Here's a concept sketch of Disney Hong Kong, taken from a display at Disneyland Paris. I'm not sure how I feel about these very slanty eyes. I'm not all indignant, but I do wonder if a Chinese person actually drew this. Or someone who ever met a Chinese person.
Saturday, November 8, 2014
Monday, November 3, 2014
Disneyland Tokyo and the Single Rider Line
When Radiator Springs Racers opened at Disney’s California
Adventure it was a total boon for my niece and me. Rather than the rope drop
crowd of hundreds stampeding to Toy Story Mania with us, they were making a
beeline into Cars Land, leaving us to a relatively line-free first three trips
through the Toy Story midway. The line for Radiator Springs would suck people up all day,
keeping them in line and away from other rides.
180 minutes. A good day for Toy Story Mania. |
When lines get that long, park visitors often hop into the
single rider’s line. This line allows cast members loading the ride to make sure
every car goes out at full capacity. So Radiator Springs Racers with its 3-seat-per-row
configuration often accommodated a family of 4 (in 2 rows of 2) and 2 single riders, one per row. Awesome. If
you didn’t mind sitting with another group you could significantly cut your time in line, and plenty of people – particularly teenagers – did just that, hanging out
in the single rider line with their friends, riding with strangers, and
regrouping at the end of the ride to go their merry way.
1/3 the wait. All of the fun. |
When I was at Disneyland Tokyo on Halloween this year they
sold out of tickets by noon. It was THAT crowded. I headed towards Splash
Mountain because it’s always a hoot to hear Zippity
Doo Dah in Japanese. The line was 150 minutes long. Fortunately, there
was a single rider line so I headed down.
Here is the single rider line at Splash Mountain, just
before boarding:
Don’t see it? Right. Too dark. Here it is lightened up, and I’ll point out the
line with an arrow.
Still don’t see it? Oh, right that’s because there ISN’T
anyone waiting. Not a SINGLE PERSON. That guy at the end, that's a cast member. With an over two-hour wait, no one wants to ride alone in
Japan, and no one wants to ride with strangers. You ride with the friends you
came with, or you don’t ride at all. It’s kind of a wonderful sentiment.
And if you look at the ride photos of everyone screaming on the Splash Mountain final drop, you’ll that almost every single car has at least one empty seat.
To be fair to Tokyo Disneyland, I think they realize this,
because Splash Mountain has the only single rider line in the entire park, and I wouldn’t be
surprised if they stopped using it entirely. No one wants to be a single rider
in Japan.
I’ve spent the last two and a half years working here to try
to bridge Western and Japanese efforts towards sustainable seafood, and one of
the things I’ve repeatedly stressed to the Westerners I work with is the need to belong to your group. Breaking from the pack and doing something different or doing something alone is a pretty big
deal, and asking for it to happen a pretty big non-starter. So for now there's a lot of conversation about the topic, and not much doing of anything. To my thinking this is okay. Because at some point if you can get the group to agree, when
they do something, they do it together and they do it en masse. This gives me a tremendous amount of hope for
Japan, and when I see that completely empty single riders line it does feel like Disneyland Tokyo is the happiest
place on earth.
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