Month: April 2022
Two New Disney PhotoPass Offerings Just in Time for Halfway to Halloween
When you’re on your Walt Disney World vacation, taking photos is a must. Disney PhotoPass is a great way to get professional photos in front of some of the best areas in the park, as well as other magic shots. Disney Parks Blog shared a new edition just in time for Halfway to Halloween. What’s Happening: […]
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Tokyo Disneyland Announces Complete Renovation of Space Mountain and Surrounding Tomorrowland Area
Tokyo Disneyland has announced a complete renovation of the popular Space Mountain along with other surrounding areas. What’s Happening: Tokyo Disneyland is about to see some major changes as the Oriental Land Company has announced a complete renewal of the park’s Space Mountain. This not only includes the iconic coaster itself but also the surrounding areas […]
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Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster Closed for Third Day in a Row at Disney’s Hollywood Studios
Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster at Disney’s Hollywood Studios remains closed after initially going down on Monday morning.
The coaster was closed for the rest of Monday and all of yesterday. As of 9:45 a.m., it has yet to open today, Wednesday, April 27.
Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster opened late on April 10 and was closed for several days in January 2022.
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Work Begins on First Storyliving by Disney Community in California
Walt Disney Imagineers and executives gathered in Rancho Mirage, California, yesterday for the groundbreaking of the first Storyliving by Disney community. This new series of neighborhoods is intended to “inspire residents to foster new friendships, pursue their interests and write the next exciting chapter in their lives.”
The Walt Disney Imagineering Instagram said, “Imagineers joined the groundbreaking ceremony today for Cotino, a Storyliving by Disney community being brought to life alongside world-class designers and developers in Rancho Mirage, CA. Michael Hundgen, Exec Producer, shared how the project team is drawing on the region’s past and present to inspire the story of Cotino – one that is connected to the natural beauty and rich history of Coachella Valley, as well as its continued influence in arts, music, and culture.
“We anticipate welcoming residents in early 2024, and can’t wait to share more as progress continues!”
Sales for Cotino, a Storyliving by Disney community, are expected to begin in early 2023, and the first homes will be completed in early 2024. Disney is planning to construct other locations across the U.S.A. too.
Thomas Mazloum, president of Disney Signature Experiences, and Claire Bilby, senior vice president, and general manager of Disney Signature Experiences Emerging Businesses, were joined by City of Rancho Mirage Mayor Charles Townsend and CEO of DMB Development Brent Herrington to celebrate the groundbreaking.
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Bookings for Summer 2023 Disney Cruise Line Sailings Opening May 9
Bookings for summer 2023 Disney Cruise Line sailings will open to the general public on May 9, 2022, at 8:00 a.m. ET.
Castaway Club members and other select guests will be able to book as soon as May 2, 2022. Here is the full calendar:
- Monday, May 2, 8:00 a.m. ET: Platinum Castaway Club members and Golden Oak Club members
- Tuesday, May 3, 8:00 a.m. ET: Gold Castaway Club members
- Thursday, May 5, 8:00 a.m. ET: Silver Castaway Club members, Disney Vacation Club members, and Adventure Insider members
- Monday, May 9, 8:00 a.m. ET: General public
Disney Cruise Line recently announced that face masks are no longer required on buses and terminals in the U.S.A.
Are you planning a summer 2023 Disney Cruise Line sailing? Let us know in the comments.
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A Brief History of Disney: Splash Mountain
For those of us who spent our formative years visiting Disney parks, the age-old Zip-a-dee-doo-dah theme synonymous with the Splash Mountain attraction likely holds a special place in your heart. Even though I remember the day this attraction opened like it was yesterday, I didn’t know much about how it came to be until I decided that this would be our April feature attraction in A Brief History of Disney. Sure, you might know some of it due to the contentious tie to Song of the South, but the spaces between are a bit of a blur.
In 1983, Imagineer Tony Baxter set out to entice more guests to the then-Bear Country of Disneyland, where only one attraction based on animatronics, Country Bear Jamboree, wasn’t gaining much attention from younger guests. Despite a push from Dick Nunis, a log flume ride for the park was initially discarded, considered to be somewhat beneath the likes of Disneyland due to the typical design for a one-off thrill of getting wet. Enter Baxter’s incorporation of the Briar characters adding that classic Disney backstory that sets their theme park attractions apart from the rest. Baxter and his fellow Imagineers started toying with a concept called Zip-a-Dee River Run, which included scenes from Song of the South.
It wasn’t until then-CEO (1984 – 2005) Michael Eisner’s intervention that the attraction took on the name Splash Mountain, thought to help promote a new film, Splash, with Tom Hanks and Daryl Hannah. A connection that modern-day lovers of this ride would find far-fetched, to say the least. It has been said that in an effort to attract more teens and young adults, Eisner engaged his own to attend the pitch meeting to test the waters among the younger generation. When his son gave it the green light, so did Eisner and the Splash Mountain project was officially in motion.
The Splash Mountain roadmap was unveiled to guests in January of 1987, with Disney execs convinced the tie to a film that was teetering on controversial at the time wouldn’t impact the project negatively due to the limitation to only animated characters from the Song of the South. The focus was redirected from the film’s Uncle Remus to the characters within the stories he told, skirting around the controversial elements that could cause upset.
The Br’er Rabbit, Br’er Fox, and Br’er Bear characters had played a walkaround role in the park for years and fit in well with the theming of Bear Country. Even when the Splash Mountain attraction opened without their more specific Song of the South backstory, they never seemed out of place. The movie never saw another day of direct association with Disney, with former CEO Bob Iger (2005 – 2020) clarifying that he saw no place for it in the modern Disney Company.
Infrastructure for the ride began development in April of the same year, quickly blowing out the budget to become one of Disney’s most expensive projects to date. In 1988, the surrounding area of Disneyland was renamed from Bear Country to Critter Country to fit in more appropriately with the new attraction. After many compromises were made to feed the growing budget required to complete Splash Mountain, including repurposing more than 100 animatronics from the America Sings attraction, the project was finally ready to open in 1989, though even then, not everything went to plan.
The opening of Splash Mountain was delayed on several occasions, pushed back over six months in total while engineers ironed out the kinks in this next-level project. One stumbling block came as test riders became soaked by the splashing water rather than a light, pleasant sprinkling. The solution was a redesign of the boat configuration, reducing capacity from eight riders to seven in order to lighten the overall weight, along with structural changes that altered the underside of the ride vehicle.
The highly anticipated Splash Mountain opened to Disneyland guests on July 17th, 1989 though it wasn’t until later in 1990 that plans were released to install the camera, which captured the reaction of guests as they descended the first section of the ride’s famous drop.
The ride opened to rave reviews and queue wait times skyrocketed as guests came to experience the park’s fourth mountain prompting the announcement of Splash Mountain being introduced to Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom and Tokyo Disneyland in Japan. Both parks opened within a day of each other in October of 1992.
In 2020, Disney made headlines with the news that both Disneyland and Walt Disney World Magic Kingdom versions would be receiving a makeover, steering away from the questionable direction of Briar Patch and towards the newer and much-loved film The Princess and the Frog (2009).
The project, said to have begun development in 2019, was met with mixed reviews. Some argued that the Disneyland setting alongside New Orleans Square would be perfect for such a transition, one that would be wildly out of place in Magic Kingdom’s Frontierland, where the east coast Splash Mountain resides. No further developments have come from this announcement, with many questioning if it will go ahead at all.
Aside from a few safety enhancements, a brief Ziploc sponsorship, and strange behavior that became popular with women in the ’90s during the photo section of the drop — you are going to have to look that one up yourselves — not much has changed when it comes to the three installments of the Splash Mountain attraction. It remains to be seen if the reimagineering overhaul announced almost two years ago will still go ahead at either location.
This attraction is an absolute highlight from my younger days, the height of excitement. Let me know your best memories of this ride from the years gone by.
PhotoPass Launching New Tower of Terror Lens and Updated Haunted Mansion Ride Photo at Walt Disney World
In honor of “Halfway to Halloween,” Disney PhotoPass at Walt Disney World is launching a new The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror lens and updating The Haunted Mansion ride photo.
The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror lens launches today in the My Disney Experience app with the purchase of Disney Genie+. The lens is available to use on Sunset Boulevard in Disney’s Hollywood Studios.
The updated ride photo aboard The Haunted Mansion at Magic Kingdom also debuts today. One of the three Hitchhiking Ghosts now appears in the photo. You might get a different ghost each time you ride.
There is no photo preview wall at the exit of The Haunted Mansion where you can link your photo, so there are two options to have it automatically linked to your Disney account while riding:
- Use your mobile device. Enable Bluetooth® for the My Disney Experience app before riding, ensure you’ve logged into the app sometime earlier that day, and keep your device out of low power mode. Then just put your device in your pocket or bag while you enjoy the ride.**
- Wear a MagicBand that’s linked to your Disney account. If you plan to reuse a MagicBand from a previous visit, click here for a few tips about your Disney PhotoPass experience.
This is the first in Disney’s ongoing efforts to enhance onboard photos at Walt Disney World attractions.
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