Our Little One Is Growing Up

Many years ago my wife and I discussed that there would come a time when our little one would start to grow tired of Disney.  Now I don’t mean Disney World, but I mean all of the little Disney things.  She used to love having Disney posters, and stuffed animals around her room.  Now she wants things that a older girls wants.  Music posters, and stuff like that.  She doesn’t mind going to Disney World because we go to the parks that she wants, and go on rides that she wants.  We don’t make her go on the little kiddie rides anymore because she is very emotional about things.

When she started school this year we asked her if she was going to use her Disney backpack anymore, and she immediatelly told us NO.  I guess that she didn’t want to feel out of place.  This caused us to have to go buy her a new backpack.  The one we got looked more like the hiking backpacks look like.  This is what she chose, and we don’t want her to feel out of place now that she is in 6th grade.

When did you have to make major changes for your child?

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Iger Stepping Down

Here is some news from the Reuters news page… I just wanted to post it in case anyone had not read this story…

(Reuters) – Walt Disney Co Chief Executive Bob Iger will step down as CEO in March 2015 after nearly a decade at the helm, setting in motion a succession plan for the largest U.S. media and entertainment company.

The company did not mention possible successors, but industry speculation centered on Chief Financial Officer Jay Rasulo and the head of Disney’s huge theme parks and resorts division, Tom Staggs.

Iger, 60, succeeded Michael Eisner as Disney’s CEO in October 2005, which means his tenure as chief executive would be less than a decade long.

Eisner’s reign at Disney, which ranks among the longest and most storied — for better and worse — in CEO history, lasted 21 years, from 1984 until 2005.

Disney shares fell 1 percent to close at $31.70 on the New York Stock Exchange. The company has increased in value by more than a third since Iger began his term.

Disney, which generates some $40 billion in annual revenue, is grappling with economic uncertainty and its impact on its three largest divisions: media, its movie studio and theme park resorts.

In August, the company posted better-than-expected quarterly results, but Wall Street analysts warned that low consumer spending may pinch in coming months.

“It’s wise for Disney’s board to have a very clear succession plan,” said Miller Tabak & Co analyst David Joyce.

Still, he said, Iger’s plan to leave the CEO post is “a little surprising given he’s still a little young-ish CEO.”

Speculation that Iger might have identified a successor picked up in 2009 after Disney said Staggs and Rasulo were swapping jobs.

Staggs, 50, was known as a favored executive and is considered a potential successor to Iger, but the former Wall Street analyst lacked operational experience. By putting Staggs in charge of Disney’s all-important theme parks, analysts said, Iger may have been affirming Staggs as a strong internal candidate for the top job while giving the finance chief much-needed operating experience.

Iger will assume the post of chairman, in addition to CEO, starting in March 2012, when Chairman John Pepper retires. Iger will hold the jobs through March 31, 2015, and continue as executive chairman through June 30, 2016.

His annual salary rose to $2.5 million from $2 million now. Iger also could receive as much as $12 million in annual cash bonuses and up to $15.5 million a year in options and restricted shares.

Iger, who got his start as a TV weatherman, joined Disney after Eisner’s deal to buy Capital Cities/ABC in 1995, a $19 billion deal that caught everyone flat-footed when announced. Iger served as Eisner’s second-in-command for the last five years of his tenure.

His loyalty and deference to Eisner led to mocking from media insiders that Iger had no thought that Eisner did not already approve.

After taking over in 2005, however, Iger stunned the very same people with bold moves that betrayed his prior image. In a matter of months, he not only smoothed over the friction Eisner created with Apple Inc co-founder Steve Jobs, but also convinced Jobs to sell Pixar animation studios to Disney for $7.4 billion.

In addition to the studio, that deal also made Jobs the company’s largest individual shareholder and landed him on Disney’s board, giving Iger unfettered access to Jobs’ insights on how to re-orient an old media company to the digital world.

Iger bought Marvel Entertainment for $4.4 billion, aggressively moved Disney programing online through partnerships with online video service Hulu and others, and ousted longtime executives such as Dick Cook, David Westin and Stephen McPherson who he felt were underperforming.

In terms of style, Iger and Eisner could not have been more different. Eisner was brash, aggressive, confrontational and hands on in every aspect of Disney’s business. Iger is quiet, laid back, borderline robotic and prefers to allow those under him to run their fiefdoms as they see fit.

“He’s a very calm personality,” Wunderlich Securities analyst Matthew Harrigan said, adding that “people are very happy with Iger from a strategic perspective.”

Iger rose to the CEO role in part because of disenchantment among investors at Eisner’s leadership, particularly the way he handled the $66 billion hostile takeover offer from Comcast Corp in 2004.

At the company’s annual shareholder meeting following that offer, Eisner received a stunning 43 percent no-confidence vote from shareholders and was forced to relinquish his chairman of the board title.

(Reporting by Lisa Richwine. Editing by Peter Lauria and Robert MacMillan)

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Jobs In Disney I Wouldn’t Want

After many years of going to Disney I have seen what many of the employees do for their job.  I don’t think that every job is meant for everyone.  There are many jobs in Disney that just don’t look that exciting to me.  I am sure that those jobs are great if you don’t want to interact with many people, but they have to be somewhat boring at the same time.

I would not want to have to do the night audit clerk jobs, merchandising, or the maintenance.  These jobs all seem to have the same exact thing going on, and that is repetition, and for the most part very little guest interaction.  I have had to check into our room late on a few occasions.  There is probably a better pay, but those people must really hate it when they want to see their family, but can’t because they are sleeping so that they can work the night shift.

I like to meet people, and work with people.  I am not sure if you feel the same, but working in Disney without guest interaction just seems very dull.

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Port Canaveral Parking Prices Increase

Just as way of an informational to everyone that is going on a Disney Cruise, or any cruise out of Port Canaveral… The parking prices have gone up.

Here are the new prices.

3-night cruise – $60

4-night cruise – $75

5-night cruise – $90

7-night cruise – $120

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Fantasyland Expansion Timeline

Being Disney is never exact on their timelines I would follow this timeline as if I were a betting man.  This is information that was mentioned at the recent D23 convention.

Early 2012 – Half of Storybook Circus with double dumbo, great goofini coaster,fantasyland train station, casey jr.

Late 2012 (November-December) – Under the Sea ~ Journey of the Little Mermaid ride, Be Our Guest restaurant, Beauty and the Beast village, Belle meet-and-greet, Castle wall

Early 2013 – Remaining half of Storybook Circus with Pete’s Silly Sideshow

Late 2013 – Seven Dwarfs Mine Train roller coaster

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