четверг, 29 января 2015 г.

Castaway Cay will debut Olaf's Summertime Freeze bar, serving non-alcoholic specialty frozen drinks


Frozen coming virtual campus tours to Disney Cruise Line including new performances, characters, deck party with Anna, Elsa, Olaf, Kristoff virtual campus tours by Ricky Brigante Posted on January 22, 2015 Get the latest: Follow us on Twitter & Facebook ! Topics: Disney , Disney Cruise Line , Entertainment virtual campus tours , Food , Movies Tags: Anna , Elsa , Frozen , Kristoff virtual campus tours , Olaf , Olaf’s Summertime Freeze bar
Beginning in summer 2015,a deck party, a three-song stage show production number, new character meet and greets, and more will be added to the Disney Magic and Disney Wonder ships, with some new offerings also slated for the Disney Fantasy and Disney Dream.
On select virtual campus tours Disney Magic and Disney Wonder sailings to Europe and Alaska, Disney Cruise Line guests will awake to find a magical freeze has taken over the ship s atrium lobby, resembling the majestic mountain-top ice palace of Queen Elsa.
A nighttime deck party “Freezing the Night Away with Anna, Elsa and Friends,” featuring the famous royal sisters of Arendelle and their Nordic companions, as the deck is also taken over by giant snowflakes, icicles and snow-covered rocks
Aboard the Disney Magic, the “Disney Dreams stage show will add new scenes featuring “Frozen” characters ,include renditions of three popular songs: “Let it Go,” “For the First Time in Forever” and “In Summer.” including special effects.
Castaway Cay will debut Olaf’s Summertime Freeze bar, serving non-alcoholic specialty frozen drinks in souvenir cups, such as “Olaf’s Flurry Freeze,” “Sven’s Carrot Delight” and “Warm Hugs.” Olaf’s Summertime Freeze opens summer 2015 near the Pelican Point tram stop by Castaway Cay Family Beach.
What s interesting to me about all of this Frozen stuff is that Disney is in a can t win situation: if they don t do Frozen things, then people would complain and criticize because they aren t giving people Frozen stuff. If they do the Frozen stuff, they are criticized for doing too much Frozen stuff.
What I think the real issue is here is that Frozen is a phenomenon that will play out until there is a next phenomenon. Will Frozen 2 be as compelling and have new characters that become a cultural hit? Doubtful.
Disney should be gearing up a Rumpelstiltskin or Hansel Gretal or something. Another European fairytale that could be big like Frozen. The polynesian thing they are doing next looks okay, but is not going to be a giant cultural hit like Frozen.
I live in Florida and was able to get up to Disney for the Frozen Days of Summer in Hollywood Studios and for the Freezing of Cinderellas Castle in MK, both were pretty cool shows visually. The problem that I have with them is there is nothing new to them at all in terms of writing. virtual campus tours The shows come across as bad spin-off stories You know the audience seemed to like it when the sisters said they like chocolate, why not put that in EVERY SHOW and it s ripped virtual campus tours right out of the movie What s that smell ::SNIFF:: CHOCOLATE! It has been in ever show that centered around Frozen I ve seen, even the quick show before the fireworks under the Hat at Hollywood Studios.
I would like to keep seeing more Frozen shows/attractions, it s nice to see Disney embrace a movie the way that they have, I can remember 1 show and 1 dark right that I may or may not have dreamt up for the Lion King. So what they are doing is refreshing in a way they need to not keep rehashing the same jokes and lines over and over again.
The problem with shows at a place like Disney is that they have to appeal to families virtual campus tours who might come once in a lifetime or once every 5 years. So, while you might not like hearing the same jokes again and again, people who are making their first trip to the parks (or one of only two trips they will take in their child s entire childhood) would go home disappointed if they did not hear that chocolate joke.
It s kind of like political speeches. If you ever follow a candidate and go to different events, the candidate says the same speech more or less every time. The lines that work and get a response from the crowd are highlighted and put into the next speech. And they keep using them until crowds no longer give a good response to them.
It s the same thing with Disney. What I think becomes a problem is when grown adults go to Disney parks frequently without children. The adults think the parks are for them. They are not. The parks are for families. Always have been. Always will be. The parks are not for middle-aged men or single super fans.
Little kids love familiarity and repetition. Taking out the chocolate joke just because Brice heard it before would never happen…because tons of little kids who have never been to a Disney park before have never heard that joke and it s guaranteed to get a laugh.
Wow, someone who gets it. I m a middle aged man who used to visit Disney parks several times a year, listen to several Walt Disney World podcasts a week (most podcasts have died off or greatly reduced their publishing schedule), read Disney websites, scour the web for Disney news, watch every film the studio released but right around the time of Frozen, I said what am I doing? . This is kids stuff. Epcot Center was my favorite place in the (entire, real) world when I first visited it in 1990 up until they got rid of Horizons, and every single change since then has made the park uglier, stupider and cheapened. The Hollywood Studios park is getting pointless. They don t bother to fix the most compelling part of what should be the premiere attraction at DAK. New Fantasyland? Seems to be aimed at preteen girls. In the past ten years, the largest investment in any US park has been Cars Land an entire land themed to one single non-Disney (at the time) mediocre movie, and nothing in the future plans appeal to me (not very into Marvel, Star Wars or Avatar this kind of thing would be better suited to Universal Parks). This Frozenization of everything is just the last straw, it s not even a good movie. Sorry for the rant but yeah, I m out. I ll enjoy my memories of what Disney used to mean, but really it s gone, it s not coming back.
Based in Orlando, Florida, Inside the Magic was launched in 2005 by Ricky Brigante. The Inside the Magic podcast has since become the longest-running Disney podcast in the world, with a new show having been released every week since its inception.
InsideTheMagic.net still features our weekly podcast covering Disney and all theme park topics, also reaching out to grand openings, special events, conventions, travel, movies, virtual campus tours and other pop culture excitement with exclusive interviews, news, high-quality videos, photos, reviews, and much more.

Комментариев нет:

Отправить комментарий