| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 298.1 | Just a side question... | NOVA::FEENAN | Jay Feenan, Rdb/VMS engineering | Sun Feb 09 1992 13:55 | 5 | 
|  |     I attended the World Expo in '88 in Brisbane, whatever did they do with
    the site after the Expo?
    
    -Jay
    
 | 
| 298.2 | More info please ? | AKOCOA::HILL |  | Sat Feb 09 1991 23:14 | 23 | 
|  |     
    	RE : .0
    
    		Would it be possible to get the name of the Australian
    magazine that the info about the proposed Brisbane park appeared in ?
    Don't get me wrong. I'm pretty sure your info is legit ( Why for ? 
    Last week, Orlando's newspapers were full of stories about Disney
    executives in the Far East -- looking at potential sites for a new 
    Disney park. However the story-behind-the-story here is these Disney
    executives are making this trip to force the Oriental Land Ltd. 
    executives -- the Japanese consortium of businessmen who put up the
    dough for Tokyo Disneyland -- to reconsider their recent decision.
    You see, these guys recently said " No " to a Tokyo version of the
    studio theme park -- which pissed off Eisner & Co. Disney then
    threatened to find new financial partners and build the second studio
    theme park else. The Oriental Land execs laughed at them ... So
    Disney's now making good on its threat ... It'll be interesting to
    see how this one plays out. I know that Disney would really prefer 
    to build the second studio right next door to Tokyo Disneyland --
    taking advantage of the already-Disney-addicted crowds. But I also
    hear that there's been a lot of loose talk around Glendale about an
    Australian Disney park. Do keep us posted, okay ? ), I'd just like
    to know the exact source. 
 | 
| 298.3 |  | BREAKR::MIKKELSON | No man is a three-mile island. | Mon Feb 10 1992 14:25 | 14 | 
|  |     >However the story-behind-the-story here is these Disney
    >executives are making this trip to force the Oriental Land Ltd. 
    >executives -- the Japanese consortium of businessmen who put up the
    >dough for Tokyo Disneyland -- to reconsider their recent decision.
    >You see, these guys recently said " No " to a Tokyo version of the
    >studio theme park -- which pissed off Eisner & Co. Disney then
    >threatened to find new financial partners and build the second studio
    >theme park else. The Oriental Land execs laughed at them ... So
    >Disney's now making good on its threat 
    
    If the Japanese businessmen referred to don't want the studio theme park
    built in Tokyo, in what way is building it Australia a "threat" to them?
    
    
 | 
| 298.4 | Deep background on Disney's current war with the Japanese | AKOCOA::HILL |  | Mon Feb 10 1992 23:56 | 42 | 
|  |     
    	RE :  - 1
    
    	Ooops. You're gonna need more info to understand the threat
    involved here. You see, when the BE ( Before Eisner ) Disney management
    team cut the original deal for Tokyo Disneyland, they weren't entirely
    sure than a Disney theme park would work overseas. So they kept the
    company's financial involvement with the project at a minimum --
    literally franchising the right to build a Disney park in Tokyo to
    the Oriental Land Ltd. business consortium with the promise that Walt
    Disney Productions would recieved 10 % of all revenues.
    	Well -- as it turned out -- Tokyo Disneyland is the most popular
    of all the Disney parks anywhere in the world. And -- by just settling
    for 10 % of the gate -- the Walt Disney Company lost billions !
    	Okay -- now it's 10 years later -- and the Oriental Land Ltd.
    group is eager to expand its relationship with the Disney Company.
    Likewise, Eisner and Co. are anxious to build on the success of WDW's
    studio theme park by building a second version of the park right next
    door to Tokyo Disneyland. Oriental Land Ltd. likes the idea, but
    there's a catch : If they're to build a Tokyo version of the studio
    theme park, they want the same terms they got on the Tokyo Disneyland
    deal.
    	Eisner and his team -- who had really been thinking along the 
    lines of a 50 / 50 split this time -- balked. So the Oriental Land
    Ltd. group -- confident that Eisner would eventually come around to
    their way of thinking -- walked away from the bargaining table.
    	Eisner -- furious at the Japanese businessmen's behavior --
    sent the Oriental Land Ltd. Company a $ 1 million plus bill for the
    cost of developing plans for a Tokyo studio theme park. He then threatened
    to seek out new financial partners and build the park elsewhere in the 
    Orient ...
    	That's where things stand now. Disney's playing hardball -- sending
    very obvious teams of executives around the Pacific Rim to visit
    potential construction sites for a new Disney park -- with the hope
    that the Oriental Land Ltd. will see that Eisner's threat was serious.
    Disney then hopes that -- faced with the very real possiblity of losing
    out on a potential goldmine like a Tokyo version of the studio theme
    park -- the Oriental Land Ltd. Company will call Eisner and his team
    back to the table and offer the Disney Company much better terms.
    	Does that explanation make clear where the threat is now ?
    
                                                                  
 | 
| 298.5 | Didn't Sony once claim to want to a theme park? | TOHOKU::TAYLOR |  | Tue Feb 11 1992 16:22 | 5 | 
|  |     re: Disney's playing hardball -- sending very obvious teams of executives 
    
    The counter ploy would be for Oriental Land Ltd. to invite a Universe
    Studios team over to Tokyo. Bush is trying to break into the
    Japan beer market, maybe a Bush Gardens? 
 | 
| 298.6 |  | BREAKR::MIKKELSON | No man is a three-mile island. | Thu Feb 13 1992 13:44 | 15 | 
|  |     
    >	Does that explanation make clear where the threat is now ?
    
    Yes, it does.  I wonder if they'd actually go through with building a
    studio theme park in a completely separate area, though.  I wouldn't
    travel to Florida to visit any single one of the Disney World parks;
    the synergy of their all being in one place is what it makes it
    worthwhile.  (Of course, I would probably still go to the Magic Kingdom
    if there weren't already a Disneyland in California, so it's not quite the
    same thing.  And, of course, the USA is a rather large country, but Japan
    and Australia are none too close, either.)
    
    - David
    
    
 | 
| 298.7 |  | HOBBLE::SWEATT |  | Thu Apr 09 1992 22:57 | 11 | 
|  |     	I can't see how Australia has the population to support a 
    Disneyland style park.
    
    	America has something like 280 million people
    	In Europe, they say there are 310 million people within 2 hours.
    	Japan has a population of around 200 million
    
    Australia has a population around 15 million.  Personally I
    can't see flying half way around the world to see the park.
    I don't think anybody else will either. 
    
 |