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Central Jersey Disney Pin Traders & Travel Dreams

  Join us for a few days of fun, friends and Pin Trading!

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September 5 – September 7, 2014
Please join us on Thursday morning for our 4th Annual “Breakfast with the Artists”
Thursday, September 4, 2014
9:00am – 11:00am
Prop Shop in Disney’s Hollywood Studios

This is a very limited opportunity & will include a full breakfast and a one hour question and answer session with several DDG artists….

Artistic Guests Include

  • Alex Maher
  • Quynh Kimball
  • Derek Lesinski 
  • *To Be Announced*

The cost of this fantastic event is $45.00 per person and it is limited! Please contact Janis Lavender of Travel Dreams at 856-768-2511 or JLTravelDreams@cs.com for all reservation details!

Also, don’t miss out on group room blocks, group pricing and of course group fun! We have special pricing just for this event that you won’t want to miss out on!

All Stars Sports – $78/night

French Quarters – $145/night

Beach Club – $224/night

*All prices include tax

To book at these great rates just call Janis Lavender at Travel Dreams, 856-768-2511 or email her at JLTravelDreams@cs.com.

Don’t forget Friday night pin trading at Port Orleans Riverside Food Court

HUGE SHOW UPDATE: See Ya Real Late with Tom Corless and the WDW News Today Podcast Return This Week

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See Ya’ Real Late

The extremely popular and revolutionary late night talk show for Disney fans is returning for a fifth season on August 20th! Combining guest interviews and WDWNT’s unique brand of comedy in a LIVE, interactive program, “See Ya’ Real Late” is ready to begin another “reign of terror” on WDWNTunes.com. It all begins tonight with a special 2-hour Episode 50 extravaganza starting at 10PM EDT on Wednesday, August 20th. Weekly 11PM EDT shows in the normal time slot will air on August 27thSeptember 3rd, and September 10th. Tonight’s guests include Paul Barrie of A Window to the Magic, John from BigFatPanda.com, and JL Knopp from WDWinfo.com. To listen to the show, you can tune in at www.WDWNTunes.com, use the TuneIn App, or use our own custom app, links below.

WDW News Today Podcast Returns!

After several months with only a few new episodes, the WDW News Today Podcast will be returning on a weekly basis beginning Monday August 25th! The show returns with a full review and live audio from the “Villians Unleashed!” event at Disney’s Hollywood Studios, with a return to the original format the following week on September 1st. Your favorite segments including “Back to the Future”, the Top 10, the Dining Discussion Series, the Walt Disney World Resort News and rumor Report, and many more will all be making a comeback, so make sure to tune in!

Download the WDWNTunes App

Now you can take WDWNTunes with you anywhere you go with the WDWNTunes Official App. The app is currently available for Android, Google Chrome, and Windows. An iOS version of the app is currently being developed.

         

8/19/14 Disneyland Resort Photo Report: New Tour at Disney California Adventure

Hello! I am Middlebrow and I am your new Disneyland Resort Reporter for WDWNT. Going forward, you and I are going to try and keep up with all of the changes at the Resort as we head into the busy holiday season and the exciting Diamond Celebration next year.

You can also bet that we will take some West Coast detours that might include The Walt Disney Family Museum in The Presideo of San Francisco, next summer’s D23 Expo, The Walt Disney Studios, Walt Disney’s Carolwood Barn in Griffith Park and the environs of what I might call “Walt Disney’s Los Angeles.”

Today let’s take a spin through Disney California Adventure.

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As DCA cruises into the tail of its second summer since its massive re-making, it is interesting to see a bit of a maturation process kicking in.

California Adventure is no longer the “first click” king like it was when it had that “new Cars smell.” Most Resort Guests again choose to begin their day at the original Magic Kingdom, but DCA is pulling its weight and distributing guests evenly around the resort.

Radiator Springs Racers fast passes now “count,” whereas before, when the ride was new, that “appointment” did not prevent one from getting another FastPass while the other one was outstanding. Now it counts.

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Guests really seem to warm up to Buena Vista Street, responding to a chance to visit a nascent Los Angeles, albeit manufactured. In this way it is the counter part to Main Street at the time of Disneyland’s opening – a visit to a less complicated, more benign time. Grandpa’s time.

As part of the maturation, DCA resently got its first Guided Tour. I have had the pleasure of taking the “Disney California Story Guided Tour” at DCA and I will touch on some of the things that were discussed and places we visited. Keep in mind, this is only a small selection of  the tons of great information offered.

The tour starts at the Park’s equivalent of Disneyland’s City Hall – The Chamber of Commerce, next to Oswald’s Filling Station – in  a V.I.P. lounge where meet your guide and are outfitted with audio equipment that helps tell the story as you go.

The tour then heads down Buena Vista taking in the sights while the Tour Guide explains many of the references to Walt Disney’s career and his move to California.

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The above photos are: a tribute to Ub Iwerks, Walt’s early Master Animator who later in his career invented several “Special Processes” that made Disney film magic, the Nine Old Men (a nickname that refers to the FDR Supreme Court) who were the Directing Animators, and at bottom an amalgam of the addresses of the Hyperion and Burbank studios.

Along the way, your guide will share interesting stories involving everything from architectural signage to shop window displays. One that comes to mind is the Big Rock Candy Mountain display in the window of Trolley Treats. My excellent Tour Guide told the story of a ride concept gone awry. Certainly a true story. In my mind though, being a life-long Angeleno I thought of the legendary Pacific Electric Red Car trip to Mount Lowe. I think the designer certainly had both in mind.

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The next stop is a tour highlight. A visit to the exclusive Member Lounge 1901, just off the entrance to the Carthay Circle Restaurant. No photos are allowed in the lounge so a word picture will have to suffice.

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I think of 1901 as a sort of an alternate universe version of the Tam O’ Shanter Restaurant that sill exists today in the Atwater Village section of Los Angeles. The “Tam” was the hangout of Walt and the boys when the studio was nearby. It was also considered to be the un-official studio commissary.

Bar stools in 1901 sport the names Walt, Lilly, Roy, and Edna. Caricatures of the Ol’ Moustro and other animators give it a lived in and living atmosphere, while mis-matched chairs evoke the ever expanding and casual atmosphere of the early Los Angeles studio. One really feels that Walt Disney casts a shadow over the space.

The whole tour is excellent. Guides bring up well known and not so familiar stories of Walt’s life in California that everyone can enjoy. You also get priority boarding on a couple of rides and a nice lunch. The Disney California Story Tour only runs in the morning so Tour Guests can access 1901. So make plans accordingly.

Next time we will go to Disneyland Park.

See ‘ya real soon!

 

Star Lord & Gamora from Guardians of the Galaxy To Appear at Villains Unleashed

If you’ve seen the hit film Guardians of the Galaxy, you undoubtedly know all about “Awesome Mix Vol. 1,” a mix tape of retro-1970s gems given to Peter Quill by his mother. Well it appears that “a mysterious gang of villains has stolen that prized cassette, and Peter Quill – you may know him as the legendary Star-Lord – is on his way back to Earth on a mission to retrieve it.” At least this is the backstory Disney is giving for the “Guardians of the Galaxy” Awesome Mix Tape Dance Party now scheduled as part of the “Villains Unleashed” event at Disney’s Hollywood Studios on August 23. The dance party will be held in Stage 5 in the Animation Courtyard (Disney Junior: Live on Stage location). Disney is promoting that the Star Lord and Gamora characters from the film will be making an appearance to retrieve the “tape” during the party. This will make the pair the very first Marvel characters to appear at Walt Disney World. image So, have you been convinced to buy a ticket yet?

Michael Eisner – Was He Robin Williams’ Genie?

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“When he shall die,
Take him and cut him out in little stars,
And he will make the face of heaven so fine
That all the world will be in love with night
And pay no worship to the garish sun.”

William Shakespeare – Romeo and Juliet

As the world learned of the passing of comedian/actor Robin Williams, Disney CEO, Bob Iger (with Animator Eric Goldberg), posted a beautiful image of the Genie from “Aladdin,” made of stars in the night sky, with thoughtful words commemorating his life. During his early career, and his years of greatest success, another Disney executive always seemed to be looking for opportunities for him, and for Disney. This partnership inextricably linked Williams with The Walt Disney Company, at least in the public’s mind, more than any other studio. That executive was Michael Eisner.

If their story was a buddy film it could be called: “The Road To Superstardom.”

The two future Disney Legends began their symbiotic relationship when Eisner took early interest in Williams’ career from the time of his TV breakout role on “Mork and Mindy” in 1978. Eisner was then running Paramount Pictures, the producer of the series for ABC at the time. The show was a hit and catapulted Williams to the stature of a “household name.” But in 1980, even before the series had ended, Michael, still at Paramount at this time, had plans for Robin that involved the Big Screen.

Eisner and all of Paramount, were disappointed at losing the opportunity to produce the film version of  the Broadway musical “Annie.” So the studio searched for another comic-book property to film. The result was “Popeye,” directed by legendary director Robert Altman. Michael could easily ask, “who more than Robin seemed to be a flesh and blood cartoon character?”

Mainly to expedite the creation of the location sets, “Popeye” even became a co-production with what was then called Walt Disney Productions under CEO, and the late Walt Disney’s son-in-law, Ron Miller. The film, which had a very loose story line, was generally appreciated by critics, but was not a success with the public.

Williams’ next two films ‘The World According to Garp’ (1982) and ‘Moscow on the Hudson’ (1984) were done for Warners and Columbia respectively, but change for Disney was in the wind.

In 1984, Eisner and former entertainment lawyer and Warner Bros executive Frank Wells made the move to Disney. While it took some time for them to get Williams’ “oars in the water,” they fairly soon were able to do just that.

In 1987, in his first Disney produced film, Williams got to work “in his wheelhouse” playing an irrepressible Armed Forces Radio DJ in “Good Morning Vietnam.” He followed in 1989 with “Dead Poets Society,” a more serious role as an unorthodox English teacher who inspires his students in a buttoned down academy. Both films were released by Disney’s Touchstone Pictures and both pictures earned Williams Academy Award nominations.

When important events arose for Disney Williams was generally recruited to be a part what ever was going on. So when Eisner wanted star power for two new theme park attractions he looked no farther than his old friend.

Robin Williams as the Time Keeper

One show was for the new Disney/MGM Studios and the other for the opening of the Euro Disney Resort. The Studio Tour attraction was part of “The Art of Disney Animation” pavilion in which the comedian led guests through the animation process via video screens and a film titled “Back To Neverland.” Williams starred with fabled newsman Walter Cronkite. America’s Most Trusted Man turned out to be a good straight-man for Williams, who plays a tourist turned into an animated Lost Boy from Peter Pan. In the other show for what later became known as Disneyland Paris, he voiced the lead character “Timekeeper ” in the time-traveling attraction “Le Visionarium: Un Voyage à Travers le Temps”. That show opened the new resort in Paris, and was eventually exported to Tokyo Disneyland and the Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World Resort with the name “Timekeeper.”

His next release, though not a Disney product, cemented Williams’ ability to “open” a family event film. Steven Spielberg actually began developing “Hook” (1991) as a co-production between Paramount and Walt Disney Productions in the early 80s, but by 1985 he abandoned the project. In 1989, Spielberg returned to the project as the director, picking Williams as Peter Pan, Julia Roberts to play Tinker Bell and Dustin Hoffman as the titular character. So, in this case, even when Williams made a high-profile film for another studio, due to the subject matter, it was perceived by many as a Disney film. Critics paned it. Ticket sales were good, but lower than expected.

This set the stage for what was to be arguably Williams’ most remembered role of all – that of the Genie in the animated feature “Aladdin” (1992). The combination of Williams’ rapid-fire, stream of conscience delivery and animator Eric Goldberg’s sinewy animation, in the style of caricaturist Al Hirschfeld, was unlike anything seen before or since.

Williams did the film’s voice work for $500-a-day, in gratitude for Eisner’s green-lighting Dead Poets Society the small “art film” that payed dividends to Disney and to Williams’ career. Eisner reciprocated by buying Williams a Picasso.

Aladdin, where Williams voiced the Genie, is still one of the top performing animated films of all time. It still has a presence in Disney Theme Parks and has recently spawned a hit show on Broadway.

With the beloved film Mrs. Doubtfire (1993) for 20th Century Fox, Williams proved he could still bring in the families and still touch hearts with his unique comedic style. He also acted as a producer on the picture, which was filmed near his home in Northern California.

In 1997 Williams did two last films for Disney. The first, a big budget remake of Walt Disney’s “The Absent Minded Professor” (1961), this time titled “Flubber” (1997). The film, produced and co-written by John Hughes, was a comedy and special effects showcase and performed well for the company. Critics were not impressed.

The other film , the drama “Good Will Hunting,” would gain him great critical aclaim, and finally, the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor.  Williams played a psychologist who helps a janitor at M.I.T. who has a gift for mathematics, but needs to find direction in his life. This film was also generally the public’s introduction to another set of film world buddies: Ben Affleck and Matt Damon.

Williams continued giving voice to animated characters and playing in popular live-action franchises until the end of his life. He also along the way played darker characters in several films to much acclaim. At the time of his death, stories were circulating in media about the possibility of a “Mrs. Doubtfire” sequel.

Michael Eisner resigned from The Walt Disney Company on September 30, 2005.

Robin Williams Died August 11, 2014 Tiburon, California

 

First look at the new Stormtrooper design for Star Wars Episode VII

First look at the new Stormtrooper design for Star Wars Episode VII

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IndieRevolver.com got their hands on some of the new concept designs for the Stormtroopers that will be seen in Star War Episode VII. It has been confirmed that there will indeed be Stormtroopers in the new movie as well as an updated design for them.  Last week Tom Hodges, who is a sketch artist who has worked with Lucasfilm, posted a sketch of what he had recently seen of the new Stormtroopers and the design coincides with what was published today.

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Star Wars Episode VII is scheduled to open on December 18th. 2015.

A Disneyland Paris Review

Recently, I had the good fortune to visit Disneyland Paris for a few days as part of my honeymoon. We’ve all heard a lot about the two European parks, both good and bad, so I thought I would share my experiences. This was originally going to be a long blow-by-blow travelogue, but no one really wants to relive complete stranger’s vacation in that much detail–so instead, I’ll focus on what’s different, what’s amazing, what’s horrible, and what’s just generally interesting.

We commuted in from Paris both days, so we didn’t get a chance to explore most of the hotels or the Disney Village area. We headed through their security, which included airport-style x-ray machines, a big difference right off the bat. Entering the park might be the most jolting difference to a regular guest at the domestic parks– the Disneyland Hotel towers over the entrance, shrouding the park behind it. Countless words have been spoken and written about the awe felt as you pass under the train station arches as Main Street and the castle are revealed behind it, but the Disneyland Hotel provides such a complete curtain that you lose the tease that you experience seeing the castle from a distance. While this might seem like a negative, it only heightened my expectations as a Disney fan longing to experience a new park for the first time. And the reveal did not disappoint.

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We visited during the Swing into Spring festival, a greatly scaled-down version of Epcot’s Flower & Garden Festival, so both Main Street and the waiting vestibule between the train station and turnstiles were decorated with brilliantly colored flowers. The gazebo that serves as the center of Town Square was decorated with a Mary Poppins motif, complete with topiaries of Mary and Burt as well as plastic penguins. And behind it you could see Le Château de la Belle au Bois Dormant (Sleeping Beauty Castle) rise majestically over the hub. I’m sure we’re all familiar with it, but its architecture and landscaping shame the domestic parks. Main Street felt comfortably familiar, yet enticingly different at the same time.  There were even plenty of scrims and construction walls up to make a WDW regular feel more at home.

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We headed first to Tomorrowland– er, I’m sorry Discoveryland (I had to correct my self countless times while in the parks too)– to take advantage of the lack of people in the park at 8:00 a.m.  The steampunk/Jules Verne  influence was apparent, thorough and without the postmodern touches of Tomorrowland 1994. The look felt cohesive and complete, the most jarring elements being the lived-in authenticity of the Star Tours area.

Discoveryland also introduced us to a much more jarring authenticity: the lack of upkeep evident in the parks. It wasn’t dirty per se; on the contrary, the park was immaculate in that respect. Sweepers, including broom artists, were everywhere. It was the lack of long-term maintenance that stood out like a 20-story wand. There were cracks in the pavement that looked like earthquake damage. It was just very clear that long-term upkeep wasn’t on anyone’s mind. The other main area where maintenance was lacking was in landscaping. Areas where people were going to take photographs were immaculate but back pathways, including topiaries, were poorly maintained and overgrown.

The rides of Discoveryland were mostly familiar, yet oddly different. Of course, the most dissimilar was Space Mountain: Mission 2. The color scheme is beautiful and doesn’t stand out like the stark white version at WDW. Theming in the queue seemed minimal in comparison, but we didn’t really have to spend much time in it. In domestic park terms, the launch is reminiscent of the Incredible Hulk coaster at Islands of Adventure, and overall it is much more akin to Rock ’n’ Roller Coaster than either WDW’s or Disneyland’s Space Mountain. From the launch to the visuals, which admittedly I couldn’t see as well since I feel the need to take my glasses off, it is far superior to Rock ’n’ Roller Coaster. I won’t say it’s superior to WDW’s Space Mountain, just because it’s so different.

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Star Tours was still the classic version, but Rex spoke French. This was an interesting dynamic, as the video segments were all in English. This bilingual motif was repeated through many attractions, and used to great effect where questions were answered in a such a wordy manner so that people who only spoke one language could follow the whole conversation. The outside of Star Tours was much more interesting with a full size X-Wing, as opposed to a mismatched AT-AT and Ewok village designed to show it’s a facade. We didn’t ride Autopia, but the neon lined frontage was much more appealing than the Tomorrowland Speedway. The Oribtron (Astrorbiter) was a combination of WDW and Disneyland. Still placed in the center of the land, but on ground level, it seemed to speed around a lot faster, a speed that would be the most terrifying ride in any Disney park if it was on the third story. Buzz Light year was very similar, but with Disneyland’s detachable guns. Captain Eo was there as well, but was closed.

The two unique offerings in Discoveryland were Videopolis and The Mysteries of the Nautilus. I know Videopolis was once something more than it currently is, but now it exists just as a gigantic counter service restaurant that shows Pixar shorts. While nothing outstanding, it was a nice place to take a break and grab some lunch. The Mysteries of the Nautilus was a very cool walk-through attraction taking you through a recreation of Captain Nemo’s infamous submarine.

Walk-throughs appear to be a key part of Disneyland Paris. In addition to the Nautilus, there was an Aladdin walk-through in Adventureland, the Swiss Family Treehouse, a tableau of wild west history as you enter Frontierland, and three in Fantasyland. There you have the story of Sleeping Beauty, the Maleficent dragon in the cave’s below the castle, and the Alice in Wonderland maze. While these walk-throughs are not going to attract anyone to the parks, these all serve as fun distractions. The one exception is the dragon. I’m sure everyone reading this has heard of the animatronic dragon created for the castle at Disneyland Paris, but rarely do I think something lives up to the amount of hype that the dragon had generated. While not fast-moving or overly complex, the audio-animatronic gave you exactly what you’d expect from a dragon sleeping in its lair, and was the unique highlight to Fantasyland.

Fantasyland itself boasted little else that was unique. Laid out much more similar to Disneyland’s Fantasyland than Walt Disney World’s, the rides there offered little difference to their stateside counterparts. Pinocchio, Snow White, and Peter Pan are all there representing the dark rides, and the three traditional Fantasyland spinners (Dumbo, the Carrousel, and the Mad Tea Party) are there as well. Casey Jr. and the Storybook Canal boats are also in Disneyland Paris, but never having been to the Anaheim versions, I can’t really compare them, other than to say they were both short and cute. Paris’s “it’s a small world” doesn’t quite have the extensive mall area that it does at Disneyland, but is more isolated and has the style of the California counterpart. Alice’s Curious Labyrinth was possibly in the worse shape of any attraction in the park– parts were behind construction walls, and parts didn’t move that were supposed too.

Moving over to Adventureland (for some reason Adventureland and Frontierland’s locations were swapped) the unique “headliner,” Indiana Jones and the Temple of Peril was undergoing a long refurbishment. The only other real attraction was Pirates of the Caribbean. Mush more akin to Disneyland’s version, you pass by the Blue Lagoon restaurant before proceeding up the waterfall first. Other than the backwards nature of the drops, the attraction seemed more of an updated version of the original with little changed overall. The surprise star of Adventureland for me was Adventure Island, a better version of Tom Sawyer’s Island.  There were numerous caves, bridges, nooks and crannies and even a pirate ship to explore. It’s even built around the Swiss Family Treehouse.

Frontierland felt distinctive compared to its American cousin’s. Expansive and open, it centers around the Rivers of the Far West, with Big Thunder Mountain Railroad in the middle of it. Big Thunder is hands down the attraction I would trade versions with. Those long, extra drops to travel under the river add an excellent start and finish to a ride that for the most part is the same. The river is navigated by it’s own riverboats, the Mark Twain and the Molly Brown. At the far end of Frontierland lies Disneyland Paris’s gem, Phantom Manor.

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It would be easy to dismiss Phantom Manor as just another version of the Haunted Mansion, but that would be a grave mistake. All the classic elements are there, but the way they are executed creates an entirely different ride.  You start in the foyer and move to the stretch room, but with different narrations (unfortunately in French only) and different portraits. Here’ you begin to understand a different story. A bride is interrupted on her wedding day when a phantom disappears her husband and begins to haunt her. The majority of the ride is similar, with minor differences up until the attic scene. From here the old west Boot Hill story takes over from the graveyard scene, picturing the dead taking over a western town, in a much more terrifying ending. Oh, and Phineas, Ezra, and Gus (the hitchhiking ghosts) are nowhere to be seen!

Disneyland Paris caps its night off with Disney Dreams. The easiest way to describe it is a combination between World of Color and Celebrate the Magic. It is a story-based projection show that has the projections on both the castle and jets of water. The show is punctuated with fireworks, but they are not the focus of the show. It was truly an amazing show, and a draw in and of itself. The oddest part of the show was the crowd just sits down. They sit down right in the middle of the street and the hub. We got yelled at for standing. People really seemed to stake out their spots early, but all of Fantasyland and parts of Adventureland close an hour before the show to keep them clear for fireworks, so most people are looking for things to do by early evening anyway.

Of course, there is also the Walt Disney Studios park. This park has had a bad reputation, and one I can think was justified. While there are plenty of clones or takes on familiar rides and shows that does not mean it didn’t have some great unique attractions and features. One of the unique parts of the park is its entrance. You enter directly into a courtyard, but then pass through a soundstage building. There’s not a way to get to the main section of the park without passing through Studio 1, which is little more than a warehouse lined with retail and quick service dining. Aside from carts and one buffet restaurant, this was the entirety of food service in the park, and even retail was extremely limited, with just a few small exit shops. Yes, that’s right, Disney is missing chances to sell you something!

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To be honest, though, the Studios park didn’t need any more. If you arrived at the park at rope drop, you could conceivably be finished with every attraction and show by mid-afternoon. And that is if everything was running. Certain attractions were just not open certain days. Armageddon appeared to be closed randomly, and from what we could see other attractions followed a similar schedule. Even at Disneyland Park, we were told that during the off-season every restaurant was closed two days a week and they rotated. This, compounded with early closures of most restaurants, made it really hard to find a decent dinner. Capacity just did not appear to be a problem at Disneyland Paris.

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Since the new Ratatouille area was not set to open for a couple of months, the highlight of the park was Crush’s Coaster. This was the only attraction we encountered with more than a 30-minute wait for during our two-day trip.  The ride itself is a combination between Primeval Whirl and a dark ride, but that hardly does it justice. It was a really fun, wild mouse dark coaster. The car, which features two rows of two sitting back to back, spins much more like a Tea Cup than Primeval Whirl once you hit the EAC.

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The other really unique elements of this park were the shows. First, there is Cinamagique, a tribute to cinema. Picture the montage at the end of the Great Movie Ride, wrapped around an inserted plot featuring Martin Short. It was a very funny bilingual show, and features an amazing blend of interaction between live action actors and filmed element, and written cleverly enough that you could enjoy it speaking either French or English.  It is truly a unique show, and I would love to see it transported over to Disney Hollywood Studios.

Another fun little show was Stitch Live! This interpretation of the living character initiative has the guests assisting the Galactic Federation in tracking down stitch after he blasts off from Earth again. The show itself follows the Turtle Talk pattern of interaction with the audience, who at the end even directs Stitch in a video game like scenario. The show was cute and would be a good replacement for Stitch’s Great Escape, though may feel a bit redundant with Monsters, Inc. Laugh Floor right across the way. Across from Stitch Live! is Armageddon: Effects Spectacular. Never has the word “spectacular” been so poorly applied. An unworkable combination of an effects show, immersion theater, and walking tour, the only nice thing I can say about it was it may have been preferable to actually getting hit by an asteroid. The only other unique attraction was Anamagique which was closed both days we were there, and from what we gathered the only thing wrong with it was that the didn’t want to run it those days.

The park also contains many cloned attractions, including the original version of Lights, Motors… Action which after getting off Armageddon would have felt like rubbing salt in the open wound, so we skipped it. We also skipped the Art of Disney Animation since we were told jt was also a direct clone. There are versions of Rock ’n’ Roller Coaster and the Twilight Zone Tower of Terror. The Paris version of Tower is a clone of the California version. This was my first time on a version without the Fifth Dimension scene, and I never realized how key that was to the experience. The ride portion of Rock ’n’ Roller Coaster felt the same, but the theming was mildly different. Starting with the pre-show, Aerosmith is no longer mixing a track, but helping design the ride itself. Once inside, it’s no longer themed to the streets of Los Angeles, but more of a backstage concert experience.

While not at any of the domestic parks, the Studios park features a Toy Stoy Playland, which had also been hastily added to Hong Kong Disneyland. The three attractions there are little more than Toy Story skins on carnival attraction. There are also Cars Race Rally, a scaled down concept of Mater’s Junkyard Jamboree and a Magic Carpets over Agrabah, which was closed for refurbishment. There was also an afternoon parade that traveled an area approximately the size of Town Square on Main Street.

Of course, the centerpiece of any studio-based park should be its tram tour. And appropriately, Disney Hollywood Studios embarrassing little brother has an equally embarrassing version of the tram tour. What was that? You didn’t think the DHS tram tour could be worse? Well you were quite wrong. Apparently, you don’t need narration or fully working trams. You drive past nameless props from movies and other, better, theme parks. After you pass all these things, wondering what they are, you get to Catastrophe Canyon, again with out any explanation. After you back track through the same props and past a boneyard featuring mainly vehicles from the Dinotopia miniseries,  you enter what appears to be a ruined London. Then the tram stops and fire comes out of the ground. No one had any idea what was going on, but we later found out this was supposed to be Reign of Fire. Remember that movie? No, no one does. We also later found out there was supposed to be a narration, which might have explained at least something.

Overall, I would not say you have to make a trip to Europe just to go to Disneyland Paris, but if you’re in the region, I would say it will be worth your time. Disneyland Park is truly beautiful and offers a lot of unique takes on what we’re all familiar with. Walt Disney Studios Park is entertaining enough to fill your afternoon, and still has attractions worth the walk over.  There is a very clear reason all multi-day tickets are park-hoppers. If you have any questions about the park, you can leave a comment or contact ron@wdwnt.com and I’ll try and answer whatever I can.

Is Disney looking to buy Warner Brothers?

Is Disney looking to buy Warner Brothers?

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Recently it was announced that the head of FOX, Rupert Murdoch, tried to purchase Time Warner Brothers Studios for $80 billion. Warner Brothers did not feel that was an adequate amount and Murdoch withdrew his takeover bid. For most people, this came as a surprise that a possible merger was even in the works. According to the Hollywood Reporter, Warner Brothers is still ripe for a possible takeover bid. The current leader is China’s wealthiest man, Wang Jianlin. If Wang’s takeover bid does not come to fruition, according to The Hollywood Reporter, the 3 possible strongest candidates are Disney, Google and Apple. Disney’s market cap is currently worth $149 billion, Google’s market cap is $385 billion and Apples’ market cap is $567 billion. Disney does seem like the low man on the totem poll compered to the other potential candidates, but with $149 billion the possible merger is still a possibility. Remember a few years ago, no one believed that Lucasfilm could be purchased by any company. I am sure a merger of this magnitude would still have to meet hurdles dealing with the Federal Trade Commission and the Securities And Exchange Commission. If a merger like this did go through for Disney and Warner, it would mean that Disney would acquire the likes of the Harry Potter series, The Lord Of The Rings films, DC Comics and all of their movies, classic Warner Brothers cartoons, such as Bugs Bunny, and The Wizard Of Oz.

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New Haunted Mansion Game Debuts Tonight (8/14/14) on WDWNT: The Radio Show

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Tonight on WDWNT: The Radio Show we introduce a brand new game called Haunted Mansion Ghost Catching Adventure. It is a choose your own adventure type trivia game where you take part in a story involving the Haunted Mansion and must answer questions to capture ghosts.

As always, we will be giving out some great prizes from Theme Park Connection. All contestants who play, win a prize, but the one with the most ghosts at the end of the night wins the grand prize!

Hosted by radio veterans and life-long Disney fans Tom Corless and Nick LoCicero, the live radio talk show on AM 1520 WBZW in Orlando focuses on the latest news and current trending topics at the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Florida. WDW News Today: The Radio Show can also be streamed live at www.1520wbzw.com. WDW News Today the Radio Show debuted in August of 2013 as a 1hour broadcast on Saturday evenings and has grown into a 2-hour program by popular demand.

To interact with the hosts during the show, listeners can call in at (407) 774-8255, tweet @WDWNT using #WDWNTRadio, or use the new LIVE chat that will be available at Radio.WDWNT.com.

The show begins at 8PM EDT tonight, don’t miss it!