Showing posts with label Meet Our Neighbor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meet Our Neighbor. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Meet Our Nieghbor - Ryan from Main St. Gazette

Ryan has been blogging, rhapsodizing and reminiscing at Main Street Gazette for over 9 months. That makes him a blogging grandaddy in the Disney blog-O-sphere! When I approached him about doing the Meet Our Neighbor inquisition, he responded with a resounding yes!

He never ceases to entertain and my favorite posts are always the ones about his experiences at Disney with his family--especially the heartfelt stories about his dad. He has created a series about a personal interest for himself. See, Ryan is a pre-school teacher and he has created a running segment called the Young Adventurer. Ryan presents the different areas of the parks on a level that younger children (and their parents) will take to and hopefully inspire them to learn more (and enjoy the parks more).

So, before I make Ryan blush any further...on with the show!

Don't forget our other Meet Our Neighbor posts:

What is your earliest Disney memory?
This is always a tough question for me. Since I lived in central Florida, and my first trip to Walt Disney World was when I was about ten months old, I don't have that first memory that many other children get to cherish. However, I do remember being very young and camping at Fort Wilderness with my dad when a hail storm came through suddenly and we had to take cover in our van. After it had passed various Cast Members (security, managers, etc.) began making rounds through the loops to make sure everyone was okay and if we needed anything. It may me feel very safe to not only have my dad there, but to have Disney looking out for us.



What is your single favorite attraction?
Hands down, this goes to Big Thunder Mountain Railroad. It was my favorite as a child, and the layers of story and detail that I continue to discover only continue to amaze me as an adult.


What is your favorite Disney and non-Disney movie?
My favorite Disney movie is an argument in my house. My wife says I act so much like Peter Pan that it must be my favorite movie, but I have always had special places in my heart for both Fantasia and Fox and the Hound. When pressed, I always go with Fox in the Hound; the friends who don't yet realize they come from two different worlds, the conflicts that arise from their friendship, and how you really feel for these characters as individuals really grabs me. Plus, who can resist the soulful voice of Pearl Bailey.
As for non-Disney movie, this one is easy, Dead Poets Society. I've always been a literary sort, and to feel as if I were one of the Captain's boys and to find that people somewhere understand the emotions of words has, and will always, impress me.




What is your least favorite park?
Ouch, this one is tough! Even though it was my favorite park from the time it opened into my young adulthood, I have to go with Disney's Hollywood Studios. I feel as many people feel in the community, that the loss of the actual studio elements was a traumatic blow to this park. From that point on I feel that it truly lost its identity and has yet to fully recover. Don't get me wrong, it has some great attractions, and I think it is gaining back some of the original spirit with the introduction of Pixar Studios, but it still has a long way to go.



What is your favorite park?
The Magic Kingdom. Epcot and Animal Kingdom have tremendous places in my heart, but the Magic Kingdom is full of stories, both obvious and obscure, and it has always been the one park I must visit no matter how short my time in Walt Disney World is.



Who is your favorite Disney character?
Okay, time to cheat a little. I actually cannot get enough of the cartoons where Mickey, Donald, and Goofy share the screen. They all have wonderful personalities on their own, and work well with other characters like Pluto, Minnie, or Chip and Dale, but they all really shine when they have to interact with one another.



What is your favorite Disney song?
Cruella de Vil. For one thing, it takes a special kind of villainess to have her very own theme song. Mostly though, the song has just enough word play, mixed with a dash of jazz, to keep me humming and tapping my foot all day long.



If you could switch places with any historical or living Disney employee, who would it be and why?
I feel like this is going to sound self-absorbed, especially in light of recent events, but it would have to be Ollie Johnston. I actually haven't talked much about Ollie since he passed away, and I couldn't even find the words needed to express my heartache at his passing on my site, but he has meant so much to me. He designed, animated, and oversaw some of the scenes I idolized growing up, and then as an adult to realize that they all came from the same man truly touched me. Beyond just his animation, however, he was one of Walt's Nine Old Men, and those interactions would be memories to cherish. As well, I share his love of trains, his loyalty, and his sentimental nature, so a switch would seem natural, except I can't draw. My wife is fond of telling me that, in all of the Disney history I have introduced her to, and all of the animators, Imagineers, and characters, she sees more of me in Ollie Johnston than in anyone else. I suppose that explains my affinity for him.





What is your favorite spot at WDW?
The benches along the wooden walkway in Frontierland, just down from the Frontierland Shed, is the spot where you can catch more than a fair share of magic. You can see and hear all of Frontierland, most of Liberty Square, watch the mill on Tom Sawyer's Island, and along the far end of the bend is the Haunted Mansion. If you wait here long enough you can catch the whistle of both the Walt Disney World Railroad and the whistle of the Liberty Belle. To me, this is the perfect spot to take it all in.



What is you're must eat food at WDW?
The Raspberry Schuss at the Boulangerie Patisserie in Epcot. This is the perfect sweet treat filled with layers of raspberry preserves, light cake, a creamy custard/mousse, and just a hint of chocolate. Uh-oh, I'm getting hungry now.


Favorite place to stay at WDW?
Port Orleans: French Quarter tends to be the favored spot to lay our heads recently. Not only is it meticulously themed, with a meandering river, and some tasty dishes, but French Quarter is also very secluded and quiet, making it the perfect hideaway for a preschool teacher.


What is your favorite restaurant?
I always have to stop in at Columbia Harbour House. The home of my once favorite chicken strips, Columbia Harbour House has some of the best views available to any restaurant inside a theme park on its second floor. A second floor that, surprisingly, very few people know about.




What is your favorite place to be at WDW?
Anywhere, so long as I have some family, friends, or both with me. After all, that's what it is all about, right?


What is the first thing you want to do on your next trip?
Check out Toy Story Midway Mania. This attraction appears to be right up my alley, and I cannot wait to take it out for a spin.



What is your favorite fireworks show?
Wishes, just listening to the soundtrack is enough to choke me up. Standing on the walkway to Adventureland, just before the bridge, and allowing the entire experience to wash over me pulls me in every time. Yep, I'm a sucker and a sap!



Where did you develop your love of Disney?
I've talked before about how my dad has taken a lot of heat over my love of Walt Disney World from the rest of my family, but to be fair, my dad was selling the parks and my mom was selling the movies and I was buying all of it. It may sound corny, but the stories, the adventures, the music, all of it has always spoken to me and I cannot get enough.



If you had to choose parks or movies, which would it be?
I would have to choose the parks. The movies have great stories, but they are not all immersive, and eventually the credits roll and the lights come back on. On the other hand, the parks never cease to have unexplored elements, no matter how hard we try to uncover them, and as you move through the parks you actually become part of the stories if you allow yourself to.



Which character do you associate with the most?
Peter Pan, the boy who never grew up. I spend my days exploring and having adventures with preschoolers, I pretty much am the boy who never grew up.



Does any forensic evidence exist linking you to the Kennedy assassination?
All that I am legally able to disclose is that I have been to the Fort Worth Airport once.


What is the weakest Epcot country?
I'm torn between Italy and Germany, but Italy has a spectacular viewing location, when it is available, for IllumiNations. So, I will go with Germany. Unlike other pavilions which lack an attraction, Germany lacks a certain depth. The gardens of Japan, winding streets of Morocco, and the garden paths behind the United Kingdom give each pavilion something more than dining and shopping, which is all Germany, in my opinion, has to offer. Although, I do love the model trains when they are running.



What is your favorite Disney guilty pleasure?
That would have to be what my wife has deemed the Pop Princesses and Phil. I try to stay away from generic pop music, but no matter how hard I try, eventually the Pop Princesses like Hilary Duff and Miley Cyrus get under my skin and I start singing their songs, which usually leads to me embarrassingly purchasing an album (Thank goodness for iTunes now). Also thrown into this group are the soundtracks from Tarzan and Brother Bear, as penned by Phil Collins


What is the most significant architectural feature of WDW?

Spaceship Earth, or more specifically the geodesic dome. It is a modern marvel in and of itself, but to then make the interior a functional environment is truly remarkable.


Who is your favorite Disney Princess?
Belle, for four reasons. One, she is French. Two, she is a brunette. Three, she loves book as much as I do. Four, she is feisty, and I adore that in a woman.



Where do you spend most of your time online when in the Disney-sphere?
The Main Street Gazette has taken away a lot of the time I used to have to free to wander around the Disney-sphere, I didn't realize what a dedication a blog was when I started, but it also give a lot back to me too. Yet, I still manage to check-in with my favorite bloggers (you know who you are), the message boards at both Netcot and Disney World Trivia, and DisFriends every day. (Sorry, Ryan...the correct answer is Imaginerding--all day, all night!)


Would you make any major changes to the current design of any of the parks?
I don't think I have enough knowledge in any specific design element to be able to say what should or shouldn't be changed. However, I think it would have been an intelligent move to have created some sort of temporary path around Mickey Ave. when it was closed, rather than just funnel everyone through Echo Lake to Streets of America, and then over to the Backlot Tour, even if only to assist with the crowd control issues.



You are the CEO and you have to cut one division: film, animation, parks, music, ABC, or ESPN. Where do you start cutting?
Ugh, do I get paid the big bucks for making this decision? I'd have to say music, if only for the reason that I couldn't do without, whatsoever, any of the other categories.


Do you have any money we can borrow or have?
I'll let you know when the check comes in from cutting the music division.


What do you consider the most historically significant or defining moment in Disney history?
Any of the times that Walt had everything tied up in a venture. From Snow White to Disneyland, if any of the endeavors had failed we wouldn't have what we all know and love today. A lot of these were, and still are, called Walt's Gamble, but I take offense to that. He knew exactly what he was doing, and precisely what the public wanted/needed, and gave it to them like no one else was doing. These 'gambles' were the brilliance that led to the ability to create worlds-upon-worlds of magic.


How do you feel about Disney's stance to remove Song of the South and other period specific pieces from its association?
As an educator, I think there is always room to find a way to teach a subject. Song of the South is no different. There are appropriate manners with which to broach these subjects, just as was done with the insensitive cartoons that were sectioned off with a special introduction in the Walt Disney Treasures. Today, with the release of such classics like Saludos Amigos and The Three Caballeros I feel like perhaps there has been a change in thought internally at Disney, and I am cautiously optimistic that we will see Song of the South and other period specific films released in some form.


If you could change one thing about a Disney Movie, what movie would it be and what would you change?
It would be the Haunted Mansion. I love the effects and story of this movie, but I think the tone, a funny-scary movie, is what hurt this film. If this film had been made strictly as a dramatic adventure, using the same general story, I think it would have been a fantastic feature.


Which Disney Hotel would you like to live in for the rest of your life?
The Grand Californian. I love the elements of the Wilderness Lodge, but the fact that I have to board a boat, bus, or car to get into the parks is the one feature that bothers me, at Wilderness Lodge and Resort-wide. However, if I could take the Wilderness Lodge details, which the similar Grand Californian has, with the ability to stroll at my leisure down to the parks, I could stay there permanently. Not to mention, Disneyland has a much more laid back atmosphere, which I would love to have in my neighborhood.


What is your favorite Disney-related book and why?
The answer to this question is really kind of a cop-out on my part, but I have my favorite Disney-on-Disney book and my favorite unofficial Disney book.



For Disney-on-Disney I have to go with the Imagineering Field Guides. These books are full of fascinating stories and features, but they don't give so much information that the average guest would be overwhelmed. Instead, for the Disney geeks out there, I look at the guides as starting point. If a particular aspect is of interest to a reader, there are plenty of resources available to further your edu-mouse-cation.



As for unofficial Disney books, I have to go with David Koenig's Realityland. This has to be the most comprehensive history of the whos, whats, whens, wheres, and hows of Walt Disney World I have ever encountered in one tome. It not only shows the complexity of the construction, upkeep, and expansion, but also shows more than enough of the human elements that make Walt Disney World so, well, Disney.



Thanks, Ryan!



Don't forget to stop by his site and tell him how awesome George and Andrew are, ooops...I mean how great Main Street Gazette is. Yeah...that's the ticket!




Monday, February 11, 2008

Daily Figment 163: Meet Our Neighbor Doc Terminus!

When we approached Glenn about doing a Meet Our Neighbor segment, he was a little unsure. See, he knew that Doc Terminus would want to participate as well, but Glenn wasn't sure if Doc would understand our Disney-related questions. So, Andy and I sequestered ourselves into the Nerdy Boys' Fortress of Solitude. After playing a few rounds of Call of Duty and Halo, we realized that we were supposed to be doing some actual work! After two minutes, we came up with our revised Passamaquoddy questions.

Don't forget our other Meet Our Neighbor posts:

What is your earliest Passa-memory? Living here all my life, my earliest Passamemory is getting my head stuck in a lobster trap and wasn't discovered until 6 hours later during a fish fry...

What is your single favorite attraction? I've always been partial to "It's a Smelt World"... even though the song is repetitive and the smell is repulsive.

What is your favorite Disney and non-Disney movie? Pete's Dragon, That was shot here in town. Non-Disney "Starfish Wars"

What is your least favorite park? MacArthur Park. (it's melting)

What is your favorite park? parallel.

Who is your favorite Pa-character? Doc Terminus... He thinks a lot like me.

What is your favorite Passamaquoddy song? "There's a Great, big Beautiful Tilapia"

If you could switch places with any historical or living Passamaquoddy employee, who would it be and why? Ben Cooper. It was his cat that spontaneously combusted, saving several lives. That story is told often here in town near Christmas time. The best thing is he gets honored for being asleep. I like to sleep too.

What is you're must eat food at PQuoddy? For main dish, Lobster.. for vegetable, Shrimp.

Favorite place to stay at Pquoddy? Sandollar Ellas Castle... I passed out there one night and they didn't notice me until the next morning when they were cleaning out the booths.

What is your favorite place to be at Pquoddy? Fishin' Illuminations Shoals

What is your favorite restaurant? Sand Angelfish

What is the first thing you want to do on your next trip? Get a Sardine Whip!

What is your favorite fireworks show? Easy... FISHES.

Where did you develop your love of Pquoddy? As a youth riding "Snow Crabs Scary Adventures"

If you had to choose parks or movies, which would it be? Parks.

Which character do you associate with the most? Doc Terminus in Pete's Dragon... Obviously.

Does any forensic evidence exist linking you to the Kennedy assassination? Someone shot Toby Kennedy? Dang, I just seen him over at the Oyster Schuck in November!

Would you make any major changes to the current design of any of the parks? More boat slips in front of the major attractions

What is the most significant architectural feature of Pquoddy? Cooper's Light.. Sometimes Called Passamaquoddy Light... We gather there for many of our community events.

What is the weakest Pquoddy country pavillion? Lichtenstein. We can't even find it on a map.

What is your favorite Pquoddy guilty pleasure? "Salmon School Musical"

Where do you spend most of your time online when in the Quoddy-sphere (like a bath-o-sphere?)? SDUPIDFriends.com. Its an online community for chatting. Its an acronym for "Some Dudes Understand Passamaquoddy is Disney"

You are the CEO and you have to cut one division: film, animation, parks, music, ABC, or ESPN. Where do you start cutting? ABC. We don't need no alphabet training in our town.

Do you have any money we can borrow or have? I just borrowed a ruple from Glenn.

What do you consider the most historically significant or defining moment in Pquoddy history? The opening of EPCOT (Enormous Piranha Caught on Troller)

How do you feel about Pquoddys stance to remove Song of the South Seas and other period specific pieces from its association? I just donated my last ruple to the cause.

If you could change one thing about a Pquoddy Movie, what movie would it be and what would you change? Finding Nemo... A happy ending would have both Marlin and Dory filleted and served in a hot butter sauce.


Uh, thanks, Doc! (We think...)

If you haven't spent time at Passamaquoddy, head there now. I would suggest taking something to drink, but you'll just end up spitting it all over you monitor.

(All of the images, except the photos of Doc Terminus, were created by Glenn)

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Daily Figment 162: Meet Our Neighbor Glenn from Passamaquoddy

We met Glenn, from Passamaquoddy, at MouseFest 2007 right before Mike Scopa's MouseFest 101 meeting. Lou introduced us and we were immediately thick as thieves. He refused, er, didn't leave our side till we gave him a free meal at San Angel Inn at the Mexico Pavilion (almost 8 hours later!). Since then, Glenn has become a great friend and we are processing his application to become an unofficial Taylor/Nerdy Boy.

I first heard Glenn on the WDWRadio show right before MouseFest. He did a segment with Lou about the Yak & Yeti restaurant at the Animal Kingdom. After the segment, I high-tailed it over to Passamaquoddy and was amazed by what I found. It isn't the typical Disney blog. Glenn has something truly original and quite humorous! If you want to hear more of Glenn, check him out as part of the MouseFest 2007 re-cap with Lou, Jessica, Jeff and Eric (besides, they talk about us quite a bit during that segment!).

As far as Passamaquoddy, Glenn is just someone who passed through the town once and took note... Doc Terminus serves the town with great medicines, elixirs and lotions all the way from Paris... France... Just don't call him a snake-oil salesman...
We will have our Meet Our Neighbor with Doc Terminus tomorrow.

Don't forget our other Meet Our Neighbor posts:

What is your earliest Disney memory? My first Disney memory is sitting in the family station wagon on the highway, waiting for the single file line of similar station wagons to make its way into the Magic Kingdom parking lot a couple miles away... Christmas 1971... I learned to appreciate the Disney queue at an early age...

What is your single favorite attraction? Splash Mountain... A perfect example of a well-rounded attraction... Great STORY... Great QUEUE... Great THRILL... Great DARK RIDE... Great MUSIC... with a touch of NOSTALGIA referencing the early Disney film, SONG OF THE SOUTH...

What is your favorite Disney and non-Disney movie? Mary Poppins... Great Story... Great Performances... Great Music... and a touch of early Disney nostalgia with the mix of live action and animation... non-Disney Close Encounters of the 3rd Kind. Mostly cause I love the clothing and hairstyles.

What is your least favorite park? Least favorite park would have to be Disney's America... Least favorite because it was never built... And I will not visit it until it is!!!

What is your favorite park? At this point in my life, Epcot is the place... Broad welcoming layout guides me from some excellent attractions and even more promising food options.

Who is your favorite Disney character? Thumper...

What is your favorite Disney song? Candle on the Water (Pete's Dragon)

If you could switch places with any historical or living Disney employee, who would it be and why? Peter Ellenshaw... Not only did he spend time with all the greats, he was left alone while working his matte painting magic... And was on location as well... Not only that, I'd be a heck of an artist...

What is you're must eat food at WDW? Citrus Swirl

Favorite place to stay at WDW? Wilderness Lodge... Beautiful resort with unique environments and great dining options...

What is your favorite place to be at WDW? Section B, Row 1 of Soarin'

What is your favorite restaurant? Whispering Canyon

What is the first thing you want to do on your next trip? Eat at the Concourse Steakhouse before it closes.

What is your favorite fireworks show? Illuminations: Reflections of Earth

Where did you develop your love of Disney?Although I was always surrounded by Disney, it wasn't until I was older and working in corporate America that I fell for Disney. Although their decisions rankle some, I love watching the vibrant company grow and morph.

If you had to choose parks or movies, which would it be? Movies. You can get a dose of Disney while still living a semi-normal life.

Which character do you associate with the most? The Dad from Carousel of Progress... He's high spirited. He likes to sit and talk... Every once and awhile breaks out in song... And likes all the latest gadgets.

Does any forensic evidence exist linking you to the Kennedy assassination? Indirectly. I have used paprika made from the grassy noll.

Would you make any major changes to the current design of any of the parks? Only by adding something more substantial to the left side of the Animal Kingdom so as to define the park shape. Right now it feels nebulous.

What is the most significant architectural feature of WDW? Spaceship Earth. While Cinderella Castle is the most regal, the Sphere is a more complex and amazing achievement.

What is the weakest Epcot country? If there were a war at Epcot, I think Italy would be the first to surrender... They have very little to protect themselves except for a restaurant that hasn't found its identity yet.

What is your favorite Disney guilty pleasure? Eating. Lotsa good food shows unfortunate results...

Where do you spend most of your time online when in the Disney-sphere? Passamaquoddy... It takes a lot of work.

You are the CEO and you have to cut one division: film, animation, parks, music, ABC, or ESPN. Where do you start cutting? Well, if I were CEO, I'd have to cut animation. It is surely the most expensive, least profitable division. But as CEO I can afford to be more idealistic... I'd get rid of ESPN. Although it is massively successful, it doesn't share synergy with the other divisions.

Do you have any money we can borrow or have? I have 3 ruples. I can lend you 1.

What do you consider the most historically significant or defining moment in Disney history? December 21, 1937.. The premiere of Snow White... Walt's folly could have shuttered the studio forever, making the idea of the theme parks irrelevant.

How do you feel about Disney's stance to remove Song of the South and other period specific pieces from its association? I think it is a necessary evil. Disney is a big target for people with agendas... Its harder for those agendas to get traction if controversial pieces are avoided.

If you could change one thing about a Disney Movie, what movie would it be and what would you change? I'd redo the DANCE OF THE HOURS section of Fantasia... I have a gag reflex in attaching the dancing hippos to classic music.

Thanks, Glenn!

Don't forget to check tomorrow for the Meet Our Neighbor with Doc Terminus!

Monday, December 3, 2007

Meet Our Neighbor: Daveland!


I've been a fan of the West Coast Disneyland Old-Timey photos ever since I stumbled onto Gorillas Don't Blog, Stuff From the Park and Davelandblog.

Dave also runs three other blogs: Haunted Mansion, Jungle Cruise and Pirates of the Caribbean. He is also the webmaster for Daveland, which has the COOLEST interactive map of Disneyland that I have ever seen. If you ever have any questions about Disneyland past, present or future, head over to Daveland and check it out. You will not believe the number of photos that he has on his site.

Don't forget our other Meet Our Neighbor posts:

What is your single favorite attraction?
Always a tough one, but I'd have to say Pirates of the Caribbean; used to be the Mansion, but I think (at least at Disneyland), the Bride area revision has kind of goofed up the fun Marc Davis/Rolly Crump humor.

What is your favorite Disney and non-Disney movie?
Favorite Disney movie: The Parent Trap.

Favorite Non-Disney movie: The Wizard of Oz.

What is your least favorite park?
California Adventure. Why would I want to see a bland (and cheaply done) recreation of the state I live in when I can visit the real thing? However, I do have a lot of faith in the new plans for it. EPCOT was also somewhat disappointing; probably because I'd read what Walt's original intentions were for it. They definitely dumbed that one down.

What is your favorite Disney song?
Feed the Birds by the Sherman Brothers.

If you could switch places with any historical or living Disney employee, who would it be and why?
Probably Bob Gurr. He was involved in so many of the cool projects at Disneyland (viewliner, monorail, autopia), and he definitely had a can-do attitude as well as the respect of Walt.

What is you're must eat drink/food at DL?
A Tinkberbell Twist to drink...available at the Fantasia Freeze cart near the Matterhorn. It's a Sour Apple & Sour Watermelon slushee "twisted" together. For food, it's a Monte Cristo at the Blue Bayou (my fave DL restaurant). Pretty much a heart attack on a plate. (Ed. note: probably my favorite Disney food of all time...mmm...Monte Cristo...)

Favorite place to stay at DL?
The Grand Californian. What a place! Probably the one thing of the DCA project that they DIDN'T skimp on! The Napa Rose restaurant inside the hotel is also a favorite.

What is the first thing you want to do on your next trip?
Take the Grand Circle Tour on the Disneyland Railroad. I could just sit on that train and ride it for an hour...great theming at the stations and in between as well.

How did you develop your love of Disney?
Back when I was a kid (I'll try not to repeat this phrase too much), the Disney classic movies would be re-released in the THEATERS (not Home Video!) on a set schedule (I believe it was every 7 years?). So, I was raised on Disney for as long as I can remember. Getting to see the classics in the theater as a little kid is probably my earliest memory. Mom also bought me the classic Christopher Finch book "The Art of Disney" when it came out. What a classic! I read that book at least a million times!

If you had to choose Disneyland or Disney movies, which would it be?
That's a tough one...but I'd have to say Disneyland! It was the culmination of Walt Disney's dreams; EPCOT could have been, but as I mentioned before, it ended up being a bunch of safe and uncreative choices.

Which Disney character is your favorite?
Dopey is my fave; I think he's much smarter than he looks. He knows how to work it; how to get an extra kiss or two out of Snow. The guy definitely has schmoozing abilities.

Does any forensic evidence exist linking you to the Kennedy assassination?
Considering I was born in 1964, probably not; however, I did once discover a yellowed copy of the JFK assassination newspaper headline in my parent's attic; coincidence?!?

Would you make any major changes to the current design of any of the parks?
Heck yes! I would revamp Critter Country and Toon Town. Critter Country is such a waste; I'd rip out Pooh, put the Country Bear Jamboree back and also bring back the Indian Village. How cool would it be to experience the Indian culture like they did at the park originally?!? Or even better yet...put a "live" Indian Village on the Rivers of America where the "fake" indian village is.For Toon Town, I'd let the Trolley start working again (who was the brain trust that bolted it into the ground?!?) add at least one more attraction (Mickey's Fantasis ride perhaps?), and put in a restaurant with Toons as the wait staff.

What is the most significant architectural feature of DL?
New Orleans Square; they captured the real city and removed all the crud! Not a whiff of vomit anywhere! Seriously though...I love the way the streets wind around...it makes it feel much bigger than it actually is.

Where do you spend most of your time online when in the Disney-sphere?
Probably the other vintage Disneyland blogs: http://matterhorn1959.blogspot.com/ and http://gorillasdontblog.blogspot.com/ are the faves. I have to give shout outs to the entire Disney Blog community; what a great bunch of people; I have "met" so many cool people in the year or so that I've been blogging. And George - you are one of the best! Too bad you're on the wrong coast! (Thanks Dave, the check is in the mail!)

What do you consider the most historically significant or defining moment in Disney history?
I would say the 1937 release of Snow White.

How do you feel about Disney's stance to remove Song of the South and other period specific pieces from its association?
Absolutely stupid. Give me a break...what a tempest in a teapot. I would wager that the people complaining about the stereotypes in "SOTS" have probably never even seen it and really need to get a life. If Warners/MGM can continue to make a mint off of "Gone with the Wind," then there's no reason that Disney can't release "SOTS."

Monday, November 26, 2007

Meet our Neighbor: Foxxfur Chapter Three

It is time to wrap up the final installment with blogging neighbor Foxxfur over at Passport to Dreams Old & New.




You can peruse chapter one and two. Don't forget our previous Meet Our Neighbor participants:



> What is the most significant architectural feature of WDW?

The castle, of course. It's the thing people want to see.

> What is the weakest Epcot country?

Despite my instinct to say American Adventure, which I find pedestrian and think the design of the building is horrid (I'm also allergic to the Voices of Liberty), I admit that people like it, so I vote for Italy, which offers a lot of... well, nothing, for everyone. It wasn't even finished, and boy is it obvious! UK has a similar problem, in addition to being an aesthetic outlier, due to the fact that the bulk of the structures are around you the minute you enter it. Since the cash to build that Music Hall behind the park in the back of the pavilion never appeared, it's never really felt whole.

OK, let's be honest. The Africa pavilion SUCKS and needs to be demolished.

> What is your favorite Disney guilty pleasure?

The possibilities! Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo? Monkeys Go Home? The Gnome Mobile? Return of Flubber? What to choose?

I admit I'm at something of a loss on this since my definition of a "guilty pleasure” is rather obtuse, so I'm going to go ahead and say it'd be Maelstrom. The attraction ought to be awful - it has no cohesion, no pace, is too short, has terrible writing, and an awful last scene, but I'm happy to see her every time. For those of you who usually run through the theatre, stay for the movie next time: the nonsense of the attraction is actually extended by the film, where we are told, through Soviet style film syntax, that Norwegians flying a helicopter is the same thing as Vikings rowing a boat!

> Where do you spend most of your time online when in the Disney-sphere? (ed. note--this was a clear cry for attention from Imaginerding.com)

These days I just kind of make the circuit through my blogs and log off, minus an occasional stop at MouseBits or Jim Hill. I can't deal with forums anymore, since the airing of bottomless opinions is pretty tiresome to me by now. I'd much rather be drawing or watching a film or whatever it is I actually do with my spare time. =)

> You are the CEO and you have to cut one division: film, animation, parks, music, ABC, or ESPN. Where do you start cutting?

Jeez. I'd just LOVE to cut ESPN, being an eternal enemy of sports, but I know money comes in there. I'd like to be wise and cut film, since Disney hasn't produced anything good in years, but I understand that some people actually liked whatever than fantasy film with the big cat, possibly a leopard, and oh yeah....that other one with the guy with eyeliner battling Cthulu. Yeah. So that could be a bad idea.

Here's a radical idea: cut the parks and sell them back to WDI. Betcha maintenance standards wouldincrease!

> Do you have any money we can borrow or have?

No, but I do have a basket of unclaimed Halloween candy, mostly mini M&Ms and Mary Janes...

LOL. Aren't I supposed to be the starving artist and you the Lauded Librarian? ;) And Company, of course...

> What do you consider the most historically significant or defining moment in Disney history?

Well I can't really say I have an opinion on the other parts of Disney history since I'm not, nor do I claim to be, an expert on those, but I think the biggest thing in themed design history is probably Great Moments With Mr. Lincoln - the first convincing but fake person ever. That was a real moment where WED showed the world something new.

> How do you feel about Disney's stance to remove Song of the South and other period specific pieces from its association?

Well first of all I understand that I apparently have a thicker skin than most when dealing with racial issues, but I really think the hoopla surrounding Song of the South is grossly overvalued. The animated sequences and James Baskin are wonderful, but the film is a crashing bore. There's live action and animation combined in Three Caballeros also, why doesn't anyone care about that?

I guess I really don't understand what's so terrible about the film. A snotty young white kid learns to be a better person through the cultural experience of the Southern black folks. Uncle Remus is one of the few significant positive black images presented on screen in the 1940's. He may be a fictional stereotype, but he has heart and integrity.

I think it's sad that there isn't a better rounded black onscreen image to cull from in the era; between the extremes of Stepin Fetchit and Paul Robeson, there wasn't a lot. So I understand that the reason to attack Remus is that there is no other representation of that kind of figure around; white characters and white images abound in cinema, but black figures are the narrowest margin until the late 50's. Still, I don't think attacking a generally positive, moral, serious and integral black character when his only other competition is Stepin Fetchit or Eddie Anderson isn't really reclaiming much ground.

Is the world ready for Song of the South again? I don't know. I don't hear much apologizing for Haddie McDaniel's character in Gone With the Wind these days, but then again, that film may finally have been absorbed in the cultural ether of banality from which it emerged in 1939. I was recently watching King Vidor's really excellent 1929 film "Hallelujah!", which is a morality play set in the world of Southern black culture, music and religion. Everyone's still apologizing for that very intelligent and naturalistic depiction of a certain era, so Gone With the Wind may be an abnormality.

I think when Disney finally lets Song of the South out again, the world will collectively go "Oh... that's what were upset about all this time?", shrug, and go on. It really is not a good movie.

> If you could change one thing about a Disney Movie, what movie would it be and what would you change?

I had to think long and hard on this one, but here she is:

When I was a kid seeing Hunchback of Notre Dame in a theater is probably the key thing that sparked my interest in much of what obsesses me today. That first shot, where the camera rushes towards the cathedral through the clouds with the chorus chanting in Latin and the bells tolling, floored my eleven year old self and I still haven't really recovered from the power of that moment. That's probably the film that made me aware that people can *choose* to do things in films, that they don't just happen, and that every moment, especially in animation, is there for a very specific reason.

OK, so that having been said, Hunchback is a film uneasily perched on the cusp of greatness; its' need to still be the 1996 Disney summer blockbuster means the seriousness and artistic integrity of the film occasionally succumbs to nonsense. I don't have a big problem with the Festival of Fools being silly, nor do I have a problem with the Gargoyles being silly, but their song and occasional interjections, especially in the otherwise splendid "Heaven's Light", is too much.

So I say: scale back the gargoyles a bit, and the film is really way beyond Walt's standard. It's probably the most artistically significant film Disney made during its' second major animation era.

Passport Recommended Reading List:

We would like to take a moment and thank Foxxfur for her contributions to our site. We are going to make a formal anouncement about her post on Imaginerding's sister site, The Minute-By-Minute Guide, but we felt like we should tell everyone about it now. She has volunteered to write posts for the blog about how a local sees the Walt Disney World theme parks. We are very excited about this opportunity!

Don't forget to stop by her site and leave her some Disney Geek love.

Monday, November 19, 2007

Meet Our Neighbor: Foxxfur Chapter Two

We shared the first set of Foxxfur's Meet Our Neighbor questions last week. This week we share the second set of questions!

Don't forget our other Meet Our Neighbor posts:


> What is your favorite place to be at WDW?

Ah-HA! Trickier question. On the beach of the Polynesian in the late summer afternoon, World Showcase on a cold winter day before Christmas, Downtown Disney Marketplace very early in the morning and in Caribbean Plaza at dusk.

> What is your favorite restaurant?

Before quality began to slip there I loved Spoodles. Then it was Citricos, still a very special eatery to me. I was utterly bowled over by Jiko earlier this year and went back in short order. The quality of the food and the expertise of the wait staff really staggered me.

Did you know that Disney doesn't know how to brew coffee? Places like Boma and Kona Cafe offer French press pots of coffee for an OK price, but if you ask them to brew the coffee to your specifications, they'll fight you on it. Disney trains the staff to brew the coffee six minutes, which will turn even the finest, lightest roast beans to sludge (by contrast, when I brew coffee in a press pot I wait 3 minutes maximum). So I was staggered when the Jiko staff asked me how long to brew the Kenya AA in the press pot, I asked for what they thought, and they responded *two minutes*. As a result of this Jiko is the only place I've ever had a properly prepared African coffee.

Kona Cafe's press pot is made with a Kona blend with a surprisingly high amount of real Kona in it, one of the most valued beans in the world. It's worth your $6 if you can get them to prepare it right!

> What is the first thing you want to do on your next trip?

To Magic Kingdom? Ride Haunted Mansion.. see Country Bear Jamboree... walk down Main Street. Climb the treehouse.

> What is your favorite fireworks show?

I don't like anything loud so, as you can imagine my favorite fireworks show is one not seen and not heard. I run to Impressions de France if Illuminations is coming up.

Despite this, I cried my way right through Disneyland's Remember... Dreams Come True (those parts that weren't Wishes, of course).

> Where did you develop your love of Disney?

Walt Disney World, undoubtedly. Disney Afternoon helped me get my fix when we were back in Connecticut, especially Tale Spin and Gargoyles and Chip n' Dale Rescue Rangers. Later it was Disney Channel and Vault Disney. Finally I just moved to Florida.

> If you had to choose parks or movies, which would it be?

Umm... is there a third option? Like death or something?

> Which character do you associate with the most?

As I've said, Minnie, when I'm feeling playful and happy. Marian, when I'm feeling romantic or sensual.
The other character I love is SEGA's Amy Rose, who represents, I feel, my more aggressive, competitive side.

They're my girls, and they make me happy.

> Does any forensic evidence exist linking you to the Kennedy assassination?

No, but I've always wanted to restage the Kennedy assassination in the Magic Kingdom: the embankment replacing 20K could be the Grassy Knoll; next to that, between Mad Tea Party and Toontown, is a big green fence... and what's right across the way? The
Speedway.

Actually I once wrote a short film where James Stewart arrives in a courtroom to make the case linking the Kennedy assassination with MAPO and the Hall of Presidents, since the real presidents are actually MAPO robots manufactured by Communists... shot in
Oliver Stone type nonsense-o-vision!

> Would you make any major changes to the current design of any of the parks?

I wish Splash Mountain wasn't in Frontierland, perhaps an aesthetic link between Fantasyland and Liberty Square... no, sorry, that sucks now that I think about it... the best place would be for it way behind Big Thunder, back in Tom Sawyer's wilderness...

I'd also like to make MGM's layout less obnoxiously confusing.

Passport to Dreams Recommended Reading List, Part Two:

Next Week: The last and final chapter--for now!

Monday, November 12, 2007

Meet Our Neighbor: FoxxFur Chapter One

Foxxfur, our neighbor over at Passport to Dreams has agreed to participate in our Meet Our Neighbor series. She had one condition, though.


She wanted us to come up with some new questions to ask. So we did. We thought long and hard. We finally sent her a list of 505 questions that were inspired by watching 101 Dalmatians five times in a row (and lots of Taco Bell).

For those of you not familiar with Foxx's writings, she writes a very academically themed blog looking at Walt Disney World from a design perspective. Sort of.

In her own words:
It is devoted to the serious documentation, study and discussion of facets of the unique methodology of themed "space" as practiced by the Walt Disney company, and the elevation of intelligent thought thereof.
She is also actively pursuing a Ph.D in Disney Studies from any university that will giver her one!

Foxx has gathered quite a fan-base in the Disney online community. Jeff Pepper, John Frost, Lou Mongello and us Disney Geeks have all sung her praises and linked to her articles. She is clearly writing some of the most literate and well-thought articles about Disney today. A lot of comparisons that Foxx makes do follow the film world. She has a degree in film studies and enjoys making short films. Ostensibly, this makes sense--Walt fashioned Disneyland after filmmaking and the Disney parks have followed suit.
Normally, I would point to some of our favorite articles, but I will save that for the end of each posts--sort of like the proverbial weenie.

Don't forget our other Meet Our Neighbor posts:
If you have read any of Foxx's work, you know she suffers no dearth of words or clever phrasing. In that same style, she has responded to so many of our 505 questions, that we need to break the Meet Our Neighbor post into several posts.
On with the show!

> What is your earliest Disney memory?

Goodness… probably watching sundry Disney shorts and films in the basement den of my parents' first house... I know I watched Sleeping Beauty over and over in that room since my parents eventually had to start putting on other tapes once I began reciting the dialogue in perfect synch with the film, facing away from the screen, playing with blocks. This was apparently very creepy, and I believe them.

> What is your single favorite attraction?

I think the finest thing ever built is Disneyland's Pirates of the Caribbean, and riding it the first time was the nearest I'll likely ever come to being touched by God (or Walt, if you prefer). The staggering scope and pace of that attraction is perfection, every inch.

> What is your favorite Disney and non-Disney movie?

Ha. Um..

Well as much as I appreciate Walt's late 30's/early40's work for its' skill and artistry - I recently watched 'Snow White' as research for a piece on Snow White's Adventures and found myself utterly swept away by the emotional paces of the film, a rarity for me - I think Disney films turned out best without Walt breathing down everyone's neck and as such the film which is nearest my understanding of what a film can be is 'The Three Caballeros'. It's sexy, funny, fun, surreal, subversive, and beautiful - I doubt there's anything better in the Disney canon.

Of 'Walt's Babies', I think his finest achievement is '20,000 Leagues Under the Sea', a stagy and hokey but still incredibly joyful film, not to mention a haunting portrait of a genius driven to terrorism and suicide (yes, that'd be Captain Nemo, not Kirk Douglas).

I don't really have a favorite single film anymore, but I will venture to say that I find 'The Night of the Hunter' to be the finest American film ever made.

I think part of what constitutes a reliable barometer for this kind of question is what's the stuff I steal from most in my own films, and that would be:

- F. W. Murnau's 'Faust' and 'Sunrise'

- Orson Welles' 'F for Fake'

- Fritz Lang, especially 'M' and the Dr. Mabuse cycle

- early John Ford

- Lindsay Anderson's 'If....'

> What is your least favorite park?

Animal Kingdom, which I find irritatingly didactic and emotionally hollow. It is, sadly, beautifully executed, so I cannot totally dismiss it. My problem with MGM-Studios is the opposite: the disjointed theming grates my nerves but the park offers me more to do than That Animal Park.

> What is your favorite park?

I don't have favorite parks, despite my ongoing love of Disneyland. I've begun to realize that it'd be more accurate to say I have favorite places, and they include:

- Liberty Square and Caribbean Plaza

- New Orleans Square

- World Showcase

- Orlando's Main Street USA

- The Matterhorn

- inside Grizzly Hall

- The Polynesian

- Wilderness Lodge

- Downtown Disney (Marketplace, please)

> Who is your favorite Disney character?

Despite the fact that my Blogger avatar identifies me as a Maid-Marian-In-Waiting (and I do love her deeply), I find myself moved most by Minnie Mouse. I'm not sure why, but I created a strong emotional identification with her at an early age. It may be because she's literally the female embodiment of the amorphous idea known as Disney, but drawing her has gotten me through many a rough spot in my life. She speaks to me and my sense of self very deeply.

Marian and Minnie are kind of my role models. =)

> What is your favorite Disney song?

Jeez... does "Baia" from Three Caballeros count? If it does, than that's it. Outside of that I say "Whale Of A Tale", "A Pirate's Life For Me", perhaps "How Do You Do". If the whole of "Johnny Appleseed" counts as a kind of mini musical, that always makes me cry.

> What is you're must eat food at WDW?

Well I'm a local now so I don't really have this kind of relationship to WDW food and beverage anymore. I do, however, have certain things I tend to get depending where I am:

Magic Kingdom: Columbia Harbour House Chicken Strips with fries (the biggest, hottest fries at Walt Disney World!), bowl of vegetarian chili, and they have this amazing faux chocolate cake made by this company in Texas. It comes in a little plastic tub and it's not refrigerated to give you an idea of the quality you're getting for your $3.59, but the texture of it fascinates me and I get it every time even tho it's pretty disgusting.

EPCOT: Yakitori House Shogun combination: shredded beef, teriyaki chicken, rice. Most filling thing I've found there. I LOVE the quality and the price of the stuff at Norway's Kringla Bakery - their Veiled Maiden and/or Rice Pudding is dreamy! Aside from those two places my boyfriend and I have fallen in love with the chips at the Harry Ramsden's Fish and Chips shop in the UK Pavilion. And of course, Club Cool. To do it properly, start with Beverley to cleanse your palette, wait a few moments for the bitters to leave your mouth, then try the Mexican apple drink.

MGM: Not here enough to have an opinion.

Animal Kingdom: Be sure to stop by the tea stand outside Everest to try a good loose leaf tea. Prices are good and they have some VERY nice stuff.

Downtown Disney: Earl of Sandwich, of course! Best sandwiches ever.

> Favorite place to stay at WDW?

Wilderness Lodge. <3

Chapter Two coming soon!

Passport to Dreams Recommended Reading List, Part One:

Don't forget to stop by her site and leave her some Disney Geek love. (In other words...leave comments. Us bloggers love them!)

Monday, October 15, 2007

Meet Our Neighbor - Richard Harrison

Richard runs Photos From the Park, a great Disney blog where he showcases the pictures that he has taken at Disneyland and Walt Disney World. His intent is to whet our appetites between trips and to help curb our homesickness for the Disney parks. I've spent a lot of time checking out his pictures over the past months and he has focused on a different angle than most vacation-type photos.

In addition to posting pictures, he also sprinkles facts and tidbits about the attractions, buildings and shows. So, not only do you get a great picture from the parks, but you learn something as well!

This is our fourth Meet Our Neighbor post. The earlier ones were:

Richard supplied the photos for the post.

Take it away, Richard!
  • What is your earliest Disney memory?

My earliest memory is a book of Walt Disney stories given to me when I was six years old. 'Walt Disney's Story Land' opened to me a realm of stories and images still seared in my mind; the family friends who gave me the book also had us over for it a Kodachrome slide show (oh, the 70’s!) and it was the first time I had seen photos from the parks. I was instantly smitten with all things related to Disney parks.


  • What is your single favorite attraction?

Wow; that's a hard choice to make but it has to be Walt Disney's Enchanted Tiki Room in Disneyland. I know, I know: the Tiki birds? Well, for me, this attraction brings together some of my favorite Disney icons: this was one of Walt's beloved ideas; the Sherman brothers are responsible for the music; Adventureland is my favorite land; and, the voice talent behind the macaws in the show and the gods and goddesses outside in the pre-show is an absolute treat. It broke my heart when WDW decided to re-imagine the attraction in the late 1990's but it’s good to know the original still lives in Anaheim. On a side note, I love the fact Walt himself owned this attraction whereas everything else in Disneyland was owned by the Walt Disney Company. Closer to home at WDW the Hollywood Hotel Tower of Terror at Disney-MGM Studios is my favorite overall conceptual ride: everything about that ride's story and theme is fantastic!


  • What is your favorite Disney and non-Disney movie?

My very favorite Disney movie is the one that made Walt Disney World possible: Mary Poppins. In addition to garnering the awards and the box office receipts necessary to launch the Florida project, it also brought together many of the story telling elements required to expand what the post DL parks have become today. As far as non-Disney movies go, it would be a toss-up between The Blues Brothers, The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly, and Lost in Translation.


  • What is your favorite park?

My favorite park is the Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World. EPCOT Center and Disneyland (not California Adventure!) are close seconds but it you gave me one last day to spend in a Disney park it would be spent in WDW's Magic Kingdom, preferably in Adventureland.


  • Who is your favorite Disney character?

While I love many of the characters Disney singlehandedly personified such as Peter Pan, Pinocchio, the Cheshire Cat, Mr. Toad, and others, my favorite Disney character is Donald Duck. Mickey Mouse is the embodiment of Walt Disney but Donald is the everyday man, the one that most people can identify with. You'll never see another character quite like Donald in that he's the one who is free to express all sorts of emotions other characters do not. When Walt and the studios wanted to point out something common to all of us or create an 'educational' cartoon they did it with Donald. Donald in Mathmagic Land and the How to Have an Accident series are some of my favorites.


  • What is your favorite Disney song?

Hmmm; it's a tie between ‘Baroque Hoedown’ from the Main Street Electrical Parade and ‘Step in Time’ from Mary Poppins.


  • If you could switch places with any historical or living Disney employee, who would it be and why?

There are two Disney greats that I'd love to spend a day looking through their eyes. The first is the Disney Legend, Don DaGradi. Don played many roles in the Disney Studios; during his long career he was a background artist, story writer, art director, and wrote screenplays. I think Don's talent was synonymous with many of the Disney greats in that he was able to do many things and did each one very well. The second Disney employee I'd love to see the world through is Randy Thornton. As Senior Producer of Product Development at Walt Disney Records, Randy is responsible for many items but my personal favorite is Randy's work involved with the release of ‘A Musical History of Disneyland’ which is a Disney music lover’s dream.


  • What is your must eat food at WDW?

When I'm in the parks it's a must stop in Adventureland for a Dole Whip. Nothing else will do!


  • Favorite place to stay at WDW?

Hands down, it's the Polynesian. We've been fortunate to spend nights in more than half of the WDW resorts and, in my opinion, this monorail resort is the best. For large groups (and we've had a party of more than 20 before) Old Key West is our favorite. Finally, for nostalgia's sake, the