present him as neurotic and uncontrollable.

What made the deepest impact was the pointed way in which Stewart revealed the flaws of Eisner as he became more entrenched in defending himself. Earlier Daily Figments have pointed to some of the brilliant things he did, such as saving the Imagineers from the chopping block. (Ed. note- Splash Mountain is the Thriller of attractions) The following passage does the opposite, truly showing how Eisner failed to consider any threat to his throne:

In the course of renegotiating the Disney relationship with Pixar, Roth presented Eisner with a proposal that would both solve the issue of succession (Ed note- Eisner would not name a President to succeed Wells and therefore, no successor to himself.) and address the faltering performance of the animation division. It was admittedly bold: Disney should buy Pixar (as it could have done years earlier) and merge its own animation division into it. "Make it all digital," Roth urged. "That's the future." As part of the deal, Eisner should make Steve Jobs, Pixar's chairman, president of Disney. "Jobs is a darling of Wall Street," Roth argued, "And you'd get John Lasseter, the greatest creative mind to ever come out of Disney."

The idea went nowhere.

At any time in the buildup to Eisner's ousting, any person could see the merit in this idea. Eisner could have written himself another ten year contract based on this move alone. But as all tragic characters falter, so goes the phrase, "L'etat, c'est moi".

I have heard other Geeks say they have hesitated on reading this as they are uncomfortable with the Disney dirt. Please, read away as this book only made me understand the depths of stewardship we have in protecting Disney. As brother Roy campaigned for "Save Disney" to out Eisner, he was exercising his ability to shepherd Disney back into the greener pastures of creative content that had become barren under Eisner in his later years. I know you will enjoy this read, although you may be sad when it ends its relationship with you. After 590 pages, this is how you treat me???? Another relationship ended.



Monday, August 6, 2007

Daily Figment 33

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In honor of our 33rd Daily Figment:

DSC_2048Club 33 at Disneyland is a very special and exclusive dining establishment. It is located somewhere in New Orleans Square at Disneyland. It is difficult to find, unless someone shows you where to look. The door color is actually a special color created by the Imagineers. They have two that they use to hide doorways and show buildings (like Soarin' at Epcot): a special green and gray. Apparently the gray disappears and the green is simply a color that most people don't even notice. Club 33 is also the only place at Disneyland to serve alcoholic beverages.DSC_2045

How do you get in?

Well, besides taking the In Walt's Footsteps Tour that Ray over at Grumpy's Hollow took, you have to purchase a membership.

What?

Yes, purchase a membership.

Wikipedia has a great article about the Club 33 membership. In a Disney Geeks nutshell:

  1. The wait list to buy a membership is 14 years (and actually closed in April 2007).
  2. $25,000; 10,000; or $9,500. This does not include annual fees.
  3. Free admission to Disneyland on the day of a Club 33 reservation.

DSC_2046Even if you take the tour, you only get to see the lobby and elevator area.

Another mystery is the actual name of the club. No one really knows, or talks about, the origins of the name. Rumors abound, though. Is it a Free Masons code? Is it alcohol related? Or did it have something to do with the original backers?

Will we ever know?

DSC_2052

Will we ever get to dine at Club 33?

Can I think of any more questions to ask?

Well, not right now.

Thanks for sticking with us through 33 Daily Figment posts. We have really enjoyed bringing them to you and sharing our love of Disney stuff (that is a technical term, by the way).

All of the photos on this page are courtesy of Ray from Grumpy's Hollow. You can check out all of his posts about his recent Disneyland and Disney's California Adventure trip. Make sure to leave a comment while you are there. He is really not as Grumpy as his namesake!

Sunday, August 5, 2007

Daily Figment 32

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A media review of The Imagineering Field Guide to the Animal Kingdom at Walt Disney World.

Now that you have finished laughing (or crying):

Saturday, August 4, 2007

Daily Figment 31

daily_figment_02mexico_02Past Time

In attempting to capture the spirit of the Mexican people, Imagineers turned their attention to the origins of that spirit. The resulting pavilion is derived from, elements of each of the major pre-Colombian civilizations--the Mayan, the Toltec, and the Aztec--as well as from the Spanish influence that has shaped their architecture and design.

The pyramid you enter to visit Mexico is a composite of Mesoamerican motifs dating back to the 3rd century, emphasizing the Aztec style. Once inside, you find yourself in a gallery showcasing Mexican arts and crafts. The Sun Stone--or Aztec calendar--marks the way to the Plaza de los Amigas (Plaza of Friends), an open air marketplace brimming with activity. This market and the adjoining restaurant are placed in a nighttime setting in order to be more authentic to the operating hours of a typical Mexican market. The Spanish-tinged Cantina de San Angel is based on the San Angel Inn of 1692.

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--p. 78, The Imagineers,The Imagineering Field Guide to Epcot at Walt Disney World

Photos courtesy of the ETM Photo Explorer.

Bothan Spy Report

One would hope that Honor Hunter's Bothan spies didn't die for this information.

Honor has another great Blue Sky Alert. This time it is about Disneyland and Disney's California Adventure. If half of what Honor writes actually comes true, I will be splitting my time between Disneyland and Walt Disney World.

E-tickets, hotels and DVC. Oh my!

Friday, August 3, 2007

Daily Figment 30 - Dick Nunis

The Windows on Main St, USA at the Magic Kingdom in Walt Disney World are a source of pleasure for any Disney Geek. How many normal vacation goers ever take a look up (or as Jeff says, "Look down!") and even notice the names, slogans and tributes.

Walt started the tradition of honoring and thanking cast members that helped to create Disneyland. The tradition moved to the other Magic Kingdom style parks throughout the years.

The first window I wanted to look at was the one for Dick Nunis. His resume reads like a dream. Can you imagine being part of the Disney theme park experience from the beginning? Or being the responsible for over 50,000 cast members? I can dream it.

He was hired in 1955 by Van France and the two of them began what would become the Disney Traditions training that all cast members received. In 1961, he was promoted to director of park operations. Walt tapped him to work on Project X (what we now call Walt Disney World) and in 1971, he was named executive vice-president of Disneyland and Walt Disney World. 1980 saw him promoted to president of the Outdoor Recreation Division (volleyball, anyone?) .

He retired on May 26, 1999.

44 years, exactly.

My question to you? What do you think the Turkish Baths stands for?

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Daily Figment 29




Please please please watch this. It is so Grumptastic!

It's only two minutes of your life and you will probably watch it more than once.

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Daily Figment 28

EPCOW

(Experimental Prototype Community of What We Thought Tomorrow Might Look Like in 1982 but Undershot and Actually got 1992 at Best)


With so much attention being placed on the developments at Epcot recently (i.e., the wand coming down, the addition of Nemo

to The Living Seas and the updated Three Caballeros attraction), I thought I would add my three cents. [ed. note-that's one better than two.]

With so many positions and so many of them in direct opposition, even the majority of the posters out there that reside on either side of the fence would agree that Epcot is still fun, even though its mission may have become diluted or watered down. The intent of these ramblings is to bring us back to the center of the target; a collection of quotes and other media that will paint a broader picture of Epcot. To help us see this Disney Geek's opinion of Epcot's missed mission and therefore, its missed opportunity.

Let's start with the obvious, an excerpt from a speech written by Marty Sklar and delivered by Walt Disney in 1966, outlining the tense of Epcot. Even if you have read this a thousand times, read it again and judge where we are today in the life of the park in the context of this concept introduction speech.

Epcot will be an experimental prototype community of tomorrow that will take its cues from the new ideas and new technologies that are now emerging from the creative centers of American industry. It will be a community of tomorrow that will never be completed, but will always be introducing and testing and demonstrating new materials and systems. And Epcot will be a showcase to the world for the ingenuity and imagination of American free enterprise.

Obviously you can make an argument whether or not these directives are being accomplished, but I would say that Epcot has strayed far from these concepts with the current changes at the park. While the mission above seems to be pretty clear, even in some of Disney's own literature that came out later (Walt Disney's EPCOT Center, 1981), the mission becomes a little more diluted. The focus of the passage below seems to move more towards entertainment:

While entertainment will continue to be a highly visible attraction of Epcot Center, it is the underlying educational value of Future World that is its most important contribution. Exciting, amusing, and fascinating as each pavilion is in itself, it is but an element of a project that may well be viewed as a springboard to our discovery of new worlds.

1966--no mention of entertainment as a focus. 1982--EPCOT seems to be about edutainment more than being a true city of tomorrow.

My main problem is that the city of tomorrow as envisioned in the 80's was outdated in the late 90's. I have visited Innoventions five times in the last 11 years and the last truly innovative thing I saw there was HD TV on display in 1996. I have made it a point, as I visit there, to look for the next new technology that blew my mind like HD did back in 1996. Since then, nothing.

Don't get me wrong, I LOVE Soarin'. Who wouldn't? But is it a fulfillment of the Walt quote above? See, I think we are missing the point with all of this stress about the wand coming down and the Nemo overlay. It is certainly worth discussing, but for goodness sake, we are taking our eye off of the ball. The next person that argues that Mission: Space is an example of partnering with American free enterprise to showcase our ingenuity for the world is going to be flogged sixty times with a churro. Cool ride, yes, but innovative, not really. The centrifuge has been used since the 1700's in scientific applications and has been used in the same application as Mission:Space for over forty years to train astronauts and pilots. Epcot has long missed the point. Until Disney frees itself of the nostalgia crunch it is currently in with this particular park, Epcot will never be what Marty and Walt envisioned in the sixties. It lived up to its original honus for approximately 12 years until the future the Imagineers dreamed of quickly passed them by.

Can we rip down attractions and put new ones up every time a new technology is invented? Of course not, but that is why the centerpiece of the park is the cradle surrounding Spaceship Earth...INNOVENTIONS. (Note to Imagineers: Sonic the Hedgehog video game is not innovative anymore)

My view of Epcot is colored to the point that I will always love it, no matter what future direction it takes, but how has missing the mark colored the park for the average ticket buyer? Watch this and laugh:



At first this upset me a little because I love Epcot so much that it made me feel defensive. But really, though, no really....this is so funny and so exaggerated that it reeks of the truth. Oh how I pine for what it must have felt like to walk through Epcot in 1982 and be blown away by Disney's vision of the future.

Blow our collective minds Disney. We all know you can do it and we all have had it done at some point in the past. For the sake of Epcot and not Epcow, do it now.