T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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379.1 | From Skip Williams and the Internet | WREATH::SCOPA | | Tue Mar 29 1994 11:11 | 50 |
|
ORLANDO, Fla--Walt Disney World's 4th Orlando
theme park, which could open as early as 1997,
will mix wild animals with nature walks and
elaborate thrill rides, the Orlando Sentinel
reported Saturday. It cited a confidential
marketing video.
Disney sources cautioned that although the
basic concepts will remain the same, the park's
design is constantly being revised, the newspaper
said.
The Sentinal's report, based on viewings of the
marketing video, said the 500-acre animal park
will have a strong conservation theme. It will
provide competition for other animal theme parks
and rides in central Florida, including Tampa's
Busch Gardens and the Jurassic Park attraction
planned for Universal Studios Florida in Orlando.
"It's got more of that fun for the younger
adults and older kids than Universal has," said
Alan Gould, a theme park analyst at Kidder,
Peabody & Co.
"And I would have to think this is going to be
huge competition for Busch Gardens."
Like the Magic Kingdom, the newest park is divided into several
lands connected by a central
hub, according to the video, which has been shown
to tourists as part of a marketing study.
A giant Tree of Life, the park's icon, rises in
the midst of the setting, in the style of the
famous Cinderella's Castle.
The lands may include a "Beastly Kingdom,"
which features imaginary animals from storybooks
and fairy tales. It may also include a "Dinoland,"
Disney's answer to Jurassic Park, which invites
guests on an archeological dig and takes them back
in time to rescue dinosaurs from extinction.
Another land may be "Africa," where guests can see
wild animals, and witness the capture of poachers,
who threaten the environment. Also there may be an
"Asia," which features rides through simulated
rain forests.
Muddy rapids--the result of erosion wrought by
careless logging--threaten the rafts in Asia, but
the journey ends safely at a conservation area.
Disney already has 3 theme parks in its complex
near Orlando--The Magic Kingdom, EPCOT Center, and
the Disney-MGM Studios.
(From Reuters)
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379.2 | As long as they include a couple *huge* roller-coasters | NEMAIL::CARROLLJ | Gilligan! Drop those coconuts!! | Wed Mar 30 1994 10:01 | 6 |
| Wow... sounds like *major* competition for Busch Gardens... If they
add a water skiing show, they could knock Cypress Gardens down as well
:-)
- Jim
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379.3 | | MAY30::CULLISON | | Wed Mar 30 1994 18:44 | 11 |
| That may or may not be true. YOu could have said the same thing about
MGM against Universal. Well Universal is doing quite well, as if
MGM did not even exist. With Busch Gardens backing it is not likely
they will go away. Cypress Gardens has been around forever long
before any of the others and they have managed to survive nicely.
Basically each expansion at WDW just draws more and more people
to Florida, the numbers are so large it probably will allow
not only for the existing places to survive but to grow also.
Harold
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379.4 | still spells trouble for BG... | NEMAIL::CARROLLJ | Gilligan! Drop those coconuts!! | Mon Apr 04 1994 16:53 | 30 |
| Re -.1 ( Harold )
Yeah, it'll draw even more vacationers to Florida ( Orlando ), but
it'll also eat up another day of vacation time - if there are tow
somewhat similar parks, and one is right next door to Orlando ( where
the bulk of the hotels are ) and the other is 1.5 hours away in Tampa,
which one are people going to go to? My folks passed on Sea World,
opting instead to just go to the Living Seas at EPCOT ( not *nearly*
the same experience, but they never were marine life fans :-) ).
My point is - generally most people stay 1 week.
1. - Magic Kingdom
2. - EPCOT
3. - Disney/MGM
4. - Universal Studios
5. - Typhoon Lagoon / Wet-n-Wild or other water park
6. - Busch Gardens
7. - Sea World
8. - Chruch Street Station
9. - New Disney Animal Park
10. - Pleasure Island
With the exceptions of ( a water park ) , Pleasure Island and
Church Street Station, all of the above usually take at *least* one day
to experience. While I don't think that Busch Gardens will fold up and
blow away, I'm sure the new animal park will eat into their profits
quite a bit . . .
- Jimbo
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379.5 | Wild Animal Kingdom | FPTWS1::ABRAMS | Curl up with a good CD-ROM | Mon Jun 26 1995 16:18 | 30 |
|
"Wild Animal Kingdom" is the name of the fourth theme park to be built at
Walt Disney World. Here are some quotes from a newswire article about
the announcement.
"...a rising wave of tourists streaming through its turnstiles and profits
topping $1B for the first time..."
"The more than $750 million project will open in the spring of 1998 and feature
more than 1,000 animals ranging from mammoth African elephants to tiny
hissing cockroaches from Madagascar."
[moderator's note: Isn't that a new rock group?]
"In addition, Disney announced other new attractions at Walt Disney World,
including new resorts, educational and sports centers, and the construction
of two Disney cruise ships bigger than any other cruise vessel now operating."
"From its 28,000 acre Disney World Resort, Disney will carve out 500 acres for
the new theme park. That's twice the size of EPCOT, fice times bigger than
the Magic Kingdom."
"Visitors will tour the jungles and savannas of Africa, engaging in close
interactions with animals. They'll go backstage for lessons on conservation
and see research being done on any of the 150 species in the new park --
including 25 endangered species."
"The park will ultimately include three themed lands: Africa, which takes
visitors on a mock safari; the Beastly Kingdom, focusing on mythological
creatures; and Dinoland, an area with animated dinosuars and other prehistoric
animals."
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379.6 | my opinion so far | FPTWS1::ABRAMS | Curl up with a good CD-ROM | Mon Jun 26 1995 16:26 | 24 |
| My personal thoughts on WAK:
1. Heck of an acronym!
2. The Disney VP I saw interviewed said this park is based on a traditional
love of animals that Walt himself started. Why, then, is only one of
three themed lands based on real animals?
3. Do we really want to see a bigger "Universe of Engergy?" The interviewers
gave him a hard time about creating a "Jurassic Park." Of course,
Univeral Studios IS creating a themed land based on "Jurassic Park."
I like to see WDW make itself distinctive, not a copycat.
4. Disney needs a fast lesson on "politically correct" speech when talking
about animals. The news article says that visitors will see "research
being done on any of the 150 species..." How about: "Visitors will be able
to see researchers studying any of the 150 species in habitats designed to
closely simulate their natural settings." I hope that's a close statement
to their plans.
5. Sounds like WDW park attendance is surging upward again.
Bill A.
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379.7 | Disney's Wild Animal Kingdom | WREATH::SCOPA | | Tue Jun 27 1995 12:26 | 8 |
| The best aspect of this is the thinning of the crowds with additional
theme park space. Although the park area may seem large probably only
half of that space will be accessible to visitors.
It would be nice to see a slowdown on hotel room expansion and an
acceleration of park expansion.
Mike
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379.8 | Why the New Park Has a Name Change | WREATH::SCOPA | | Wed Feb 21 1996 11:54 | 86 |
| By Leslie Doolittle, The Orlando Sentinel, Fla.
Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News
Feb. 20--ON TOURISM
Disney's Wild Animal Kingdom has been tamed a bit -- in name at least.
The official title of the park is now Disney's Animal Kingdom.
It appears Mutual of Omaha -- the folks who brought you the Wild
Kingdom TV show -- may have influenced that decision.
Last year, shortly after the park was announced, officials from the
Nebraska-based insurance company noted that they still own the
rights to the name Wild Kingdom.
You remember ol' Marlin Perkins and Jim Fowler:
Yes, Jim, and just as that baby wildebeest needed protection from the
fierce crocodile, your family needs Mutual of Omaha insurance!
When Disney World spokesman Bill Warren was asked whether Mutual
influenced the name change, he responded with a sidestep that
would have made the late Gene Kelly proud:
"Everyone was calling it the Animal Kingdom so we thought it would be
better to go ahead and change the name."
When pressed for a "yes" or "no" response to the Mutual question, out
came a tribute to the late Fred Astaire:
"We have no quarrel with Mutual of Omaha."
As for Mutual of Omaha Kathy Olson, vice president for public affairs
said the company has a policy against discussing legal issues.
"I can confirm that we have had discussions with Disney concerning the
name," Olson said, "but I can't comment on the nature of those
discussions."
In the meantime, Bob Lamb, vice president/resort critters and head of
the Animal Kingdom, says he is well on his way to assembling the
"dream team of the zoo world."
Bruce Read, senior curator of mammals/deputy general curator at the St.
Louis Zoological Park, has been named general curator in charge
of daily animal operations.
Beth Stevens, senior vice president at the Conservation Action Resource
Center at Zoo Atlanta, starts March 4 as director of conservation and
science. She's responsible for linking Disney World conservation and
education efforts to projects and organizations around the world.
And come Monday, Dr. Peregrine Wolff, director of biological
programs at the Minnesota Zoo, will start work as veterinary
services director. She will be charged with animal health care
throughout the resort.
Yes, you did just read: Lamb hires Wolff to care for Disney animals (in
Doolittle's column, no less.)
Lamb concedes that Wolff's name caught his eye when looking at a
list of job candidates, though she got the job based on her
extensive qualifications.
So how did Wolff wind up with a name like Peregrine?
It seems her parents weren't fervent environmentalists or animal
lovers, as one might think. They named her after a falcon because
they wanted a longer name they could use and still call a boy or
girl a favorite family name -- Perry.
Wolff, who goes by Peri, said although she spent a large part of her
childhood wishing her name was Heather, her name didn't get
noticed too much until she entered college.
"That's when people started picking up on the double-carnivore," Wolff
said.
So what did Peregrine Wolff's parents name her sister?
Ashley.
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379.9 | Dragon's Keep | DONVAN::SCOPA | | Fri May 31 1996 13:33 | 22 |
| Well this doesn't sound right but I'm just the reporter:
It appears that a pretty sensational thrill ride will be coming to
Disney's Animal Kingdom (DAK). The name of the attraction will be
something like "Dragon's Keep".
The best way to describe this attraction is that it is an inverted
looping roller coaster much like Batman:The Ride. But there are a few
interesting twists to this ride.
First, it will be indoors. Space Mountain was the first indoor roller
coaster ride but it won't be the last. DK will be built in a huge evil
dark castle with many areas that are begging to be brushed by a guest
filled coaster. Among the tight hallways guests will encounter what is
being described as the largest audioanimatronic figure ever
created....a huge dragon whose lot in life is to hurl chunks of
fireballs at the coaster.
That's the scoop....I just can't figure out why they would put this
attraction in DAK.
Mike
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379.10 | Ticket price | STOSS1::KUTZ | St. Louis Sales Support | Mon May 19 1997 12:17 | 3 |
| Has anyone heard about potential ticket costs for Animal Kingdom? I'm
assuming that existing (until DAK's opening) tickets, such as a 5 Day
World Hopper pass, will not be honored at DAK.
|
379.11 | My Guess | DONVAN::SCOPA | | Mon May 19 1997 14:24 | 31 |
| I don't think they will be honored. I've heard several didfferent takes
on what might happen:
- DAK for all of 1998 will have separate admission from the other
parks. That is the present multi-day passes will continue except
for DAK which will require a separate admission.
- Starting in the Summer of 1998 WDW may include DAK only in their
Length of Stay Passes.
- Annual Passports issued after May, 1998 will include DAK.
- Once DAK opens all admission media may be upgraded, for a price,
to include DAK.
I think the last option is the one that most likely will happen. I'm
guessing that the new tickets will go something like:
1-Day/1-Park => About $50-55
4-Day value => About $170-180
4-Day Hopper => About $195-205
5-Day Hopper => About $260-270
AP (New) => About $325-335
AP (Renewal) => About $285-300
Please note these are only my own personal estimates for adult prices
and these include tax.
We'll have to wait about 8 months.
Mike
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