• About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • DMCA
  • Sitemap
  • Write For Us
Friday, February 26, 2021
Daily illinois - USA | News, Sports & Updates Web Magazine
  • Covid-19
  • News
    • All
    • Education
    • Politics
    • Sports
    • World
    Pelosi mistakenly refers to Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson as 'Don Johnson'

    Pelosi mistakenly refers to Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson as ‘Don Johnson’

    What's wrong with UVa? Explaining the defending champs' fade before Selection Sunday

    What’s wrong with UVa? Explaining the defending champs’ fade before Selection Sunday

    Top 20 New Hampshire Union Leader RSS Feeds

    Markets rebound as inflation worries fade – business live

    Tucker Carlson Suggests QAnon Doesn't Exist Because He Can't Find Its Website

    Tucker Carlson Suggests QAnon Doesn’t Exist Because He Can’t Find Its Website

    Tiger Woods completed one of sport's greatest comebacks. Can he do it again?

    Tiger Woods is awake and recovering from surgery after serious accident

    US aviation body orders urgent probes of some Boeing 777 engines

    US aviation body orders urgent probes of some Boeing 777 engines

    Sangamon Auditorium - PHOTO COURTESY UIS VIA YOUTUBE/UISTUBE

    Letters to the editor 2/18/21

    Retired NYPD cop and Queens 'Republican Messiah' arrested in Capitol riot probe

    Retired NYPD cop and Queens ‘Republican Messiah’ arrested in Capitol riot probe

    Naomi Osaka Beats Jennifer Brady To Win Australian Open

    Naomi Osaka Beats Jennifer Brady To Win Australian Open

  • Science & Tech
    • All
    • Mobile
    How will NASA's Perseverance rover engineers pilot first helicopter on Mars?

    How will NASA’s Perseverance rover engineers pilot first helicopter on Mars?

    Sir David Attenborough narrates the "exhibits" in this AR iPhone app

    Sir David Attenborough narrates the “exhibits” in this AR iPhone app

    There's a secret code in the Mars rover's parachute

    There’s a secret code in the Mars rover’s parachute

    Spotify reveals HiFi tier, 80-country expansion, new exclusive podcasts

    Spotify reveals HiFi tier, 80-country expansion, new exclusive podcasts

    ‘Follow the Sun’ is a new Mac app to automate brightness and color temperature of HomeKit lights - 9to5Mac

    ‘Follow the Sun’ is a new Mac app to automate brightness and color temperature of HomeKit lights – 9to5Mac

    Democrats ask cable and streaming providers about their role in spreading misinformation ahead of Capitol riot

    Democrats ask cable and streaming providers about their role in spreading misinformation ahead of Capitol riot

    Bradley Voytek

    The Brain’s ‘Background Noise’ May Be Meaningful After All

    This Android's under-display selfie camera isn’t great, but it's a sign for future phones

    This Android’s under-display selfie camera isn’t great, but it’s a sign for future phones

    'Diagrams' Mac app updated with palette customization and M1 Macs support - 9to5Mac

    ‘Diagrams’ Mac app updated with palette customization and M1 Macs support – 9to5Mac

    Portland Apple Store ready to reopen after nearly nine months - 9to5Mac

    Portland Apple Store ready to reopen after nearly nine months – 9to5Mac

  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    What’s playing at the drive-in: 'Minari,' 'Tom & Jerry,' a Billie Eilish doc and more

    What’s playing at the drive-in: ‘Minari,’ ‘Tom & Jerry,’ a Billie Eilish doc and more

    Dennis Stroughmatt's Cajun-Creole Trio entertains at Hill Prairie Winery near Oakford this Saturday evening for a Mardi Gras celebration.

    February finals

    Woman drinking coffee and using laptop at home

    How To Stay Focused While Working From Home

    One Good Thing: Netflix’s Ginny & Georgia is so much more than a Gilmore Girls rip-off

    One Good Thing: Netflix’s Ginny & Georgia is so much more than a Gilmore Girls rip-off

    How did 'Drivers License' become the song of 2021? By exalting in the power of teen-girl melodrama

    How did ‘Drivers License’ become the song of 2021? By exalting in the power of teen-girl melodrama

    null

    Disney Plus: Everything to know about Disney’s streaming app

    'Superman & Lois' flies back to the Man of Steel's 'Smallville' roots

    ‘Superman & Lois’ flies back to the Man of Steel’s ‘Smallville’ roots

    Actress Mara Wilson empathizes with Britney Spears being sexualized as a child

    Actress Mara Wilson empathizes with Britney Spears being sexualized as a child

    'Drivers License' made its 'SNL' sketch debut and Olivia Rodrigo is 'shaking'

    ‘Drivers License’ made its ‘SNL’ sketch debut and Olivia Rodrigo is ‘shaking’

    Best running earbuds and headphones to use for 2021

    Best running earbuds and headphones to use for 2021

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Travel
    Shockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok

    Shockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok

    L.A. Affairs: Swiping for Mr. Right while freezing my eggs

    L.A. Affairs: Swiping for Mr. Right while freezing my eggs

    This sweet image, taken by South African photographer Brent Stirton, shows Itsazo Velez, the director at the Lwiro Primates Rehabilitation Centre in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), introducing two new rescued baby chimps to the juvenile enclosure. This image has helped Stirton earn shortlisted status in the wildlife and nature category. He said: 'The chimps will be closely monitored by the keepers who live with the juvenile and baby chimps 24/7 in their enclosure and at night in their night dormitory. These chimps are all rescues and come from the bushmeat trade in DRC after their mothers were killed for bushmeat. The babies are often taken for sale and sometimes for pets. As a result, many of these chimps have lived lives of isolation, suffering and cruelty'

    Sony World Photography Awards 2021: Stunning images from shortlisted professional photographers

    pA tailored look from fallwinter 2021 Armani by way of New York.p

    Angelo Urrutia Picked a Hell of a Year to Launch His Brand—and He Wouldn’t Change a Thing

    New research reveals British pig farming is reducing carbon footprint

    'That Vegan Teacher' says TikTok ban won't silence her following petition, controversies

    ‘That Vegan Teacher’ says TikTok ban won’t silence her following petition, controversies

    Feed your moths and hide your trousers: the expert guide to making clothes last for ever

    Feed your moths and hide your trousers: the expert guide to making clothes last for ever

    L.A. Zoo reopens for the second time during the pandemic

    L.A. Zoo reopens for the second time during the pandemic

    These Beautiful Photos Celebrate Diversity In The Most Joyful Possible Way

    These Beautiful Photos Celebrate Diversity In The Most Joyful Possible Way

    Nestlé’s Cookie AI Looks Creepy As Hell, But Could Improve Your Baking

    Nestlé’s Cookie AI Looks Creepy As Hell, But Could Improve Your Baking

34 °f
Chicago
30 ° Fri
39 ° Sat
38 ° Sun
33 ° Mon
No Result
View All Result
Daily illinois - USA | News, Sports & Updates Web Magazine
No Result
View All Result
Home Lifestyle Travel

Commentary: COVID took away Disneyland’s annual pass program. How to bring it back better

by Staff Writer
January 24, 2021
in Travel
Reading Time: 7min read
0
Commentary: COVID took away Disneyland's annual pass program.  How to bring it back better
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Last March, during one of the final times I dined out before the pandemic shutdowns, I threw down my Disneyland annual pass along with my debit card when the bill arrived. It was an instinctual action, one that would ensure I would receive the 15% discount that came with my $1,449 Signature Plus pass.

Related posts

This sweet image, taken by South African photographer Brent Stirton, shows Itsazo Velez, the director at the Lwiro Primates Rehabilitation Centre in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), introducing two new rescued baby chimps to the juvenile enclosure. This image has helped Stirton earn shortlisted status in the wildlife and nature category. He said: 'The chimps will be closely monitored by the keepers who live with the juvenile and baby chimps 24/7 in their enclosure and at night in their night dormitory. These chimps are all rescues and come from the bushmeat trade in DRC after their mothers were killed for bushmeat. The babies are often taken for sale and sometimes for pets. As a result, many of these chimps have lived lives of isolation, suffering and cruelty'

Sony World Photography Awards 2021: Stunning images from shortlisted professional photographers

February 26, 2021
L.A. Zoo reopens for the second time during the pandemic

L.A. Zoo reopens for the second time during the pandemic

February 24, 2021

Except I wasn’t at Disneyland.

The bartender at the downtown Los Angeles restaurant jokingly asked if the Disneyland pass was my idea of an extravagant tip. Little did we know that its value would soon be rendered useless.

The Walt Disney Co. announced last week that it was ending the annual pass program as it currently exists, with a plan to regroup someday with “membership” offerings. It’s a huge shift in Disneyland culture — many Southern Californians grew up with daily, weekly or monthly visits to the park during the nearly four decades the passes have been in existence.

For me, growing up in Chicago, trips to Walt Disney World as a child were an every-other-year luxury. It was a place where the very sight of a monorail among Florida greenery spurred the imagination of a curious kid and allowed a crushingly shy boy to come out of his shell and dream of possibility.

When I moved to Los Angeles, Disneyland, thanks largely to its annual pass program, became a place of community and comfort. Often I’d bring a laptop to Disneyland or California Adventure and work there once or twice per week. As counterintuitive as it sounds, on deadline days I’m still most efficient at Disneyland, a place that allows my mind to relax and reminds me that wonder only belongs to childhood if we let ourselves forget what it means to be playful.

Now, after a year of uncertainty and anxiety about COVID-19, Disneyland fans have a bit more unpredictability, as well as the realization if it wasn’t already clear, that the effects of the pandemic will likely live with us for years to come.

Even without knowing how many passholders exist, it was clear that the program could not go on without modifications. When theme parks get the go-ahead from California to reopen, they will do so with a reservation-only system and heavily reduced capacity. Right now, the only lines on Disneyland property are for COVID vaccines, which offer the hope that we will return to normalcy or near to it. But the timeline depends on supply and distribution as well as adoption by those who are vaccine-hesitant.

Thus, my first reaction when Disneyland axed the annual pass program was relief. Then later, concern.

Relief, because visiting the parks during a pandemic is not on my to-do list, nor did I want to dump money into a pass I wouldn’t use. The little time I spent last year at Downtown Disney and in the shops and eateries of Disney California Adventure’s Buena Vista Street was enough to persuade me to stay away. The experiences felt forced, more stress-inducing than relaxing with my attention hyper-focused on the mask and distancing behavior of other guests rather than my surroundings.

Still, as we’ve seen throughout this pandemic, peoples’ comfort levels vary greatly. If Disneyland opens at 25% capacity — and if estimates that the park has about 1 million passholders are correct — Disney had a mess on its hands. The vast majority of those who paid for access wouldn’t have it and would probably feel entitled that they did.

Halting the so-called “AP” program was the right move. So too is the decision to revamp it.

There has long been growing consensus that the AP program, introduced in the early 1980s, was in need of change. The familiar complaint among a large segment of the Disney fan community is that APs lead to overcrowding, creating a lesser park experience for all. For instance, I learned to avoid the park on Sunday afternoons when many pass tiers were often unblocked and crowding reached claustrophobic levels.

Once, I made the mistake of attending on a Dapper Day when tens of thousands of Disneyland guests dress in vintage cocktail attire; it happened to coincide with a day all passes were unblocked. “Why are you here?” asked a Disney cast member I knew. “Dapper Day, plus no block-out day? This is Disneyland pandemonium!” She wasn’t wrong.

But ways to fix this — to essentially spread local attendance throughout the year so that company and consumer interests align — often result in brute, uncomfortable, classist solutions. Some say Disney should cut the monthly payment program because distributing the cost of a pass throughout 12 months creates the illusion of a lower price and, goes the argument, turns Disneyland into a backyard for those who live near it.

They should not, under any circumstance, do this. Not ever.

Many locals have gotten used to visiting Disneyland daily, weekly or monthly.

(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

People should not be punished for exploring their passions. It’s also out of step with how we purchase everything from streaming services to smartphone plans and fails to recognize the economic realities of younger generations that can’t afford other possibilities. Many in their late 20s and 30s are still dealing with the after-effects of the Great Recession and now there is a pandemic thrown on top of it.

The success of a theme park also depends on the attendance of all generations. Tickets sold to 20-somethings today are essentially tickets sold to a family in 20 years. Older adults have nothing to feel nostalgic for if they are priced out and don’t go to begin with. Disneyland’s annual pass program was already on this dangerous path, one set entirely on price increases rather than perks. Eliminating monthly payments would turn the parks into a playground for Boomers, Instagram creators and rich folks.

And make no mistake, the AP program is in many ways still vital, especially at an urban locale that doesn’t have Walt Disney World’s hotel capacity or its four theme parks and activities to encourage week-long stays. The annual pass changed my appreciation of theme parks, allowing them at long last to be seen as Disney’s designers intended. No longer was Disneyland a check-list of things to do in an exhausting 10-hour day that’s ultimately little-to-zero fun for anyone.

What’s more, much of Disneyland is reliant on either those taking extended vacations or in their absence, locals who regularly return. All-encompassing lands such as Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, which not only has rides but a game on a mobile app that encourages guests to play and engage with the space over time, depend on those who come to hang out rather than hit two rides and bolt.

At Walt Disney World, such activities or even food and wine festivals, can be worked into week-long vacations. In Anaheim, situated in a region with many of the nation’s finest restaurants, art institutions and national parks, such accouterments depend on a robust and accessible program that invites locals to return.

Even the upcoming Avengers Campus is clearly designed with a “local’s park” in mind. The relatively small land is fashioned less as an otherworldly place and more as a SoCal college campus complete with what is more or less a mini beer garden (no offense to the size of Ant-Man and Wasp, for whom the bar is themed).

The conventional wisdom is that hotel guests are more desirable than annual passport holders since over time they spend more money. But that is somewhat outdated blunt marketing thinking — out-of-step with not only what Disneyland represents to SoCal, which will forever be its primary market, but also today’s financially strapped, experience-focused consumers. Increasingly, we’re looking for personalization in our entertainment, changes we’ve seen develop over time amid an own-less, stream-on-demand lifestyle.

Concept art for Disney California Adventure's Avengers Campus

Concept art for Disney California Adventure’s Avengers Campus, which is designed as a place to hang out.

(Marvel / Disney)

Look for guidance at the shift in season ticket programs for sporting events. The Dodgers, for instance, offer a program geared toward those who want limited merch such as bobbleheads as well as one focused on those who want discounts versus those who want more flexibility. This is likely the path forward for Disneyland. The gargantuan Disneyland AP program lacked such personalization, resulting in broadly sweeping tiers based on block-out days rather than specifically tailoring passes to the different ways in which fans engage with the parks.

Even as someone who went 30 to 40 days per year, I started to question the value of a near $1,500 pass that failed to offer the broader sense of connection that I get with my theater and museum memberships, access to events and the ability to regularly meet others who are also passionate about the theme parks. I keep going back to one quote from Disneyland Resort President Ken Potrock in a call with reporters last week, as he was foreshadowing membership programs that are specifically targeted at guest interests rather than calendar dates.

“We want to make sure that we’re creating a program that’s understandable, but at the same time delivers on great value, and that can be things that’s not just clicks at the turnstile,” Potrock said, breaking down “benefits” as things that include “parking or discounts.”

Memberships that come with an assortment of perks — some with merch discounts, some without, some with dining discounts, some without, some with access to after-hours ticketed Halloween events, some without — are easy to imagine. The fear is that Disney goes more of an a la carte route rather than creating robust packages.

Or worse, that the equivalent of the near-daily access of the Signature pass becomes something akin to a poor man’s Club 33, Disneyland’s high-priced private club. Those who have ever been to an “AP-only” lounge at Disneyland know that zero exclusivity is better than exclusivity done cheaply.

But on the surface, programs that offer more control over when people visit — expect a much more robust reservation system rather than lists of block-out days — and can include a couple of the current passholder perks that are most important to certain guests, isn’t a bad idea. Reservations even offer a flexibility that a pure calendar-based system does not and allow Disney to constantly adjust throughout the year, with some memberships based more on spontaneity and some focused more on advanced planning.

The goal should be a park that is full constantly, claustrophobic rarely — if ever — and allows current passholders to find a membership that lines up with their current access and price, with some perks that make it feel a little more tailored to one’s interests. And also, of course, allows everyone to keep making monthly payments.

Will this happen? There’s reason to be skeptical. Disney’s other membership program, its fan club D23, has arguably decreased in value in the last three or four years, becoming little more than home to an upfront payment that grants the right to purchase other things. Unique events have also been dwindling. The focus has seemed to shift to film screenings and talks, whereas it once provided members access to elaborate holiday events at Los Feliz restaurant Tam O’Shanter and even once hosted events at Club 33.

But I’m going to be optimistic and assume Disney views its annual passholders as its most loyal and important guests. So, who do I talk to about getting better wi-fi in Cars Land for my remote work station?



Source by www.latimes.com

Share196Tweet123Share49
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Van Morrison teams with Eric Clapton for anti-lockdown song

Van Morrison teams with Eric Clapton for anti-lockdown song

December 19, 2020
Sen. Rand Paul's ‘Festivus Report’ claims $54B in tax dollars was 'totally wasted'

Sen. Rand Paul’s ‘Festivus Report’ claims $54B in tax dollars was ‘totally wasted’

December 23, 2020
'Zombie' greenhouse gas lurks in permafrost beneath the Arctic Ocean

‘Zombie’ greenhouse gas lurks in permafrost beneath the Arctic Ocean

December 24, 2020
What’s playing at the drive-in: 'Minari,' 'Tom & Jerry,' a Billie Eilish doc and more

What’s playing at the drive-in: ‘Minari,’ ‘Tom & Jerry,’ a Billie Eilish doc and more

0
Fact check: New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced he would defer his annual raise

Fact check: New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced he would defer his annual raise

0
Swedish government sidelines epidemiologist who steered country's no lockdown experiment as deaths rise

Swedish government sidelines epidemiologist who steered country’s no lockdown experiment as deaths rise

0
What’s playing at the drive-in: 'Minari,' 'Tom & Jerry,' a Billie Eilish doc and more

What’s playing at the drive-in: ‘Minari,’ ‘Tom & Jerry,’ a Billie Eilish doc and more

February 26, 2021
Dennis Stroughmatt's Cajun-Creole Trio entertains at Hill Prairie Winery near Oakford this Saturday evening for a Mardi Gras celebration.

February finals

February 26, 2021
Woman drinking coffee and using laptop at home

How To Stay Focused While Working From Home

February 26, 2021
Daily illinois - USA | News, Sports & Updates Web Magazine

Copyright © 2020 Dailyillinois.com.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • DMCA
  • Sitemap
  • Write For Us

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • About Us Page
  • Contact
  • DMCA Policy
  • Home 1
  • Privacy Policy
  • Submit, Guest Post, Write For Us and Become a Contributor
  • Terms of Use

Copyright © 2020 Dailyillinois.com.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.