Hopefully that’s not really what Delta stands for! We’re headed off for Spokane WA. It’s a first for both of us, and it will be exciting to see what Spokane is like. But first we go through Minneapolis. I remember when I was young my family (all good Minnesotans) would fly to Minneapolis (though we usually drove), and due to the observance/non observance of daylight savings time, we would often arrive at the same time we departed! Probably won’t happen today…
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Off to Spokane
Go!
On the way
Test
Not exciting, just a test
Sent from my iPad
Twilight Zone Tower of Terror
Ok, this is likely the best ride I’ve experienced anywhere, no matter how you rate it. Guests enter the Hollywood Tower Hotel through the front gate. Guests may notice that the cast members (dressed as bellhops) are very solemn and ominous. Throughout the entire queue area in most parks, typical 1930s jazz music can be heard, hauntingly echoing through a cracked, serpentine pathway which leads to the hotel proper. The outdoor queue winds through the overgrown gardens of the hotel, past signs pointing to the stables, bowling green, tennis courts and swimming pools. The queue meanders to the west of the hotel entrance, past disheveled and crumbling statuary and a vine-covered pavilion. Eventually it leads to the lobby from the left. Inside the doors, the Hollywood Tower Hotel appears frozen in time, everything in it draped in decades’ worth of dust and decay. There is a yellowed copy of the Los Angeles Examiner dated October 31, 1939, a table set with tea and stale pastries, several suitcases abandoned near the front desk, a long-extinguished fireplace, an unfinished game of Mahjong at a table accompanied by a few rancid cocktails, a concierge desk with a hat and cane left behind,a cobwebbed owl sculpture surrounded by a circle of dead flowers acting as the centerpiece of the lobby, and what appears to be an elegant couple’s dinner, with the last bottle of champange still unopened.
Behind the front desk is the elevators, one of which its sliding doors partially detached from their grooves. A sign in front of the elevator still reads “Out of Order.” Everything in the hotel has apparently been preserved and left undisturbed ever since it closed that fateful night all those years ago. Guests are informed that their rooms are not quite ready, in the meantime, guests are ushered into the hotel library. The library is home to not only books, but also the hotel’s collection of antiques and exotic curiosities, an old television set, and various pieces of Twilight Zone memorabilia scattered about the room. Through the window, guests may observe a fierce thunderstorm raging outside.
With a bolt of lightning the power suddenly goes out, save for the television which crackles into life, apparently of its own accord. The opening sequence of Season 4 of The Twilight Zone plays, followed by a supposedly “lost” episode hosted by Rod Serling. Serling fills in some of the blanks regarding the closure of the Hollywood Tower Hotel back in 1939. The episode shows the hotel on that night all those years ago. A ferocious thunderstorm has enveloped the building and grounds. The episode then cuts to the lobby, where four guests accompanied by a hotel bellhop board the elevator. The elevator ascends normally at first, but then lightning strikes the hotel, causing an entire wing and the guests to vanish Bringing the episode back to the present, Serling comments the particular evening’s weather is eerily similar to the one on the night the five people disappeared. He also refers to the one elevator in the hotel still in working condition, which is the maintenance service elevator located in the basement boiler room. He invites the guests, if they dare, to board the elevator and discover the secret of the Hollywood Tower Hotel. The television then shuts off and is followed by a brief moment of darkness.
With that, a back exit from the library opens. The guests exit into and move through the boiler room, past quietly humming boilers, furnaces and engines, at the end of which they are placed upon a row to stand on a marker of their choice, awaiting the service elevator’s arrival. This is the idea:
There seemed to be quite a number of gaily attired hotel guests the day we were there…
But we waited in line anyhow…
Our library bellhop, Elizabeth was particularly scary and added greatly to the sense of foreboding leading up to the ride.
The technical workings of the ride are phenomenal–The ride system of The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror at Disney’s Hollywood Studios employs specialized technology developed specifically for Disney, particularly the ability to move the vehicle in and out of the vertical motion shaft. The elevator cabs are self-propelled automated ride vehicles, termed “AGV” for autonomous guided vehicle, which lock into separate vertical motion cabs. The cabs can move into and out of elevators horizontally, move through the “Fifth Dimension” scene, and on to the drop shaft.
In order to achieve the weightless effect the Imagineers desired, cables attached to the bottom of the elevator car pull it down at a speed slightly faster than what a free-fall in gravity would provide. Two enormous motors are located at the top of the tower. The motors are 12 feet (3.7 m) tall, 35 feet (11 m) long, and weigh 132,000 pounds. They are able to accelerate 10 tons at 15 times the speed of normal elevators. They generate torque equal to that of 275 Corvette engines and reach top speeds in 1.5 seconds.
After the elevator cab has completed the ride, it propels itself to the unload dock and then back to the show shaft. The ride exceeds 30 mph VERTICALLY. You really need seat belts for this ride!
Walking Around Disney’s Hollywood Studios
One of the pleasures of vacationing at WDW if you can get off the fast pass treadmill for. A few minutes is just wandering around the parks. At Disney’s Hollywood Studios, there is quite an unbelievable variety of places to go! Here’s a very un-December scenes from what? Sunset and Vine?
And here’s Callie on some New York street or another…
And here’s some goober standing near a peculiar fountain filled with Muppets!
And I don’t know where this is, but you know it’s gotta be Disney because there are people actually cleaning the streets! What the what?
So we had a blast checking out the park, which is really a big part of the fun.
The Great Movie Ride
This is, as we’ve seen, the starting point for the entire park, but I hear rumors occasionally of a refurb or elimination of this ride, which would be a shame from my point of view. Maybe an update here and there, but don’t take a wrecking ball to it!
Really a boffo bit of fun! Hooray for Hollywood!
Disney’s Hollywood Studios
Is that the right name? That’s an interesting story.
In 1985, Disney and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer entered into a licensing contract that gave Disney worldwide rights to use the MGM name and logo for what would become Disney-MGM Studios, which included working production facilities for movies and television shows and a satellite animation studio, which began operation prior to the park’s debut. In 1988, MGM/UA responded by filing a lawsuit that claimed Disney violated the agreement by operating a working movie and television studio at the resort. On May 1, 1989, the theme park opened adjacent to the production facilities, with MGM’s only affiliation being the original licensing agreement that allowed Disney to use the brand name and lion logo in marketing, and separate contracts that allowed specific MGM content to be used in The Great Movie Ride.
Disney later filed a countersuit, claiming that MGM/UA and MGM Grand, Inc. had conspired to violate Disney’s worldwide rights to the MGM name in the theme park business and that MGM/UA would harm Disney’s reputation by building its own theme park at the MGM Grand hotel and casino in Las Vegas, Nevada. On October 23, 1992, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Curtis B. Rappe ruled that Disney had the right to continue using the Disney-MGM Studios name on film product produced at the Florida facility, and that MGM Grand had the right to build a Las Vegas theme park using the MGM name and logo as long as it did not share the same studio backlot theme as Disney’s property. The 33-acre MGM Grand Adventures Theme Park opened in 1993 at the Las Vegas site and closed permanently in 2000.
Disney was contractually prohibited from using the Disney-MGM Studios name in certain marketing contexts; in those instances, the park was called The Disney Studios.
On August 9, 2007, Walt Disney World President Meg Crofton announced that Disney-MGM Studios would be re-branded as Disney’s Hollywood Studios, effective January 7, 2008, saying, “the new name reflects how the park has grown from representing the golden age of movies to a celebration of the new entertainment that today’s Hollywood has to offer—in music, television, movies and theater.” So I had it right, whew!
So the park that started as a concept to build a Great Movie Ride at EPCOT became one of the most entertaining properties at WDW, called Disney’s Hollywood Studios. And I know we had fun there!