@@bradsmack1 When you consider the number of cast members it takes to keep the parks running, I suspect construction costs are a relatively small percentage of their overall budget.
@@smwsmwsmw Numbers would be nice to see on that, Steve. Not that you have to provide them.....it's just something that tweaks my curiosity! With the inevitable and predictable annual rise in cost, though, of materials, R&D, labor, and the persistent need to actually HAVE something erected and standing for the cast members to operate and man, it's possible, if not likely that construction costs are a relatively larger percentage of their overall budget than the generally static hourly cast member wage, regardless of roster count. The company has to have SOME way (payroll and construction notwithstanding) to keep acquiring licensing rights to new intellectual properties on which to plan and build new lands and rides, and admission prices seem to be the most direct and obvious way to fund expansion. Not to mention, the company improving guest experiences in-park can always be built into PR campaigns, helping lead guests to an easy rationale for mortgaging the house to afford a summer visit!
I definitely miss the PeopleMover. On a hot crowded afternoon, when the lines were all two hours long, my friends and I would go on the PeopleMover. It had a short line, it meant getting off our feet for twelve minutes or so, and it was a Walt ride, a ride he was personally connected to, which meant it was something special.
He would be disgusted at what his company has become. He wanted EVERYONE to be able to enjoy his parks, no matter how much money or status your family had. Now with Disney removing his speech from the 75th anniversary thing we may be seeing Disney try to remove Walt altogether.
@@TheIonVain they're even skipping and going back. They celebrate their 50th anniversary in 2022 and their 100th is next? Baloney. Walt would be mad. This is a outrage!
For some reason, Body Wars is the most tragic, scary, and fascinating abandoned ride - at least to me. Something about the simulators still being in there is unnerving and amazing sounding at the same time.
Aparently they tested the revamped star tours ride film in the simulators with employees riding it so they were still in fully working order as recently as 2010/11 when they were tested. I forget which year this was but the simulators have since been removed and the rooms they were housed in are just empty
9:32 For anyone wondering, the Disney Vacation Club Lounge is nice. It has some couches and pillows, it offers free refreshments, and Disney Video Games for the kids to play. I feel that the space is really open up there, and it offers a BEAUTIFUL view of the park. It’s been a few years since I’ve been up there though.
i go about once a year to disney world and like a few days after we left, we found out it would be closing. I’m going again in a little over a week. the great movie ride is one of my all time favorites and i have memories of it from when i was like 6. I remember always covering my eyes in the alien scene, but once my sister and i made a pact to keep our eyes open and we did. some of my best disney memories are from that ride. :(
My only question is who's replacing all these light bulbs in these abandoned rides like someone would have had to have replaced that desk light bulb for that animatronic at some point
I wouldnt go on it. I'd be terrified. 2 people died on that ride. It was their fault since they jumped from car to car but still.. It would give me the creeps.
Wolfie Gamer123 both were at Disneyland. The only peoplemover that remains is in Disney world. Plus, lots of deaths have happened at Disney parks. All amusement parks have had many deaths
Same here! So many of the cool ones closed before i was old enough to go! I got to go to Captain EO, Great Movie Ride, and the ride where you can customize your own thrill ride. But thats about it!
So true. I'll never go to WDW again. The cost is too steep. And if anyone thinks it isn't hurting them, they're wrong. Been visiting theme park boards for months and Universal Orlando is pretty crowded. It's so packed I'll have to wait until September to go because they're remodeling a chunk of Harry Potter World. I don't know what the new attraction will be.
Disney is a hugh capitalist company and they continue to add to opportunities for entertainment. No matter how much they raise the price they still have large crowds. This includes during down times. I love Disney and am a Disney Vacation Club member..but see the prices go up every time we go. I still can afford it but there may come a time when that will not be possible. If my family is not there because of that there will be three more families that can. I know Disney pushes the progressive socialist agenda but they are capitalist first.
Disney has more money than they know what to do with, yet somehow the parks still aren't given the budget to create whatever they want. Many new attractions are cancelled, and the ones that are built are always scaled back. Example (of many): disneyandmore.blogspot.com/2018/05/disneys-animal-kingdom-avatar-land-1st.html Also strange that Disney, the most visited parks in the world, has been worrying about and copying Universal lately.
I remember body wars!! I thought it was fun!! It was one of the rides i had to ride more than once! Thnx fo the memories….just came from disneyworld last week!! I had not been in such a long time….but i had so much fun!! Can hardly wait to go back!!
This was my first time watching one of your videos, and I loved it! Thank you for highlighting River Country. As a former WDW Cast Member, I use to swim in the empty pool for practice. I was a lifeguard for Fort Wilderness and Wilderness Lodge. Lake Patrol use to be stationed at the abandoned RC. The last time I swam in the pool, back in 2004, I did a flip turn and came up to see two vultures staring at me. Between them, the peacocks, and the unkept pool; it was time for me to hang up my goggles and to stop swimming there. 💚
I'm surprised you told the story of the PeopleMover without talking about why it's "no longer up to code". When they replaced it with Rocket Rods, apparently they didn't take into account the faster moving Rocket Rods added a lot more stress to the track and the supporting columns than the old slow moving PeopleMover did. So even though they took away Rocket Rods, they couldn't just bring back the PeopleMover.
Many of the pieces of attractions were sold off to cast members. I have a friend that has a people moved car on their back patio. I have the table and chairs from Peter Pan cafe when it was demoed for the new fantasy land. AMERICA SINGS characters were moved to Splash mountain. ( we called it America Screams after a cast member was crushed to death by jumping between stages... it was closed and stopped rotating soon after)
I remember riding it when you sat tandem on a single seat (2 riders to a seat, 4 to a car) and it was a simple lap belt on the front person. WDW around 1979 or 1980. My mom thought my little brother was going to fly out!
Dwårf ïn the trêes It was star wars themed? because a few weeks ago I went to Magic Kingdom and I went on space mountain and it seemed normal, (I loved it btw, awesome ride)
Agreed. I remember when I was probably about 8 or 9, my father had me convinced that we were going to be hit by a train for real when the "car" got to the old lantern lol.
Yep .I remember that was the first ride I ever went on at DW in the early 70's but I'm going to visit my daughter in California & are going my first time to Disney Land so I'll get to ride it again there at least.
Have you found the dragon that used to be in 20,000 Leagues? They kept some of the features from the old ride. If you look carefully, you can get a quick glimpse of the Sea Monster in Finding Nemo at Disneyland.
DisneyWorld's version has been repurposed so, it doesn't count as abandoned but intact. If you listed things that were later demolished or repurposed, Disneyland's Tower of Terror and Epcot's Horizons would be on the list.
I haven't been bk there since I heard about the 20k sub ride being g demolished. They tossed all but two subs into a landfill as well the majority of the props from the ride and repurposed the remaining subs .
I miss the previous version of the Carousel of Progress. Now is the time! Now is the best time, now is the best time of your life! There's so much to cheer for, be glad you're here for, it's the best time of your life!
I worked in the Imagination Pavilion in 2017 and I can confirm that there are still relics of the old Imageworks upstairs. The painting studio and music booths are still there but the Colour tunnel has been moved to the Disney museum. The issue they have with the upstairs of the building is that the emergency access is not up to code, particularly for those with disabilities. Or at least that's how I understood it.
so when you look at the building there are the two glass pyramids. The one on the left is a DVC lounge open to the public and the one on the right is shut off and the only way through is via backstage now. Once you get up there the sculptures you used to be able to paint are high on the walls in the left corner. If you were to walk toward that on your right is the orchestra bit which looks very similar to how it looks downstairs and the colour tunnel foundation is still on the floor behind you. there was something else round a corner but i can't quite remember it. A lot of wall fixtures but not much stand alone furniture. It was very dark. Like I remember someone having to turn on the lights.
You are correct about the emergency access thing, Rachael!From what I had heard, it was very difficult for physically disabled/handicapped guests to get up and down from ImageWorks, even with the Glass Elevator (which was kinda small). I also had heard rumors that it had also something to do with making sure the structure didnt collapse from being used by so many people in such a short span of time (I think IW was originally meant to be an attraction for 2-3 years prior to the opening of EPCOT but was kept open because of its popularity with guests). Though who knows, it could've been likely just the emergency access issue.
I have very fond memories of Epcot Center. I was there back in 98 when my parents took my sister and myself for vacation to Orlando. It's a pity to see that most of it is now abandoned. As a non-mainstream geek it was great to see technology (although somewhat dated) and world culture in one place.
Disney World has been having trouble with the abandoned River Country becoming a breeding ground for alligators due to its inactivity and water access, so I wouldn't be at all surprised if Disney has decided to do something to hopefully fix that by building on or at least clearing the area. But to be fair, I'm not terribly caught up on all the goings-on at Disney locations.
I was told by a cast member at WDW that River Country actually closed because they were having trouble keeping the alligators out of the park and closed it before any patrons were seriously hurt. My guess if they put a resort there, they may still have this issue.
Donna Lynn I doubt the cast members is telling the truth. Seem highly unlikely that they close it because of alligators. I mean why would alligators go there when there is so many people around. I’m pretty sure it closed because of unpopularity, and Florida’s law. Today however I could believe the whole thing about building the resort to stop the alligators due to how abandoned River Country since there low activity and a good water source
Alexandra McGinnis - I loved River Country. Water Parks with really high slides are a dime a dozen in Florida, but Water Country was different. Natural.
Innoventions was MY CHILDHOOD. I loved coming up with inventions when I was little so I loved that place, so sad when I came back and saw it was gone 💔
My parents were DVC members and my dad worked for WDW from 1997-2011 after he retired from Phila F.D. and we moved to south lake county. Then i worked at MGM for a few years while i was in community college. We used to stay at Old Key West and Wilderness lodge all the time but also stayed at Grand Floridan, Boardwalk and Yacht and Beach Club. By the time i got older we were banking our points to go on a cruise every year or two. Did the Wonder, and rhe Magic twice. I know now how incredibly fortunate i was to grow up in central florida going to disney once, twice a year for 4-7 day vacations. I miss it tremendously and lost most of the memories and collectibles my parents saved in a house fire. I hope to one day be able to give my kids the kind of childhood i had
There was an attempt to replace the Disneyland People Mover with a futuristic, radio controlled, high speed car ride that used the PM track and loading dock. We were there on its opening day and between many malfunctions we were able to ride it. It was great fun, but due to the frequent stoppages, Disney scrapped it after just a few days and never tried again.
When Disneyland first opened there was an attraction in Frontierland called Nature's Wonderland where you rode a pack mule through the "Old West". Part of the attraction was an Old West town which now forms part of Big Thunder Mountain. It's visible along the path to the entrance of the attraction. Not quite the same as just leaving it to the elements, but another example of Disney using part of an old attraction for a new one.
There is this guy who works at the Hollywood studios park and he worked at Disney almost all his life and knows pretty much everything about Disney world ,everything abandoned and much more. Anyway he kept us and a group of people entertained while we were waiting for the fireworks. Next time you go keep an eye out for him if he doesn't retire by then.
I remember the Imagination Pavillion. There were the "music stations" he talks about where you would hit buttons and you'd hear drum sounds and blips would run up the nearby display. Then there were these tables with needles in them and you'd run your hands under the needles to make them move and see the needles move from the top of the table. I also recall a station where you would stand in an area with a blue-screen background and there was a video that "chroma-keyed" you into various scenes.
I miss the Submarine ride. "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" was a favorite movie of my youth and I loved hearing Kirk Douglas singing that song from the movie while waiting in line. I was 7 that first premiere summer in 1955, and they had actual cast members, customed as mermaids, swimming in the lagoon that were visible from the windows at the begining of the ride before you "submerged". I was thrilled then, and miss it now that I can't share it with my younger grandkids. I also miss the ticket books. In the "Old Days" you would purchase a ticket book (books and prices varied) that inclused your entry ticket and A thru E tickets for the various attractions from the Horse Drawn Trolley (A ticket) to the major attractions (E ticket) like the Submarine Ride, or the Matterhorn Ride. The Train Ride that circled the park was built, owned and operated back then by the Southern Pacific Railroad (were my Dad worked) and was a C ticket ride. In later years, my older cousin worked at the Emporium on Main Street and visitors would give her their unused ticket books as a tip, (they were not allowed to accept cash tips) on their way out of the park. My aunt had a drawer in her house filled with them. As a kid I would go with her to work and she would sign me in for free, then using the tickets, I would ride free all day. The food then was also very good and reasonably price. Now, not so much! Another ride I miss are the Mike Fink River Boats that cruised around Tom Sawyer Island along with the Canoe rides. But now too they are gone, but with fond memories. Disneyland has always been my favorite place on earth, as it is for my kids and grandkids. Unfortunately for us, it's now longer free.
Sadly another urban explorer checked body wars previously and sadly the simulators were removed mainly to use as spare parts for the revived Star Tours :( but yeah it's sad to see what happen to cranial command and much of Epcot :(
To answer the question of Body Wars' simulators, they are gone. Behind the walled off boarding doors, you will find nothing but an illuminated empty hangar. I've seen it!
Yeah I think I heard/read somewhere that they got reused for Star Tours and that was part of the reason it shut? And now the rumors are that the Disneyland ST might close and their simulators be used for something for the Marvel Land!
I'm glad you asked Alexandra McGinnis. At first I was trying to sneak in, but I was caught by a nice Cast Member. After I explained what I was doing, she was kind enough to lead me down the old queue, the vehicle viewing windows(which is where I saw the empty hangars), and the attraction exit.
Personal favorite/heartbreaker for me is (yet another) Epcot example: the old stage that once hosted Kitchen Kabaret (a charming nutrition-themed animatronic musical show) and later on Food Rocks (a more dated "modern" replacement of KK) is still sitting behind Soarin'. No joke; look around the back of The Land/Soarin' pavilion and you'll see a giant, technicolor fridge-shaped building. IIRC, some of the Food Rocks animatronics are still inside the stage (specifically a few in the ceiling and floor).
I miss the old tom sawyers island (I hate the weird pirates remake, The closed down fort and the way they basically use it as a staging area for fantasmic
@@robbyrob0723 Yea, they basically closed off the entire northern half of the island along with it. I remember spending so much time running around in all the tunnels and fort. At least WDW still has it as Tom Sawyer island and the whole island is still open (at least I think they still do).
2:25 - The entire Wonders of Life pavilion at Epcot is largely abandoned these days, except for very limited periods during the Flower\Garden and Food and Wine festivals.
A couple of my childhood favorite Disneyland attractions that are still (kinda/in some way) standing today are: The Motorboat Cruise (the old dock is still standing and currently serves as a seating area for Edelweiss Snacks near the Matterhorn) and The Keelboats (which was a jungle cruise-like humor-based boat ride around the rivers of America. One boat still remains docked by the cabin on Tom Sawyer’s Island and the loading dock for the ride currently serves as a smoking section along the rivers of America)
I’ve taken my family to WDW more times than I can count, and I’ve never understood the abandoned attractions at Epcot. Some of the abandoned attractions in this video might be dated, but with very little money and effort they could be modernized just enough to open for smaller children. Back when my kids were very young, they would have enjoyed these attractions for the air conditioning if nothing else! Epcot feels like the hottest park! (am I right?) A few years ago, we sat through the re-release of the Captain EO attraction for that very reason. We endure the Carousel of Progress at Magic Kingdom for the same reason, but it’s become special to us over the years. “There’s a great big beautiful tomorrow.” Just don’t stand up on that one, Cast Members get cranky if you do. As always, great video! “Oh! It’s a great big beautiful tomorrow…”
A lot of this was during. The Eisner era at Disney when Disney Parks went all in blind on Euro Disneyland in Paris and had a underwelming opening day. That loss cascaded in to projects getting cancelled and Budget cuts to existing projects. Peoplemover was a victim of the Rocket Rods ride reusing it's track by building the new track over it's structure. With no banking.
Animal Kingdom is even hotter. The Africa area particularly, because the opportunities for shade are limited in that space. And you naturally spend more of your time outside there.
I saw Captain EO on the re-release after Michael Jackson died; it was an interesting historical artifact. Kind of charming, but also goofy. It was a bit different from the original release, because they were re-using the motion effects from "Honey, I Shrunk The Audience" instead of doing the original in-theater effects. You could definitely see where all the money went, though I noticed that the 3D cinematography was not as refined as in modern 3D movies.
Matt McIrvin you have a good point. But for whatever reason we do the rafting first at Animal Kingdom (long story). We always end up buying clothes after and we end up walking around feeling cooler I guess.
The People Mover was changed to Rocket Rods, a much faster version. However it ALWAYS broke down and the lines took up a large area of Tomorrowland, so they eventually closed the entire track.
I haven't been to Disneyland since 1980. Last time I went, you needed to buy tickets for the rides. I came home with a bunch of unused tickets. Wish I had kept them. Reason I didn't use all my tickets, every ride had long lines. We spent like 2 hours in line just to ride the new Space Mountain. We use to go like 4 times a year when we lived in L.A. I remember the ride where you look in the mirror and you can see a ghost in your lap. Or Peter Pan ride, here we go! Or the tea cups.
Ah the lettered tickets, with "E" tickets being for the fanciest rides. The ghost projections was in Haunted Mansion, I remember it turned the vehicle you were in sideways as it passed by the mirror and a tiny projector in the center of the vehicle itself would simply project the ghost image.
@@Kurt77777 Wish I would of kept them. I thought of throwing them away many times then I'd change my mind. I never imagined there would be internet someday.
I really miss the Eastern Airlines-sponsored IF YOU HAD WINGS (it then became Delta Dreamflight, and now it’s Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin). I believe it was the very first ride I experienced at MK back in 1977. “If you had wings, you could do all these things. Fly Eastern, we’ll be your wings.” At the end of the ride, Eastern Airlines agents were waiting so you could book a trip. To a then five year old, it was the coolest thing ever! I almost wish they would get rid of all the DVC kiosks and make a DVC ride ... sort of a tribute to IYHW.
I got to ride it in 1994 at age 6. By that time I think it was Delta Dreamflight. I loved it so much, we rode it twice lol. My dad was a private pilot in the 70s and loves anything to do with planes, so it was one of his favorites. The next time we went to Disney in 1999, my parents and I were very disappointed to see it had been replaced by Buzz Lightyear, which we did not like. Sigh.
I missed the sky tram in Disneyland the one that goes from tomorrow land to fantasy land ! It had a nice view of the park and it was a quick way to skip the crowds underneath!
The loading building for the Sky Tram in Fantasyland is still there, just past the Casey Jones Railroad before you cross into Frontierland. You just have to know where to look, as trees have grown up in front of it, but it's still in the same spot.
I remember going to River Country as a kid. I was about 6yrs old and when I talked to other people about Disney's third water park, they never believed me about it. I also remember going to Discovery Island in the middle of the lake.
@@zackdia It won't be built on because there is no underground to provide services out of the view of visitors. I had thought they would have cleared the island and built a hotel on the land, but it may violate the green space requirements that the park has to maintain or get heavily fined. All of the WDW Parks are either on the 2nd or 3rd level above ground which allows for supply, trash collection, and maintenance vehicles to travel under the park and out of the view of guests. It's also how you may see a cast member turn down an alley and around a corner and "disappear" because there is a hidden door that allows them to go under the park to move around without answering questions every 3 steps.
I remember both of those. A giant bird crapped on my in the aviary in Discovery Island... River Country was too cold and dangerous to be a Disney Park these days...
Disney loves to Abandon attractions and then leave it like a Monument to the old attractions. "I?... I am a Monument to all your Sins. This is Not your grave... But you are welcome in it..."
I remember riding Body Wars when I was like 3 or 4. They had the pavilion open for a convention thing once and you could still see where these attractions were located and it made me sad.
Also, when I went to Disneyland, I was so super surprised by the track being left for the People Mover. They should’ve just removed the tracks because it looks so weird.
MoonOnATuesday in the 80s it was very futuristic! Had a great feel. By the 90s it started falling behind and Walt’s vision of a distant future never got a proper full on update):
It was! I can confirm cause I went often starting in 1989. The original Journey Into Imagination was my all time favorite. The only Future World attraction that is still, for the most part, unchanged is Spaceship Earth. I miss the old Epcot. 😭
MoonOnATuesday I went in 1990, my Mom brought me to Disney World / Epcot for my 8th birthday. It was incredible. I will absolutely never forget how cool it was. Kinda sad my kids won't see the things I saw. It was truly futuristic. Captain Eo was 3D and it felt REAL. Unbelievable. After reading your comment and others, I know I need to thank my Mom again for that experience 💯
Thank you guys, i love hearing your experiences. Im a big fan of the futurist movement that inspired EPCOT. I would have loved to experience it, but im glad you guys did and are able to tell us.
I grew up in Orange County CA, and with Disneyland. It was so exciting in 1967 when Tomorrowland was completely remodeled and updated. That was when the People Mover was added along with Adventure thru Inner Space & The Carousel of Progress. In 1991 I found myself living in Orange County, FL, so my visits to Disneyland were much fewer and farther between. My last visit to Disneyland (2000-02) I was so disappointed in Tomorrowland. It looked crowded and trashy to me. I was very disappointed that the People Mover was gone. I really enjoy the Tomorrowland Transit Authority at Magic Kingdom, and the very first thing I noticed was how the technology for motion was different. At Disneyland you have rubber tires in the track that turn and pull the cars along. At the TTA it's done with linear induction magnetic motors. The ride is much smoother than the old People Mover at Disneyland.
I loved the Exxon “pavilion” with the dinosaurs. That was so cool. I don’t even remember where it was. The Kitchen Cabaret in The Land. They’re always changing too many things. I STILL love Figment.
I so miss America Sings. It was fun, entertaining, memorable, and my kids looked forward to it each time we went to Disneyland. Same for Bear Country Jamboree !
I live in florida so I have been to Disney World lots of times. I have never been to Disney Land but I dont think I want to if we still have a lot of rides that have closed in California.
I’ve been at Disneyland over the weekend and I got to see the old PeopleMover and innovations! It was very interesting to see and I got tons of pictures. My brother had also shown me that in the shop for Buzz Lighyear Astro Blasters the check-out counter desks are made of the old people mover carts! Also one of the shelves in that same store is made from one of the rockets on the old Rocket Rods ride that sits abandoned on top of the old loading area for the PeopleMover :3
loving the WOL music loop. Last time I visited EPCOT, in august, it still played. I hopped the rope, but but didn't go inside. Instead I just stood there and felt the EPCOT Center vibes
WE NEED TO CLEAN UP ONE OF THE RIVER COUNTRY SLIDES AND PUT SOAP AND WATTER ON IT SO WE CAN RIDE IT ONE MORE TIME. SOMEBODY NEEDS TO MAKE A VIDEO OF THAT!!!! THAT LAST PERSON TO RIDE THE RIVER COUNTRY SLIDE!!!
I love the people mover at Disney World. It was kind of cool you end up behind the scenes in Space Mountain. It is nice a ride to just relax and take a break and get a cool view of Tomorrowland.
River country such a shame, went there couple times as a kid.... can’t help but think though the park closing doesn’t really surprise me because even as a kid I remember thinking at blizzard beach or typhoon there was so much to do, stacks of rides/ lazy river/great food.... and river country wasn’t really even close to these two, still was lovely place to visit in its hay day.
The Great Movie Ride and Splash Mountain 💔 I love those, even though they’ve been reskinned and changed. They’ll forever be core memories of my childhood; never forgotten ❤️
Got to give this guy credit for making this adventure into the forbidden world. I imagine every theme park has it's nightmarish stories. I saw all of Epcot from the beginning. Fond memories with family at Disney world. Thanks for sharing this!
The best way to get backstage is to join a high school marching band that goes to Disney to perform every other year. They take you backstage and you get to see nearly everything behind the scenes and it’s quite interesting.
Let's Not forget about the Submarine halves in castaway cay used for divers to do their snorkeling and diving to share unique memories with friends and family!
I was at Disneyland in '68 (5y/o). I rode the people mover. I remember my brother looking down and spitting on a hippy. I also remember the carousel of progress and it's a small world ride.
My favorite abandon attraction is the Home of Tomorrow that was in Disneyland. Yes, I know it was torn down and the only thing that still is there is a square support. I know that it wouldn't be a home of NOW, but oh well.
River country was a great alternative to the "main" parks, especially for those that have stayed at Fort Wilderness campground. I wasn't a big water park guy but the kids and wife loved it. It is sad that it is not used, for that purpose any longer. Thanks for sharing...
I was the project manager for Innoventions when we officially stopped the rotation. We’d tried to spin the building the opposite direction, but the brakes and gears needed were no longer made. Alas, it came to a permanent halt. In its latter years, it was home to the Disney Dream Home and “ring” shows, that is, sponsor mini-shows as the lower floor revolved. Until it didn’t. Then we just masked them. Last I knew, the animatronic skeleton of Tom Morrow was still hidden behind a stage drape.
There was one ride at WDW that you can still see the remnants of. I don't remember what it's called but it was essentially a cable car in the air. Some of you may know what I'm talking about. It used to cut across Tomorrowland. They took it down YEARS ago (at least a couple of decades) though. I was fortunate enough to at least get to ride it during a few trips before they shut it down. Now the only signs of it that are left are the poles that held the pulleys for the cables.
I loved The Great Movie Ride so much. Something you could of mentioned is that after the people mover at Disneyland was taken away *sob* they redid the tracks and made the ride Rocket Rods. For the line for that attraction they closed Circle Vision.
Some people won't count Nara Dreamland, but I do because technically Walt did send imagineers to work on the park. So my favorite abandoned "Disney" attraction is Nara Dreamland, even though the park is extinct now...
Growing up the first time to Disney in Florida they were just starting to build Space Mountain. My favorite ride was the 20,000 Leagues ride and I was mesmerized by the Hall of the Presidents.
The beautiful tile mural that was in Tomorrowland Disneyland which always was my favorite spot to take photographs of (was working on becoming Photographer then) of both sides of the buildings.
Cranium command sounds so cool, I wish it wasn't closed but all the kids want is probably stuff related to movies and mostly movies new enough for them to actually watch in a cinema rather than at home.
Sometimes vids can prompt you to have sad realizations. Like the one I just had. The sad truth is, I've never been to Disneyland. I'm a kid of the 60's. I didn't grow up there, in fact, I didn't get there until I was about 30, but I lived in California for many years. In Riverside, Fontana, Long Beach, Hollywood, Bell and Los Angeles. All that time and talk and I never actually went to Disneyland. It really was a dream trip for kids who grew up when I did. I never thought that they would leave some of the most valuable property in the world just sitting there. Of course, I always thought that one day I'd be able to afford to go. Oh well.
I grew up in So Cal, lived there off and on until 2011 (still go to So Cal from Las Vegas several times a year) and I've never made it to Magic Mountain...
That was one of my favorites! A while back, someone made a DVD version of it using computer animation and the original audio track; it was really cool.
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea at Disney World. It was where Ariel's Grotto now sits. There's a lake with caves behind her. If you can find a decent vantage point, you can see one of the abandoned submarines.
The amount of money that goes into these places and are so quickly replaced or just abandoned BLOWS MY MIND
Yeah millions on millions...
Gee, I wonder where Disney GETS all that money!!!😉Can you say, "bloated admission"?
It also takes a lot of money to keep it running, so if its not making money its not worth keeping it running, yknow?
@@bradsmack1 When you consider the number of cast members it takes to keep the parks running, I suspect construction costs are a relatively small percentage of their overall budget.
@@smwsmwsmw Numbers would be nice to see on that, Steve. Not that you have to provide them.....it's just something that tweaks my curiosity! With the inevitable and predictable annual rise in cost, though, of materials, R&D, labor, and the persistent need to actually HAVE something erected and standing for the cast members to operate and man, it's possible, if not likely that construction costs are a relatively larger percentage of their overall budget than the generally static hourly cast member wage, regardless of roster count.
The company has to have SOME way (payroll and construction notwithstanding) to keep acquiring licensing rights to new intellectual properties on which to plan and build new lands and rides, and admission prices seem to be the most direct and obvious way to fund expansion. Not to mention, the company improving guest experiences in-park can always be built into PR campaigns, helping lead guests to an easy rationale for mortgaging the house to afford a summer visit!
I definitely miss the PeopleMover. On a hot crowded afternoon, when the lines were all two hours long, my friends and I would go on the PeopleMover. It had a short line, it meant getting off our feet for twelve minutes or so, and it was a Walt ride, a ride he was personally connected to, which meant it was something special.
He would be disgusted at what his company has become. He wanted EVERYONE to be able to enjoy his parks, no matter how much money or status your family had.
Now with Disney removing his speech from the 75th anniversary thing we may be seeing Disney try to remove Walt altogether.
@@TheIonVain they're even skipping and going back. They celebrate their 50th anniversary in 2022 and their 100th is next? Baloney. Walt would be mad. This is a outrage!
PeopleMover is a tour now
People mover was awesome. Always great to sit down relax and chill and enjoy a ride thru Tomorrowland.
@@TheIonVainexactly! It disgusts me
For some reason, Body Wars is the most tragic, scary, and fascinating abandoned ride - at least to me. Something about the simulators still being in there is unnerving and amazing sounding at the same time.
Aparently they tested the revamped star tours ride film in the simulators with employees riding it so they were still in fully working order as recently as 2010/11 when they were tested. I forget which year this was but the simulators have since been removed and the rooms they were housed in are just empty
Something about things being abandoned yet accessible to see them is super fascinating to me. Especially animatronics
9:32 For anyone wondering, the Disney Vacation Club Lounge is nice. It has some couches and pillows, it offers free refreshments, and Disney Video Games for the kids to play. I feel that the space is really open up there, and it offers a BEAUTIFUL view of the park. It’s been a few years since I’ve been up there though.
My favorite extinct ride is THE GREAT MOVIE RIDE
Colton Gregory I was just over it! You had to tell me again!!! Noooo! I. Loved. That. Ride!
i go about once a year to disney world and like a few days after we left, we found out it would be closing. I’m going again in a little over a week. the great movie ride is one of my all time favorites and i have memories of it from when i was like 6. I remember always covering my eyes in the alien scene, but once my sister and i made a pact to keep our eyes open and we did. some of my best disney memories are from that ride. :(
Me too, and yet I am excited for the coming of Mickey & Minnie's Runaway Railway when it pulls into the station.
That is so sad a lot of people loved that ride
@@tyler439 ok, now you're just making me sad 😓
My only question is who's replacing all these light bulbs in these abandoned rides like someone would have had to have replaced that desk light bulb for that animatronic at some point
95keat Wow.... you are probably the only person to think about that.... That really makes ya think!
It kinda seems like they want you to go in there and get in trouble
Prolly for security to patrol and not use flashlights 🤷♀️
Ricky Bennett That’s really interesting! I didn’t know that!
Prob a maintenance guy who cares enough to keep the light on.
8:42 I DON'T KNOW WHY THIS IS SO FUNNY TO ME BUT HE JUST FULLY GOES UP THE STAIRS WITH PEOPLE WATCHING HIM LMAO
What we couldn't see were the multiple poison darts blown into his neck as he walked up the stairs.
HEY! You weren't supposed to see that old attraction! Ohhh shoot, he got by, the Boss is gonna get me for sure...
BRING
BACK
THE
PEOPLEMOVER!!!
Disney World still has theirs!
You said it, man!
Just rode it 2 days ago at Disney World
I wouldnt go on it. I'd be terrified.
2 people died on that ride. It was their fault since they jumped from car to car but still.. It would give me the creeps.
Wolfie Gamer123 both were at Disneyland. The only peoplemover that remains is in Disney world. Plus, lots of deaths have happened at Disney parks. All amusement parks have had many deaths
I would *LOVE* to be able to travel through time so I could experience every re-purposed, replaced and shut down Disney attraction!
Yes me too
Same here! So many of the cool ones closed before i was old enough to go! I got to go to Captain EO, Great Movie Ride, and the ride where you can customize your own thrill ride. But thats about it!
Same
The anger of him when he said that walt Disney world had the people mover while Disneyland didn’t.
It's pretty fun
It’s my favorite ride at Disney World!
SpaceMountainAlum I was lucky to ride pre-movie pirates of the Caribbean when I was a kid at Disneyland.
Hilarious.
Magic kingdom has a people mover
I miss.... the lower cost park entrance fee!
I miss the smaller crowds.
So true. I'll never go to WDW again. The cost is too steep. And if anyone thinks it isn't hurting them, they're wrong. Been visiting theme park boards for months and Universal Orlando is pretty crowded. It's so packed I'll have to wait until September to go because they're remodeling a chunk of Harry Potter World. I don't know what the new attraction will be.
Disney is a hugh capitalist company and they continue to add to opportunities for entertainment. No matter how much they raise the price they still have large crowds. This includes during down times. I love Disney and am a Disney Vacation Club member..but see the prices go up every time we go. I still can afford it but there may come a time when that will not be possible. If my family is not there because of that there will be three more families that can. I know Disney pushes the progressive socialist agenda but they are capitalist first.
Disney has more money than they know what to do with, yet somehow the parks still aren't given the budget to create whatever they want. Many new attractions are cancelled, and the ones that are built are always scaled back.
Example (of many):
disneyandmore.blogspot.com/2018/05/disneys-animal-kingdom-avatar-land-1st.html
Also strange that Disney, the most visited parks in the world, has been worrying about and copying Universal lately.
Jack White How have they copied Universal? I’m not attacking you, just wondering about examples
As a child I loved body wars! because it reminded me of the magic school bus episode when they go inside Arnold’s body I believe.
It was the hat kids my mind is at blank with his name sorry
Ralphie! :)
@@DisneyDancer1990 yes that one
I remember body wars!! I thought it was fun!! It was one of the rides i had to ride more than once! Thnx fo the memories….just came from disneyworld last week!! I had not been in such a long time….but i had so much fun!! Can hardly wait to go back!!
This was my first time watching one of your videos, and I loved it! Thank you for highlighting River Country. As a former WDW Cast Member, I use to swim in the empty pool for practice. I was a lifeguard for Fort Wilderness and Wilderness Lodge. Lake Patrol use to be stationed at the abandoned RC. The last time I swam in the pool, back in 2004, I did a flip turn and came up to see two vultures staring at me. Between them, the peacocks, and the unkept pool; it was time for me to hang up my goggles and to stop swimming there. 💚
I'm surprised you told the story of the PeopleMover without talking about why it's "no longer up to code". When they replaced it with Rocket Rods, apparently they didn't take into account the faster moving Rocket Rods added a lot more stress to the track and the supporting columns than the old slow moving PeopleMover did. So even though they took away Rocket Rods, they couldn't just bring back the PeopleMover.
8:41 HOW DID HE JUST DIP THROUGH WITHOUT GETTING CAUGHT 😂
That's what I wanna know.
There was a person RIGHT beside the doorway
Probably works there
Just strolling on in like you just don't know
Employee?
Many of the pieces of attractions were sold off to cast members. I have a friend that has a people moved car on their back patio. I have the table and chairs from Peter Pan cafe when it was demoed for the new fantasy land. AMERICA SINGS characters were moved to Splash mountain. ( we called it America Screams after a cast member was crushed to death by jumping between stages... it was closed and stopped rotating soon after)
Ronald McKenzie it still rotated, just with breakaway walls
most people know that story by now. and i dont think she jumped between the walls. she got stuck
I miss Country Bear Jamboree.
"The way you're always hibernating, you must be part bear."
"Awe, heck! I'm only part moose as it is!"
Ultrapilotray Its still at Disney World.
It still exists
10:26 is that someone laid on the floor? i can’t be the only one that noticed that
Bruh
I noticed, im so scared
I noticed it too 😳
Probably a dummy used for cpr practice
Yeah for surre👁
Long live the OG space mountain, when it wasn’t star wars themed
I know I was sad I liked when it would plaster it to the seat because of the speed now it's just sad not fast
I remember riding it when you sat tandem on a single seat (2 riders to a seat, 4 to a car) and it was a simple lap belt on the front person. WDW around 1979 or 1980. My mom thought my little brother was going to fly out!
At least it’s still there whino.
Dwårf ïn the trêes
It was star wars themed? because a few weeks ago I went to Magic Kingdom and I went on space mountain and it seemed normal, (I loved it btw, awesome ride)
@@autisticbbclebronjames right. Was there too. It was not Star wars themend
Mr. Toad at Disneyworld will always be missed
Mr Toad is buried in the Pet Cemetary at the Haunted Mansion! His memory lives on!
Mark P I agree.
Agreed. I remember when I was probably about 8 or 9, my father had me convinced that we were going to be hit by a train for real when the "car" got to the old lantern lol.
Yep .I remember that was the first ride I ever went on at DW in the early 70's but I'm going to visit my daughter in California & are going my first time to Disney Land so I'll get to ride it again there at least.
cmon, it was a two hour wait for a FAIR ride.....
Imagine if the scanners were still on at body wars and it would tell disney someone trespassed
I refuse to believe in any future where we don't have Buffalo wings or cheeseburger pizza.
BIG MOOD lol
Tim O'Connor both are gross.
David Ray No way buffalo wings are gross lmao
*Buffalo Pizza and Cheeseburger Wings.
300
What?! No 20000 Leagues? You can still see it. Its not even very well hidden.
Have you found the dragon that used to be in 20,000 Leagues? They kept some of the features from the old ride. If you look carefully, you can get a quick glimpse of the Sea Monster in Finding Nemo at Disneyland.
DisneyWorld's version has been repurposed so, it doesn't count as abandoned but intact. If you listed things that were later demolished or repurposed, Disneyland's Tower of Terror and Epcot's Horizons would be on the list.
I sure do miss that ride. Back in the 80s as a kid I thought it was real as we submerged underwater
I haven't been bk there since I heard about the 20k sub ride being g demolished. They tossed all but two subs into a landfill as well the majority of the props from the ride and repurposed the remaining subs .
Jesse Sanchez they destroyed one of them and a employee took the head, their were 2 for either side so the other not broken one is in a museum.
I miss the previous version of the Carousel of Progress. Now is the time! Now is the best time, now is the best time of your life! There's so much to cheer for, be glad you're here for, it's the best time of your life!
I worked in the Imagination Pavilion in 2017 and I can confirm that there are still relics of the old Imageworks upstairs. The painting studio and music booths are still there but the Colour tunnel has been moved to the Disney museum. The issue they have with the upstairs of the building is that the emergency access is not up to code, particularly for those with disabilities. Or at least that's how I understood it.
Thank you for the update!
OkayRachael so where are they upstairs?
so when you look at the building there are the two glass pyramids. The one on the left is a DVC lounge open to the public and the one on the right is shut off and the only way through is via backstage now. Once you get up there the sculptures you used to be able to paint are high on the walls in the left corner. If you were to walk toward that on your right is the orchestra bit which looks very similar to how it looks downstairs and the colour tunnel foundation is still on the floor behind you. there was something else round a corner but i can't quite remember it. A lot of wall fixtures but not much stand alone furniture. It was very dark. Like I remember someone having to turn on the lights.
I miss the original and the upstairs!
You are correct about the emergency access thing, Rachael!From what I had heard, it was very difficult for physically disabled/handicapped guests to get up and down from ImageWorks, even with the Glass Elevator (which was kinda small).
I also had heard rumors that it had also something to do with making sure the structure didnt collapse from being used by so many people in such a short span of time (I think IW was originally meant to be an attraction for 2-3 years prior to the opening of EPCOT but was kept open because of its popularity with guests). Though who knows, it could've been likely just the emergency access issue.
JUSTICE FOR FIGMENT. WE MUST RETURN TO IMAGINATION.
Still at Disney World.
@@lauriemalinowski6191 Not with Dreamfinder. The one now sucks.
One little spark
Of inspiration
Is at the heart
Of all creation
Just go to Epcot, Florida. Its there and its better
@@thepug475 LMFAO NO IT AINT 😂😂😂😂😂
I miss the original Test Track.
Brenton same here
Brenton is that the one that got replaced by the cars land?
COLDisWICKED no it was at Disney world and they just “updated” the ride
Actually I was the world of motion
The new test track dosent make sense. Before your actually test drive a car. Now with same may out you just zig around
I have very fond memories of Epcot Center. I was there back in 98 when my parents took my sister and myself for vacation to Orlando. It's a pity to see that most of it is now abandoned. As a non-mainstream geek it was great to see technology (although somewhat dated) and world culture in one place.
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, Captain Eo, The Great Movie Ride ... miss those!
Reva R Ditto to 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. It was really different from the rest.
Reva R I loved 20000 leagues when I was a kid at WDW ...isn't it still at DL ?
A ride I never got to enjoy sad but true
I went to Disney in 2010 and they had brought back Captain Eo temporarily to honor MJ after his passing. It was so fun and unique!
I’ll bet my money that Disney is building a resort in River Country just to stop people from going into River Country.
Alexandra McGinnis lol would not surprise me
Disney World has been having trouble with the abandoned River Country becoming a breeding ground for alligators due to its inactivity and water access, so I wouldn't be at all surprised if Disney has decided to do something to hopefully fix that by building on or at least clearing the area. But to be fair, I'm not terribly caught up on all the goings-on at Disney locations.
I was told by a cast member at WDW that River Country actually closed because they were having trouble keeping the alligators out of the park and closed it before any patrons were seriously hurt. My guess if they put a resort there, they may still have this issue.
Donna Lynn I doubt the cast members is telling the truth. Seem highly unlikely that they close it because of alligators. I mean why would alligators go there when there is so many people around. I’m pretty sure it closed because of unpopularity, and Florida’s law. Today however I could believe the whole thing about building the resort to stop the alligators due to how abandoned River Country since there low activity and a good water source
Alexandra McGinnis - I loved River Country. Water Parks with really high slides are a dime a dozen in Florida, but Water Country was different. Natural.
That footage of cranium command abandoned looks SO CREEPY...Buzzy still being lit up 😅😭
Hannah McGuire I know
It looks like my nightmares. Literally.
I remember hearing that some time after this video Buzzy went missing
Luckily he was found
As of 2020 the cranium commmand and the pavilion is being turned into the Play! Pavilion.
Seriously! Why keep it lit? 🤷🏻♀️
Innoventions was MY CHILDHOOD. I loved coming up with inventions when I was little so I loved that place, so sad when I came back and saw it was gone 💔
My parents were DVC members and my dad worked for WDW from 1997-2011 after he retired from Phila F.D. and we moved to south lake county. Then i worked at MGM for a few years while i was in community college. We used to stay at Old Key West and Wilderness lodge all the time but also stayed at Grand Floridan, Boardwalk and Yacht and Beach Club. By the time i got older we were banking our points to go on a cruise every year or two. Did the Wonder, and rhe Magic twice. I know now how incredibly fortunate i was to grow up in central florida going to disney once, twice a year for 4-7 day vacations. I miss it tremendously and lost most of the memories and collectibles my parents saved in a house fire. I hope to one day be able to give my kids the kind of childhood i had
There was an attempt to replace the Disneyland People Mover with a futuristic, radio controlled, high speed car ride that used the PM track and loading dock. We were there on its opening day and between many malfunctions we were able to ride it. It was great fun, but due to the frequent stoppages, Disney scrapped it after just a few days and never tried again.
Love this history
When Disneyland first opened there was an attraction in Frontierland called Nature's Wonderland where you rode a pack mule through the "Old West". Part of the attraction was an Old West town which now forms part of Big Thunder Mountain. It's visible along the path to the entrance of the attraction. Not quite the same as just leaving it to the elements, but another example of Disney using part of an old attraction for a new one.
* laying in the dark *
“Even buzzy’s face is still lit u-“
* pauses video *
nope nope nope nope
lolll
Discovery Island
Skinny Daniel Disney World in the center of Bay Lake
There is this guy who works at the Hollywood studios park and he worked at Disney almost all his life and knows pretty much everything about Disney world ,everything abandoned and much more. Anyway he kept us and a group of people entertained while we were waiting for the fireworks. Next time you go keep an eye out for him if he doesn't retire by then.
I remember the Imagination Pavillion. There were the "music stations" he talks about where you would hit buttons and you'd hear drum sounds and blips would run up the nearby display. Then there were these tables with needles in them and you'd run your hands under the needles to make them move and see the needles move from the top of the table. I also recall a station where you would stand in an area with a blue-screen background and there was a video that "chroma-keyed" you into various scenes.
I miss the Submarine ride. "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" was a favorite movie of my youth and I loved hearing Kirk Douglas singing that song from the movie while waiting in line. I was 7 that first premiere summer in 1955, and they had actual cast members, customed as mermaids, swimming in the lagoon that were visible from the windows at the begining of the ride before you "submerged". I was thrilled then, and miss it now that I can't share it with my younger grandkids.
I also miss the ticket books. In the "Old Days" you would purchase a ticket book (books and prices varied) that inclused your entry ticket and A thru E tickets for the various attractions from the Horse Drawn Trolley (A ticket) to the major attractions (E ticket) like the Submarine Ride, or the Matterhorn Ride. The Train Ride that circled the park was built, owned and operated back then by the Southern Pacific Railroad (were my Dad worked) and was a C ticket ride.
In later years, my older cousin worked at the Emporium on Main Street and visitors would give her their unused ticket books as a tip, (they were not allowed to accept cash tips) on their way out of the park. My aunt had a drawer in her house filled with them. As a kid I would go with her to work and she would sign me in for free, then using the tickets, I would ride free all day. The food then was also very good and reasonably price. Now, not so much!
Another ride I miss are the Mike Fink River Boats that cruised around Tom Sawyer Island along with the Canoe rides. But now too they are gone, but with fond memories.
Disneyland has always been my favorite place on earth, as it is for my kids and grandkids. Unfortunately for us, it's now longer free.
Sadly another urban explorer checked body wars previously and sadly the simulators were removed mainly to use as spare parts for the revived Star Tours :( but yeah it's sad to see what happen to cranial command and much of Epcot :(
To answer the question of Body Wars' simulators, they are gone. Behind the walled off boarding doors, you will find nothing but an illuminated empty hangar. I've seen it!
Yeah I think I heard/read somewhere that they got reused for Star Tours and that was part of the reason it shut? And now the rumors are that the Disneyland ST might close and their simulators be used for something for the Marvel Land!
Out of curiosity, how have you seen it?
But once Star Tours went through it Refurb they changed some of the simulators and used the body tours ones
I'm glad you asked Alexandra McGinnis. At first I was trying to sneak in, but I was caught by a nice Cast Member. After I explained what I was doing, she was kind enough to lead me down the old queue, the vehicle viewing windows(which is where I saw the empty hangars), and the attraction exit.
Cyberdyne Systems they did apparently reuse it and cranium command is gone too.
Personal favorite/heartbreaker for me is (yet another) Epcot example: the old stage that once hosted Kitchen Kabaret (a charming nutrition-themed animatronic musical show) and later on Food Rocks (a more dated "modern" replacement of KK) is still sitting behind Soarin'. No joke; look around the back of The Land/Soarin' pavilion and you'll see a giant, technicolor fridge-shaped building. IIRC, some of the Food Rocks animatronics are still inside the stage (specifically a few in the ceiling and floor).
Sami Dark I miss both
It was actually removed during the last few years during a bathroom expansion thing.
Jeez, really? Replaced with bathrooms? :(
Darn yea I recall now I was at Epcot last week and the ladies rooms were new that’s where the stage was!
Sami Dark Yup. Squatters where a ride once was. Kind of disappointing.
I miss the old tom sawyers island (I hate the weird pirates remake,
The closed down fort and the way they basically use it as a staging area for fantasmic
Oh no! Really? That was my favorite place there!
@@robbyrob0723 Yea, they basically closed off the entire northern half of the island along with it. I remember spending so much time running around in all the tunnels and fort. At least WDW still has it as Tom Sawyer island and the whole island is still open (at least I think they still do).
2:25 - The entire Wonders of Life pavilion at Epcot is largely abandoned these days, except for very limited periods during the Flower\Garden and Food and Wine festivals.
Gone and Forgotten..Mr. Toad's Wild Ride..
I haven’t forgotten! It was my favorite ride! Isn’t it still at Disneyland though?
The went to hell ending was hilarious.
🍃🌱🌱🌺🎒🏃🏽♀️🕴🏾🧛🏿♀️🧟♀️🧟♀️👩🏾🏫👣😞Villanell🌪⚡️🌪🌲🍃☁️⛅️🌈🍀🌲🌲🐉e
@@EK-dt4cp It is, I just checked the map. I think what they're saying is that it's not popular anymore?? I wouldnt know, I've never been there.
this ride needs to come back
A couple of my childhood favorite Disneyland attractions that are still (kinda/in some way) standing today are: The Motorboat Cruise (the old dock is still standing and currently serves as a seating area for Edelweiss Snacks near the Matterhorn) and The Keelboats (which was a jungle cruise-like humor-based boat ride around the rivers of America. One boat still remains docked by the cabin on Tom Sawyer’s Island and the loading dock for the ride currently serves as a smoking section along the rivers of America)
Thomas Stanley I still miss the motorboat cruise. One of my most vivid Disneyland memories is going on that with my dad around 1977.
I’ve taken my family to WDW more times than I can count, and I’ve never understood the abandoned attractions at Epcot. Some of the abandoned attractions in this video might be dated, but with very little money and effort they could be modernized just enough to open for smaller children. Back when my kids were very young, they would have enjoyed these attractions for the air conditioning if nothing else! Epcot feels like the hottest park! (am I right?) A few years ago, we sat through the re-release of the Captain EO attraction for that very reason. We endure the Carousel of Progress at Magic Kingdom for the same reason, but it’s become special to us over the years. “There’s a great big beautiful tomorrow.” Just don’t stand up on that one, Cast Members get cranky if you do. As always, great video! “Oh! It’s a great big beautiful tomorrow…”
I remember i saw Captain Eo on my 8th birthday. 😬 I'm 36 now and it was so completely amazing back then
A lot of this was during. The Eisner era at Disney when Disney Parks went all in blind on Euro Disneyland in Paris and had a underwelming opening day. That loss cascaded in to projects getting cancelled and Budget cuts to existing projects. Peoplemover was a victim of the Rocket Rods ride reusing it's track by building the new track over it's structure. With no banking.
Animal Kingdom is even hotter. The Africa area particularly, because the opportunities for shade are limited in that space. And you naturally spend more of your time outside there.
I saw Captain EO on the re-release after Michael Jackson died; it was an interesting historical artifact. Kind of charming, but also goofy. It was a bit different from the original release, because they were re-using the motion effects from "Honey, I Shrunk The Audience" instead of doing the original in-theater effects.
You could definitely see where all the money went, though I noticed that the 3D cinematography was not as refined as in modern 3D movies.
Matt McIrvin you have a good point. But for whatever reason we do the rafting first at Animal Kingdom (long story). We always end up buying clothes after and we end up walking around feeling cooler I guess.
10:25 totally looks like a body in swim trunks laying on the ground.
Vishpala Most likely a CPR dummy
I noticed that too!
Merely a discarded mannequin thought to be a part of the once-proposed "Felony Island."
The Innoventions music in the background of this whole video... My heart... I miss this place
I went to River Country the last season it was opened.. The water was NOT very cold at all. But it was a bright bright green
I remember it being incredibly cold in 1998. It wasn't that green at that point. I bet the algae was helping insulate the water and kept it warmer.
I'm sure that health regulations regarding swimmers and chlorinated water for amusements had something to do with it, too.
The People Mover! I used to love that! And it was great for letting parents sit for awhile before going on more rides. Not that this wasn't a ride.
The People Mover was changed to Rocket Rods, a much faster version. However it ALWAYS broke down and the lines took up a large area of Tomorrowland, so they eventually closed the entire track.
I haven't been to Disneyland since 1980. Last time I went, you needed to buy tickets for the rides. I came home with a bunch of unused tickets. Wish I had kept them. Reason I didn't use all my tickets, every ride had long lines. We spent like 2 hours in line just to ride the new Space Mountain. We use to go like 4 times a year when we lived in L.A. I remember the ride where you look in the mirror and you can see a ghost in your lap. Or Peter Pan ride, here we go! Or the tea cups.
Ah the lettered tickets, with "E" tickets being for the fanciest rides. The ghost projections was in Haunted Mansion, I remember it turned the vehicle you were in sideways as it passed by the mirror and a tiny projector in the center of the vehicle itself would simply project the ghost image.
Should've kept those tickets! They are definitely a collector's item today worth lots of $.
@@Kurt77777 Wish I would of kept them. I thought of throwing them away many times then I'd change my mind. I never imagined there would be internet someday.
I really miss the Eastern Airlines-sponsored IF YOU HAD WINGS (it then became Delta Dreamflight, and now it’s Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin). I believe it was the very first ride I experienced at MK back in 1977. “If you had wings, you could do all these things. Fly Eastern, we’ll be your wings.” At the end of the ride, Eastern Airlines agents were waiting so you could book a trip. To a then five year old, it was the coolest thing ever! I almost wish they would get rid of all the DVC kiosks and make a DVC ride ... sort of a tribute to IYHW.
I got to ride it in 1994 at age 6. By that time I think it was Delta Dreamflight. I loved it so much, we rode it twice lol. My dad was a private pilot in the 70s and loves anything to do with planes, so it was one of his favorites. The next time we went to Disney in 1999, my parents and I were very disappointed to see it had been replaced by Buzz Lightyear, which we did not like. Sigh.
I missed the sky tram in Disneyland the one that goes from tomorrow land to fantasy land ! It had a nice view of the park and it was a quick way to skip the crowds underneath!
louie perez yes, a quick way that few used. Too bad someone had to go and do something stupid and die on it, so they closed it down 😕
The loading building for the Sky Tram in Fantasyland is still there, just past the Casey Jones Railroad before you cross into Frontierland. You just have to know where to look, as trees have grown up in front of it, but it's still in the same spot.
You can also see the concrete circles on the ground where the support towers once stood.
AH yeah, that was totally a sneaky essential trick we used as teens hanging out there in the 80s.
I remember going to River Country as a kid. I was about 6yrs old and when I talked to other people about Disney's third water park, they never believed me about it. I also remember going to Discovery Island in the middle of the lake.
I was surprised he didn't mention Discovery Island. That's still abandoned. Like a whole island lol
Truhopefaith You are Right!! River Country. The memories of me losing my family and being so scared! And Discovery Island!!!
@@zackdia It won't be built on because there is no underground to provide services out of the view of visitors. I had thought they would have cleared the island and built a hotel on the land, but it may violate the green space requirements that the park has to maintain or get heavily fined. All of the WDW Parks are either on the 2nd or 3rd level above ground which allows for supply, trash collection, and maintenance vehicles to travel under the park and out of the view of guests. It's also how you may see a cast member turn down an alley and around a corner and "disappear" because there is a hidden door that allows them to go under the park to move around without answering questions every 3 steps.
I remember both of those. A giant bird crapped on my in the aviary in Discovery Island...
River Country was too cold and dangerous to be a Disney Park these days...
I used to work at Epcot and the little pavilion where Cranium Command used to be is so jarring.
DamiAnimated what does jarring mean?
Xty100 like an unpleasant feeling
@@xtyna100 england slang for annoying
Disney loves to Abandon attractions and then leave it like a Monument to the old attractions.
"I?... I am a Monument to all your Sins. This is Not your grave... But you are welcome in it..."
“Relax, I’d rather not piss this thing off”
-people trying to sneak past security
Halo 3 is one my favorite video games
+gamerpro504 And yet we don't give a shit.
I give a shit :(
gamepro504 that was Halo 2
God, am I old. I remember when Ebcot was just a picture on a display board.
Me too lol
Yup it’s so different now
Haha I remember my first vacation to Florida they were building Disney world at the time
They also must have changed the name from ebcot to epcot
I remember riding Body Wars when I was like 3 or 4. They had the pavilion open for a convention thing once and you could still see where these attractions were located and it made me sad.
Also, when I went to Disneyland, I was so super surprised by the track being left for the People Mover. They should’ve just removed the tracks because it looks so weird.
Makes me sad that epcot is now a shell of its former self. The original park sounds fantastic to have experienced.
MoonOnATuesday in the 80s it was very futuristic! Had a great feel. By the 90s it started falling behind and Walt’s vision of a distant future never got a proper full on update):
It was! I can confirm cause I went often starting in 1989. The original Journey Into Imagination was my all time favorite. The only Future World attraction that is still, for the most part, unchanged is Spaceship Earth. I miss the old Epcot. 😭
EPCOT Center 1989-1991 was the best ever! Epcot theme park nowadays, ehhh we still have drunkytown but that’s about it.
MoonOnATuesday I went in 1990, my Mom brought me to Disney World / Epcot for my 8th birthday. It was incredible. I will absolutely never forget how cool it was. Kinda sad my kids won't see the things I saw. It was truly futuristic. Captain Eo was 3D and it felt REAL. Unbelievable. After reading your comment and others, I know I need to thank my Mom again for that experience 💯
Thank you guys, i love hearing your experiences. Im a big fan of the futurist movement that inspired EPCOT. I would have loved to experience it, but im glad you guys did and are able to tell us.
10:25 Am I wrong or is that a human body on the floor
Literally Who right!?
Wtf?!
That's what I was going to ask. Looks like a body laying behind that trailer. #creepy
OMG YOU RIGHT!! I JUST REALIZE IT AFTER SEEN COMMENT SECTION . It is a human body?? SUPER CREEPY
I see it omg to creepy
Please don't put innoventions music over your video. It's way too much nostalgia at once.
I grew up in Orange County CA, and with Disneyland. It was so exciting in 1967 when Tomorrowland was completely remodeled and updated. That was when the People Mover was added along with Adventure thru Inner Space & The Carousel of Progress. In 1991 I found myself living in Orange County, FL, so my visits to Disneyland were much fewer and farther between. My last visit to Disneyland (2000-02) I was so disappointed in Tomorrowland. It looked crowded and trashy to me. I was very disappointed that the People Mover was gone. I really enjoy the Tomorrowland Transit Authority at Magic Kingdom, and the very first thing I noticed was how the technology for motion was different. At Disneyland you have rubber tires in the track that turn and pull the cars along. At the TTA it's done with linear induction magnetic motors. The ride is much smoother than the old People Mover at Disneyland.
I loved the Exxon “pavilion” with the dinosaurs. That was so cool. I don’t even remember where it was. The Kitchen Cabaret in The Land. They’re always changing too many things. I STILL love Figment.
The one with the dinosaurs is being turned into the queue/pre-show for the Guardians of the Galaxy roller coaster.
I always love listening to your videos. Your voice is so soothing but keeps my attention at the same time.
Extinct attractions? How about tower of terror at Disneyland!
Too soon?
I so miss America Sings. It was fun, entertaining, memorable, and my kids looked forward to it each time we went to Disneyland. Same for Bear Country Jamboree !
Wesley Burnham Country Bear Jamboree is still at Florida. It has aircon, which is the main reason people go to it.
Christopher Garcia I agree
I live in florida so I have been to Disney World lots of times. I have never been to Disney Land but I dont think I want to if we still have a lot of rides that have closed in California.
Slimmy_007 we went to Disney world for the first time last month. I got to ride tower of terror. Is it an old attraction?
This video makes me so sad I just want all the 90s rides back and all the new rides gone.
Desiree Delilah 🙄🙄🙄
i like them all :)
I’ve been at Disneyland over the weekend and I got to see the old PeopleMover and innovations! It was very interesting to see and I got tons of pictures. My brother had also shown me that in the shop for Buzz Lighyear Astro Blasters the check-out counter desks are made of the old people mover carts! Also one of the shelves in that same store is made from one of the rockets on the old Rocket Rods ride that sits abandoned on top of the old loading area for the PeopleMover :3
loving the WOL music loop. Last time I visited EPCOT, in august, it still played. I hopped the rope, but but didn't go inside. Instead I just stood there and felt the EPCOT Center vibes
WE NEED TO CLEAN UP ONE OF THE RIVER COUNTRY SLIDES AND PUT SOAP AND WATTER ON IT SO WE CAN RIDE IT ONE MORE TIME. SOMEBODY NEEDS TO MAKE A VIDEO OF THAT!!!! THAT LAST PERSON TO RIDE THE RIVER COUNTRY SLIDE!!!
$10,000 Leagues Under the Sea!!
I love the people mover at Disney World. It was kind of cool you end up behind the scenes in Space Mountain. It is nice a ride to just relax and take a break and get a cool view of Tomorrowland.
3:33 buzzy guards his realm.
this is where he lives no
also 333 x 2 is 666 so there
Buzzy's soul is trapped in an eternal Limbo
River country such a shame, went there couple times as a kid.... can’t help but think though the park closing doesn’t really surprise me because even as a kid I remember thinking at blizzard beach or typhoon there was so much to do, stacks of rides/ lazy river/great food.... and river country wasn’t really even close to these two, still was lovely place to visit in its hay day.
The Great Movie Ride and Splash Mountain 💔 I love those, even though they’ve been reskinned and changed. They’ll forever be core memories of my childhood; never forgotten ❤️
Got to give this guy credit for making this adventure into the forbidden world. I imagine every theme park has it's nightmarish stories. I saw all of Epcot from the beginning. Fond memories with family at Disney world. Thanks for sharing this!
The best way to get backstage is to join a high school marching band that goes to Disney to perform every other year. They take you backstage and you get to see nearly everything behind the scenes and it’s quite interesting.
I love the EPCOT music playing, giving a reference to the greatest project abandoned by Disney.
Huh
Let's Not forget about the Submarine halves in castaway cay used for divers to do their snorkeling and diving to share unique memories with friends and family!
I love the Epcot music. It’s the best and you feel a certain way
I was at Disneyland in '68 (5y/o). I rode the people mover. I remember my brother looking down and spitting on a hippy. I also remember the carousel of progress and it's a small world ride.
Spitting on a hippie lol
That was me he spit on! What an ahole
They axed Small World!? Oh it must have been racist.
That’s probably why they closed it because of people like your brother
My favorite abandon attraction is the Home of Tomorrow that was in Disneyland. Yes, I know it was torn down and the only thing that still is there is a square support. I know that it wouldn't be a home of NOW, but oh well.
River country was a great alternative to the "main" parks, especially for those that have stayed at Fort Wilderness campground. I wasn't a big water park guy but the kids and wife loved it. It is sad that it is not used, for that purpose any longer. Thanks for sharing...
I was the project manager for Innoventions when we officially stopped the rotation. We’d tried to spin the building the opposite direction, but the brakes and gears needed were no longer made. Alas, it came to a permanent halt. In its latter years, it was home to the Disney Dream Home and “ring” shows, that is, sponsor mini-shows as the lower floor revolved. Until it didn’t. Then we just masked them. Last I knew, the animatronic skeleton of Tom Morrow was still hidden behind a stage drape.
There was one ride at WDW that you can still see the remnants of. I don't remember what it's called but it was essentially a cable car in the air. Some of you may know what I'm talking about. It used to cut across Tomorrowland. They took it down YEARS ago (at least a couple of decades) though. I was fortunate enough to at least get to ride it during a few trips before they shut it down. Now the only signs of it that are left are the poles that held the pulleys for the cables.
I loved The Great Movie Ride so much. Something you could of mentioned is that after the people mover at Disneyland was taken away *sob* they redid the tracks and made the ride Rocket Rods. For the line for that attraction they closed Circle Vision.
Some people won't count Nara Dreamland, but I do because technically Walt did send imagineers to work on the park. So my favorite abandoned "Disney" attraction is Nara Dreamland, even though the park is extinct now...
Growing up the first time to Disney in Florida they were just starting to build Space Mountain. My favorite ride was the 20,000 Leagues ride and I was mesmerized by the Hall of the Presidents.
The beautiful tile mural that was in Tomorrowland Disneyland which always was my favorite spot to take photographs of (was working on becoming Photographer then) of both sides of the buildings.
Cranium command sounds so cool, I wish it wasn't closed but all the kids want is probably stuff related to movies and mostly movies new enough for them to actually watch in a cinema rather than at home.
Sometimes vids can prompt you to have sad realizations. Like the one I just had. The sad truth is, I've never been to Disneyland. I'm a kid of the 60's. I didn't grow up there, in fact, I didn't get there until I was about 30, but I lived in California for many years. In Riverside, Fontana, Long Beach, Hollywood, Bell and Los Angeles. All that time and talk and I never actually went to Disneyland. It really was a dream trip for kids who grew up when I did. I never thought that they would leave some of the most valuable property in the world just sitting there. Of course, I always thought that one day I'd be able to afford to go. Oh well.
I grew up in So Cal, lived there off and on until 2011 (still go to So Cal from Las Vegas several times a year) and I've never made it to Magic Mountain...
Woot Fontana!
I miss (from the Anaheim location) the "Adventure Through Inner Space" ride. When I was a kid I called it the "microscope ride".
That was one of my favorites! A while back, someone made a DVD version of it using computer animation and the original audio track; it was really cool.
One of my favorites too! Brought to you by Monsanto.
I miss 20000 leagues under the sea at DW. I also miss the old Living Seas at Epcot. I have NEVER seen the very first thing on this list.
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea at Disney World. It was where Ariel's Grotto now sits. There's a lake with caves behind her. If you can find a decent vantage point, you can see one of the abandoned submarines.
I always wanted to visit Epcot to ride the " World of Motion" that used to be sponsored by General Motors. Of course that ride is long gone now.
I remember seeing the holes still in the Matterhorn mountain the skyride went through. Always loved that ride too.
Abandoned-the connection between lands by JEAN LEFFITE
also see Defunctland
Body wars was great! My young self really loved going through the body and saving that person from the SPLINTER!
Loved camping at Fort Wilderness. Really loved 20,000 leagues under the sea.
the flying saucers, pack mules, and the mine train ride at Disneyland