I’ll save you a click: don’t send this “middle aged” man back to any theme park because he didn’t get to go as a child, so his opinions are irrelevant to the theme park culture, especially Disney. https://www.theatlantic.com/culture/archive/2020/07/disney-world-during-pandemic-extremely-weird/614617/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=share
Although I did enjoy his stance and tone of writing, I disagree with a lot of the viewpoints he saw during his first-time ever stay at Magic Kingdom with a distaste that continued in his mouth.
There are several things in this opinion article that left me in awe as to how this was published to the public:
This especially: referring a smile for a photograph behind a mask to an electrocutive procedure for a neurotrigger into a smile that is not genuine.
How he didn’t understand that It’s A Small World is a child’s ride, and a timely attraction to all because it was built for international unity.
He should of had this paragraph and that was it for his article, as he stated that he was not the person to be reporting here, and states that he saw people who were there for Snow White are “ignorant and stupid.”
And in closing, I almost threw my phone at the damn wall for this part.
I understand pandemic, and the risks of going to theme parks and areas of crowding, and just all of that in general, I respect those who are taking the highest precautions and continuously being safe,
I understand pandemic, and the risks of going to theme parks and areas of crowding, and just all of that in general, I respect those who are taking the highest precautions and continuously being safe,
But this was a bad take. It was an absolution into the negative progress we have as a society, and to have downplayed and diminished any hope for a future towards the audience of The Atlantic is demeaning as a journal.
Bad take. Don’t incite this article.
Bad take. Don’t incite this article.