Living the Dream

Everything was going great on our Cruise aboard the Disney Dream until my 7 year old daughter asked about Donald Duck’s penis… but more on that later.

Lifes Sweetest Reward

We have very defined roles around the Parkeology offices.

For example Shane writes frequent updates, he maintains the day in and day out technical aspects of the site, he visits the Florida parks often scouring for small details and interesting stories and he keeps the fridge full of various high calorie / low quality energy drinks.

On the other hand I disappear for months on end, rarely do any actual work and forget my passwords often. Yes, I’m in charge of a very important annual tradition and I am an expert in certain areas but Shane is clearly the brains of the operation. HOWEVER I do take trips. That’s my thing… I’m the guy who has been to all the parks everywhere and I know it really pisses Shane off… I like it that way.

Recently we decided to mix it up and instead of visiting a park or resort we hit up the Disney Cruise lines. People seem to love them in that creepy, brain-washed-zombie sort of way you sometimes see happen with Disney fans.  It’s not that people like the Disney Cruise Line; they LOVE it.  They want to marry it and have children with it.  They want to hide away and never leave the luxurious and impeccably clean confines of the ships.  It’s the greatest experience of their lives. Calling fans of the cruises devoted is like calling the Taliban “loyal”, frankly some of these folks seemed a bit insane to me.

I like this…

I’ve always been a fan of the Disney parks and their history, really my whole life at this point, but I have never cared all that much about other aspects of Disney.  The movies are fine, I enjoy some of them quite a bit, but that’s never been my thing.  Minnie Mouse shower curtains make me gag, snooping around for hidden Mickeys is a waste of time.  In other words I have a narrow but fairly deep interest in the history of the theme parks, what makes them work, how they came to be, but the Disney Cruise Line does not offer any of that. They offer all the aspects of Disney that I don’t care about: cloyingly cute shows, choreographed fun and lots of Mickey branded swag.

…NOT this.

I have never had a desire to take a Disney Cruise in fact I have had a strong aversion to it. Cruises in general have always kind of creeped me out.  It’s something for old people, unadventurous people or people who enjoy eating tremendous amounts of crappy (but “free”) food while jammed around a very shallow pool with 1,500 other people all rocking out to some Jimmy Buffet tunes.

Party Time Baby!

They are full of what I call “forced fun”. It’s the same thing we used to see at the old Pleasure Island, people acting like they were on vacation rather than actually being on one. I know in my heart that no one REALLY enjoyed pretending that it was New Years Eve every night. I know that no one truly thought having some lame confetti cannon blow some sparkly glitter in the air was cool or fun or clever or anything other than tedious. However there is a certain group-think feeling of “forced fun” that happens in these situations. People feel that they are paying a lot of money, that they are supposed to be having fun and that they are in a situation that is meant to be fun, therefore they force themselves to pretend to have fun. It’s like how those hypnotists shows work… we all just go along with the flow, do what we are told and hope things turn out OK in the end. This is what I expected from cruises.

Not fun. Not even PRETEND fun.

Throw in the mix some Disney foam head characters, scores of sticky kids running un-tethered and lots of lines for everything (and perhaps some sea sickness) and I was not expecting a lot of this.  But this was never about me; this was about my parents and their desire to spend time with their grand daughter (the aforementioned 7 year old).  The die was cast and I was along for the ride.

Looks like fun…

Early in the planning stages my mother suggested going on some God awful Shrek cruise or something but we managed to stay focused and convince her that if we were going to do this, if we were going to endure what was surely a week of high seas misery then we were at least going to do it on a Disney ship. Furthermore we were going to do it on the Dream, at the time the newest, biggest and hopefully best Disney had to offer.

It was a 5 night Caribbean Cruise.  Nothing fancy, we were leaving from Port Canaveral in Florida… cruising around the Caribbean a bit, stopping off at Disney’s Private Island (Castaway Kay like I need to tell any of you that) a couple of times and a brief stop in Nassau.  This is pretty standard cruise stuff.

Things went smoothly at the terminal and as expected it was nicely done. Likewise boarding the ship went off without a hitch.  I was not super fond of being forced to have our group picture taken (so that they could try to sell it back to us later) but this is par for the course I understand.

Yea, they got this part…

The ship is nice… let’s just get this out of the way right off the bat.  I’m not going to give you all sorts of details about the layout and the offerings because it’s all out there and done much better and more in depth than I could ever do.  I just want to share my little personal experiences and opinions with you, order the free DVD if you want to plan a trip. Anyway, yes, the ship is nice.  It looks just like all the pictures you have seen.  Both the inside and out were clearly superior to other large ships that we saw.  Disney knows how to do this kind of thing and it is all executed exceedingly well.

Upon getting all the passengers on board I was happy to see that the ship did not seem THAT crowded.  It was full for sure but not crushingly so.  Even at big group events things felt orderly and under control, much more so than much of what happens in the parks actually. The first big event was a kick off “Bon Voyage” party.  In most cases this is held on the upper deck but it was raining a bit when we left so it was held in the main lobby.

make it stop

Hundreds of people jammed into the lobby and out pranced Mickey and Minnie and some poor college kids who had to serve as background dancers (and later we would see doing many other duties such as ushers in the theater or hosts at restaurants).  Cue the music and here comes the cheese.  Typical Disney “party” music blasted and of course confetti flew.  Foam heads bobbed around, college kids gamely rocked it out and the forced fun was starting to set in. We also got to meet Leslie for the first time. Leslie is our impossibly chipper, incredibly peppy cruise director.  Leslie would not ask us if we were having fun, she would command us to have fun. Her smile beamed as though chiseled from ivory. Leslie is like every Disneyland Ambassador ever all rolled into one and over caffeinated to the extreme. I was starting to think that this was the start of what was going to be a very long week in captivity.

Then I noticed something. My daughter had pushed to the front of the crowd with her mom and was dancing with the music. Not fake dancing, not sarcastic dancing, not forced fun dancing. The smile on her face was genuine the joy was real. She waved her hands in the air when the MC told her to; she waved her dolls hands in the air as well.  As “Dynamite” blared from the sound system she bopped up and down as I had never seen her do before. Disney knows it’s audience… she is the audience, she is what this was about and seeing her that happy of course made me happy… those bastards!  Disney got me… they are some sort of master manipulators but they got me.  This wasn’t going to be exactly as I expected after all.

Continued next time in part 2.

 

 

 

Comments (16)

  1. Thought the first: For the love of God, do not answer your daughter’s question about Donald. Sadly(?) the post on that very subject from the excellent Tetrapod Zoology blog seems to have vanished, but trust me it’s a mystery best left unsolved.

    Thought the second: As it happens, my family and I went on our very first Disney Cruise experience (on the Magic) last month. We enjoyed ourselves, but you hit the nail on the head with the “forced fun” thing. Looking forward to part two!

  2. As long as Long Duck Dons’ is not shaped like a dollar sign, then in similar circumstance I’ll be there. A reluctant first time spring trip hangs in the balance, dependent on Part II, and well if the Don has been arrested.

  3. You got me hooked. Looking forward to Part 2.

  4. where the heck is part 2?

  5. Loved Part 1!

    I feel like I could have written this–well, if I had any sense of wit or writing skill and if I had a daughter and if I had ever gone on a Disney Cruise….what was my point again? Oh, yeah–seriously, thanks for putting in words how I feel. I am a huge nut about the parks–love the history, love the design, love the concepts that never made it to reality….People see my framed photo of Le Château de la Belle au Bois Dormant on my desk and translate that into meaning I love to dress up as a Princess (yes I’m a guy, but they think that) and hug small women in giant Mickey costumes all day (I don’t).

    I too am an avid dissenter to “forced fun” and this is exactly why I haven’t been on a cruise yet. I do already see that all of this could change once I do have a little one in my life (child, that is!)…so I look forward to Part 2.

    • Dan

      This is the burden we park fans face. My entire life people have given me Mickey Mouse crap.

      They think I’m a “Disney” fan and therefore would enjoy a nice set of Mickey and Minnie salt and pepper shakers or perhaps a Shrek shower caddy (people aren’t that smart).

      Trying to get people to understand that I enjoy the narrow focus of park history and design and creation is almost impossible, so I smile and say thank you and then give the Seven Dwarves pillow sham to someone who cares.

  6. I have to admit that despite being of the correct era I was not familiar with “Jaggernaut” but after reading a synopsis of the plot it sounds awesome!

    They really shoudl remake it. When you think of things like Speed 2 or even the Die Hard films it falls right in line…

  7. Let’s remake the 1974 thriller, “Juggernaut” aboard a Disney Cruise ship, shall we? Sort of a “Titanic” meets “40 Pounds of Trouble”.

  8. Michael:

    Part two is on it’s way… thanks!

  9. Teevtee – don’t betray me now. Don’t tell me that the smile of a child is enough to overlook all the other insanity.

    • But her smile is so cute!
      We’ll see…

  10. That was a tease! I’m anxious for the obvious conclusion, where you sign up for DVC, start your pin collection, and audition to be an extra in the shows.

    And thanks for finally posting that picture of your plush collection. You didn’t tell me you finally got that Sulley you were looking for!

  11. Hey! The setup was great, but where’s the payoff!
    What about Donald?
    I guess I’ll wait (patiently) for part 2…

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