I miss when the Disney stores were heavily themed. There were elaborate window displays and animatronic figures in the stores. It was like going to Disneyland without paying. So sad when the original sf Disney store closed. It was so much fun to go there, now it's back again but different location and so much smaller and plain.
I loved those window displays so much. Spending some time in the Disney Store was a must-do whenever I was at the mall as a kid. A slice of the magic hundreds of miles from the parks.
I miss being able to walk into a Disney Store and see a corner dedicated to beautiful artwork, a mountain of plushies, racks of CDs and movies, things that adults can appreciate as well as kids. Heck the shop next to the Disney Store in my mall has a greater variety of shirts and things for the older generation of Disney fans than the actual store itself!
I worked at the Disney store from 1989 to 1993. Part of our job was to promote Disney history and culture. It was nostalgic and a lot of fun. I can't say much for the new incarnation of the Disney stores. They lack much of the warmth of the old model, and seem to run away from Disney history, preferring to simply market whatever the company is pushing at the moment. Also, it would be nice, as others have said that there's virtually nothing for an adult Disney fan to buy...Best wishes to all...
I used to love all the cool Disney characters above the whole store , it really was a warm nostalgic feeling! I feel like after they remodeled the Disney store I go to , it lacked imagination . What a bummer and an end of an era. Hopefully there's more pictures of those old stores Makes me feel warm inside
The Disney Store here in Bristol, England was amazing in the 90s. Huge two story place in the city centre, and they sold memorabilia and painted cels from Disney productions (at huge costs, but was amazing just to look at). Now it's tucked away in a mall and is a fraction of the size. Still, always have to make a visit when I'm there!
It has recently returned to the Cribbs Causeway, but this time as one of many pop-up Disney Stores that have opened up in recent months with a possibility of a re-expansion. One of my local Disney Stores is also a pop-up, having opened 3 years after the original permanent store closed down.
twosharpteeth YES! I love Disney but I always go to the store and never buy anything. I feel like I'm in a kids store. They only have toys and kids clothing. The only thing they have for adults are a small table of some "meh" shirts and a few coffee mugs. Why can't the Disney store some what resemble the merchandise they sell in the theme parks?
I agree. I went to the one in Times Square for all of that footage and honestly was a bit bummed at the balance of kid to adult stuff. I was hoping to buy a shirt or something while I was there, but the selection was so limited.
One of the issues with the media (cd's/dvd's) is that you could buy it anywhere else for less. Why would consumers pay more when they know they can get it for less anywhere else? I agree, I miss it, too. I think it could've been handled better.
Who goes in the Disney stores for media? I am in the habit of visiting whatever Disney store I stumble over when I am on vacation, because, believe it or not, they often have stuff which I can't even order in my own country. Last time I scored a Nanna plushie, and a really great one of Lucifer.
I think the problem with Disney Stores presently is that they're trying to win the retail game and justify their existence solely thru volume. The merch mix in any one I've visited skews greatly toward the ten-and-younger crowd, which is fine if that's what you're aiming for, but I think their retail arm is forgetting the nostalgia value they're leaving untapped by only catering to the youthful segment. Many adult buyers would happily shell out money for quality branded adult apparel, household items, and nostalgia / collector's pieces. When I visit Disneyland, I always pick up a hat and hoodie because they are Disneyland-branded items that I can't get somewhere else. Perhaps they might rethink their product mix... or perhaps they feel the stores are on life support in the current retail environment and are just aiming for immediate revenue as opposed to creating longer-term goodwill.
I adore the Disney store because it's a tiny bit of Disney at home. The Disney store is where I finally decided that i would start saving for our first big trip with our children.
I thought it was a keyblade at first too, but one time when I was there and talking to the cashier she told me it was actually the "key to the store" that they used during it's opening ceremony. Kind of a bummer.
My local Disney store had a really cool window display where Mickey, Goofy, Pluto, etc were dancing around a piano. Stuff would spin around, and it was a huge draw. That was back in the 90s. When they removed that in favor of simple cardboard window displays was when the store started losing its luster.
broadwaybaby561 My local one in England used to be just like that too! It was such a magical place with the moving figures and merchandise for all ages. I always remember watching the Disneyland videos and really wanting to go there! I miss the old Disney stores so much. I feel like they ripped the heart and soul out of the place. 😢
broadwaybaby561 I forgot on which mall they had this in but there was also one like that in California ! It was my favorite thing to look at every time I went
I had hoped you would mention the merchandise. The quality in the beginning was amazing! The finest porcelain figurines that sold for thousands of dollars. Framed cels from different Disney films. Very nice artwork. Then quality began becoming cheaper as in very poorly made dolls. I think they were pumping out low quality Mattel products. I was too young at the time to make purchases but I've made some since. Very expensive Laurenz Capodimonte Disney Fine and Scmidtts fine porcelain that the Disney Store used to sell. I miss the exquisite merchandise sold back in the 80's/90's.
Earlier this summer I was traveling with family, and we found a Disney store that hadn't changed its decor at all since it opened in the nineties. All the decor and statues inside and even the sign outside were all the originals from the opening; it was like stepping back into my childhood. I was so excited-- I took a bunch of pictures and everything. Thanks for sharing the history! :)
Without collectibles there isn't a reason for someone like myself to visit a store. Every once in a while I'll walk in but I was just turn around and walk right back out. "Nothing to see here, folks".
I love Japan's Disney Stores much more. It has a mostly adult demographic in mind and makes very beautiful collectibles, fashion, jewelry and cosmetics. The stores here at home have only one or two good things I set my eyes on occasionally.
The Tucson Mall in Tucson AZ still has it's one and only Disney Store in Tucson! The Dianey Store has been at the Tucson Mall on since 1988 & it's been remodeled several times & it still doesn't show any signs of disappearing!! I love the Disney Store because it's so awesome!!
I remember when it actually had adult clothing in there and other stuff that catered to fans of all ages, now all that's in there now is just a store catering to 5 to 14 year old girls, I miss going in to one of these stores, I love Disney and I miss having one and I miss them having something for someone my age
I just found your channel, really interesting video! I agree with the commenter who said the Disney Store caters to a younger audience. Every time I go into a Disney Store, I'm disappointed to find pretty much only children's toys and clothing items. The online selection is better, but I feel like this store could thrive if they had apparel and home decor items for adults.
Elijah Ford If you truly believe it's lame, WHY are you commenting on a video about the Disney Corporation? And seriously, "Nerd"? That's the worst insult you could think of?
DisneyKittee they use to have adult clothing and home decor but they stoppped they said they weren't selling. I saw people buying including me. Some reason they over time started focusing more on kids. The warner bros store died out. Hopefully the disney store won't.
Great video. Also adding to their problems in the late 90's; the toys/books/media section of the store had the same products as Walmart, Target and any other retailer. A good 20% of the merchandise sold at The Disney Store could be found elsewhere for a cheaper price. Shopping at The Disney Store had become less unique.
Matt Chilcote the last time when USA peaked economically where the middle class had money and such was 99 early 2000. People paid up for a pleasant shopping experience. And the Disney stores gave that with their decor.
Hi Rob, Love your channel. Just a few points to add to your video. My mother worked for one of the earlier Disney stores (Fairlane Mall in Dearborn Michigan) from almost day one, and worked there almost through to close leaving only a year before it shut down. My family got a first hand view of what happened. Some of the points that caused the downfall: 1) Over expansion: When there was only one mall in Michigan with a Disney store it did extremely well. When every mall in the state had one they barely drew enough people to keep the lights on. Disney didn't grasp this until it was too late, but the employees saw it happen with every new store opening. 2) Degradation of customer service: When the store opened there was a mandate of 8+ people on the floor at all times. The older stores had 4 registers to check out guests that were always manned, a greeter at the entrance of the store, and the rest of the employees floated in the store helping guests. Cost cutting measures came before the stores started to wane causing the number of people on the floor to be cut to the bare minimum. As such the stores suffered. The once immaculate stores suddenly had no greeter, one or two registers opened (causing long lines when busy) and no one maintaining the floor. What was once a mini vacation in the mall turned into a sad trek to a Disney themed junk store. 3) Degradation of merchandise: When the stores opened they had merchandise that was only available in the parks until that point. High quality ceramic figures, painted cells, artwork, clothing, towels, and plush. As the expansion occurred Disney shifted away from this merchandise to turning the stores into essentially a toy store. Plush mountain, movies, and music were kept, but anything that would attract an adult was removed in favor of the same toys you could get from other venues for less. You can see a partial shift back to the old model in current Disney stores. While there are still a lot of toys they now carry mugs, ceramics, and other things that can't be easily found elsewhere. The slump of the Disney store was a sad event, but unfortunately it was not caused by the 2000's. Disney's own actions to increase profit were the real cause.
I loved my local Disney store! For me it was almost like going to the parks for a day with the statues and the sets (i.e. Castle) in true Disney fashion they took the shopping experience to a whole new level of quality and fun
To be fair the mall is in of itself an outdated concept, they peaked in the 70s and 80s then declined in the 90s due to competition from big box retailers like wallmart and Target, then online marketplaces like ebay and amazon in the 2000s.
So when I looked into it, malls were actually still on the rise in the 90s. It wasn't until the mid aughts that we started to see a decline, and then a few years later (08-09) we really saw a big drop in malls. While I think these larger changes made it harder for Disney to rebound after getting their stores back, I don't consider them to be primary reasons for that initial decline.
Where I live, what you mention are getting the blame for the decline, but I see more and more outdoor shopping areas open up, which basically are fancy strip malls with a crappy parking layout. At a strip mall, you park where you want to shop, then leave. At these shopping centers, you park far away, because it's hard to find somewhere close, since it's not a real "lot." You have to avoid hitting pedestrians, and you have to avoid being struck by cars. You also have to walk in 110 degree weather, or 20, or rain, or snow, or both, because somehow this is all more desirable than an actual AC/heated mall. Lemme tell ya, you're just going to that one steer, and then leaving because of that. But the area is fancy, and closer than any mall is, so you shop there anyway, voting with your dollar.
+Rob Plays in the late 90s, when WB stores and even Nick stores (they existed) began to close, there was only TWO Disney Stores in Dallas, which were far away. Those malls were already in the decline due to over saturation of malls in general. One of these two malls already had a mall a block away, and with more and more malls opening in the suburbs, there was little reason to drive out to the city to shop. One of these two malls had an entire floor that was almost empty. The other had begun to lease out stores as office space. By the late aughts however, these two malls sprang back to life somehow. In an age of Internet commerce, the mall with a vacant floor now has tenants everywhere. The other, DOUBLED in size!! Thankfully at least one, (the one that doubled in size) saw a return of a Disney Store.
TheUnholyHandGrenade When I was little I used to beg to go to the mall just to watch the screen in the back at that store. I don't think we ever bought anything (too poor), but my mom had to drag me out a couple times.
The Disney store used to be a place of joy for me to keep me satisfied when I was not in Walt Disney World. Now, it's a disappointment and makes me even more depressed that I'm not in the parks.
Great video Rob! My daughter was born in 1989 so we ate, slept and drank Disney movies and merch all thru the Disney Renaissance! (and still do, really) We probably made weekly trips to our local Disney Store. As a matter of fact, back then, if you preordered your Disney movies thru the Disney Store (as they were released on VHS! lol!), they used to include these really nice lithograph sets with the movie. I think we had all of them, although, where they're at now is a mystery. lol. I even had the Disney Store credit card. We still have one or two locations here in the Detroit area but the closest one to me is an hour away. I've only ever been out there once. 😕
I loved going into the Disney store. The only issue was, the items were getting less and less impressive. They used to have this GIANT tower of plushies. 100's of different plush. They had a whole wall of Water Globes and Figurines. The rest of the store was separated into different movies. It was great. But then they started just doing "Princess" and the latest movie, they got rid of the big plushie tower, they got rid of the water globes. More than half the store was dedicated to children's costumes and t-shirts. Instead of a full store, it was basically empty with very little to offer. I'm not surprised it's gone now.
Funny you didnt mention that some of the decline was also due to malls closing down...disney stores always had high traffic, but if the mall are not packed then it sadly the stores couldn't survive...well they lasted for over 35 years..thats a pretty good run and not really fits your narrative of biting off more than you can chew..
We don't have a Disney Store near me anymore we have a Disney Outlet there used to be one an hour away but that closed two or three years ago closest one now is in Baltimore which kind of sucks because while the outlet does have a lot of stuff the official stores have some things you can't get at the outlets and it's a pain in the butt to find
I grew up a stone's throw away from King of Prussia, PA, one of the few malls the internet hasn't managed to kill yet. They had (and to an extent, still do have) all the big media outlet stores, especially back in the 90's. Even Warner Brothers was doing amazingly well in the retail business back then, back when kids would buy anything with Taz on it. If anything, WB's fire died down even faster than Disney's did.
I had no idea. We just watched 5 stores open in our area, we thought they where new. It's interesting and paints a much different picture when we know all the facts. Thanks Rob for another great video and giving us a little something to think about. I love the way your videos are thought provoking.
Just saw this video in my Suggestions, and I'm glad I checked it out! I remember the old Disney Store of yesteryear. The first iteration of the Disney Store at my local mall used to have those animatronics ("animatronics", they weren't anything special like what you would see in the park, they were more stationary, and they were situated on gears that would twist or rock them, and that was about it), and I kinda miss them.
The Disney and Warner brothers stores, a long with Spencer’s gifts, and brookstone, use to make the mall the place to be as a kid/teen, especially in Tucson AZ
I don't think I ever had to be told "no, you can't have that" by my mom as much as when we went to the Disney store when I was a kid (which was every time we went to the mall - practically every other weekend). It was such a magical experience. It's kind of a double-edged sword that my area doesn't still have a Disney sword. On one hand, I miss that magical feeling I got as a kid when I visited the store, but on the other, I'm going to accumulate a couple hundred thousand dollars in loan debt in the next few years, and I definitely do not need the temptation to spend money I don't have on things I don't need.
I'm lucky to have two Disney stores relatively close to me. I wish they would have more stuff for older collectors. There's no reason the Disney store couldn't have exclusive Funko Pops or something. The stores themselves are awesome to look at though
The Disney store near where I live, started with a good even mix of stuff. Some girls, some boys, some adult, and some whole family items. But over time the adult stuff vanished, the girls stuff took over half of the store and the rest was the family and boys. Now the girls stuff seems to take 3/4 of the store the boys have 1/4 and sometimes you find family stuff on those racks that sit in the middle of the lane that run from the front to the back.
There's was a Mickey's Kitchen at our Disney Store at the Montclair Plaza! I don't remember the healthy options at all, but I do remember these delicious fries they had that were shaped like Mickey and Donald and Goofy! I mourn those fries...
I think it's more a reflection of changes in shopping trends in general, especially regarding malls. The retail landscape has drastically changed since the 1990s and a lot of huge chains have either closed or greatly reduced. It's genuinely no surprise Disney had the same problems. My question (that I don't expect an answer to) is: Is the online Disney store successful enough to make up for the major cutback in retail locations or has Disney simply started to sell more merchandise through licensing deals again?
I definitely think that played a part, and admittedly I should have mentioned that in the video. E-commerce I think more than anything gave it that final shove, but the decline began just prior to it. It was sort of a 1-2 punch for them. As for your question, in short , it's likely. The division is doing better today than it was in 1999, even when you account for inflation. The only detail I couldn't find a clear answer on is how that revenue breaks down. Since the consumer products division includes video games, and that's gets lumped in with licensing revenue, I can't really tell how much of that better revenue is due to things like their Star Wars and mobile games.
I have good memories in the Disney stores as a toddler around 2001-2003. I don't remember much except the blueish design, some buzz lightyear toys, and the projected screen in the back.
My local Disney store got turned into a place that sold ESPN merchandise. They didn't even bother remodeling the place, so all the old design structure from the Disney store is still there. They didn't even replace the sign, they just hung a poster over it
The Disney store by my house was the one with the restaurant. It was so cool. The store looked and felt like Disneyland. I use to love going there as a kid all the time.
I bet the Disney Store is what lead to the Children's Place bankruptcy. When they took the reigns, Disney Stores sprung up everywhere, including malls with low traffic. And, of course, they ran the stores like they ran their own, focusing SOLELY on little kids. I don't think they even had that token adult table of shirts like they have today. I remember walking into one of those stores, and when a "cast member" asked me if she could help me find anything, I asked her to help me find anything with Donald. She could only find one single piece of merchandise, and it was a shirt with the main 3 together. But in their defense, both WB and Nick had their own stores, which closed before Children's Place even bought them. They might've saved the store, even if they dumbed it down completely.
I went to the Disney store every Saturday with my mom as a kid in the early 2000s, they closed the one we went to quite a while ago but moved the figures from the store to a Disney outlet in Hershey. The figures don't move anymore, and it's far from the impressive window displays I remember seeing as a kid.
I miss the old version of Disney store, in Staten Island mall now it's small. I used to go there all the time in th 90's. I mostly go to the Times Square store because has more options
My local mall (or "shopping centre" as we call it down here in Australia) use to have a Disney shop. (It was right near the cinema, funny enough.) But then it closed sometime in 2002. It then replaced by a National Geographic store, which was then turned into a store that sells hippy stuff. God how I miss the Disney store. 😖😖😖
I used to have a Disney store in my mall back in the late 2000s. Weird place for a store as I live in a town in the South of England (even though it's the largest town in the country). Years later, the store closed in favour of a gift shop called MenKind, though recently a Pop Up Disney Store (basically a mini disney store) opened up in mid 2017 and still runs today (oh and the giftshop that replaced it closed).
I loved the Disney store as a kid. It was so cool and the characters up on the shelves and on the ceiling were so cool. I walk past it’s old location in the mall sometimes and remember what it was like even though it’s replaced by a h&m style clothes store now.
There used to be a Disney store in a town about an hour away from me and it was AMAZING! You had characters hanging from film reals, the vintage Mickey mouse logo on the floor marking your arrival and they sold EVERYTHING! T shirts for both adults and kids, DVD's, toys, CD's, plates, cups. Just a TON of magic. Unfortunately it closed when I was only about 6 so I don't have all that many memories of it and I thought it was a dream for the longest time. That was until a family car ride a couple years back. We stopped by a mall and were on the home stretch and I just wanted to stay on the road. And in that mall was a Disney Store that was stuck in the 90's and early 2000's. It was so beautiful that I wanted to cry.
I grew up in the early 2000's and I vividly remember the entrance floor having the Mickey face from older Mickey cartoons. I remember statues of the old cartoon characters, and the special room of plushies and a TV. Everything was themed. I miss it. They now only cater to little kids.
This video really takes me back to my childhood. In the late 1980s and early ‘90s, EVERYBODY had a studio store in the mall: Disney, Warner Bros., Paramount, 20th Century Fox, Universal. Heck, even the Discovery Channel had a studio store. All of those could be found in the Sunvalley Mall in central Contra Costa County, California. Not exactly in the midst of a bustling metropolis by any stretch of the imagination.
(A follow up to my last comment) I live close to NYC, and have been to the store there. I like how they themed the elevator to Rapunzel, and how everything is set up. I do realize other stores are mostly 1 level. However, I feel other stores could learn some design ideas from not only the past stores, and the NYC store. But that's just my opinion.
I remembered when the first Disney Store came to Ft Lauderdale,Fl at the new Plantation Fashion Mall in the late 80's. It was the most crowded store I've ever seen at the time. Across the Blvd was the Broward Mall which had the Warner Bros Store in the early 90's but after the decline of the Fashion Mall, Disney moved over to the Broward Mall, set up shop directly across from Warners and knocked them out of business there within a year. The Broward Mall briefly had a Hanna-Barbera store too but that didn't last long. 90's was all theme stores.
They used to have Disney stores in Australia. They had one in the shopping centre in my area and one day it just disappeared. I used to love walking around in there and I'm high-key still sad that it's gone 15 years later.
Our Disney store closed around 2005. I had almost 10 years of memories there. I'm fortunate enough to live 2 hours from Orlando, but the Disney Store in our mall was such a nice place to shop if you couldn't go to the parks. It's greatly missed.
The 3 story Disney store on 5th Ave in Manhattan was awesome.. of course I was a baby when I went there but my friends folks talk about how awesome it was!
There used to be a Disney Store in my town (which is in one of the smaller UK 'cities', it's not even really a city) and I always wondered what had happened to it...now it's the most generic grunge clothing store in a mall filled with too many clothing stores I always make a note to visit a Disney Store when I find one, I remember mine used to have the big screen, AMAZING statues of the characters themed around movies, a distinct smell, and a huge bin of soft toys at the back, with costumes lining the walls
I loved the Disney store at my mall as a kid. It's where I got my Buzz Lightyear toy, it was where my brother got his first Woody toy, and it was where I got exposed to a lot of Disney's older movies. I remember when Lilo and Stitch was coming out and it was huge in my Disney store. I got a Stitch Elvis Plush and it was a great experience. Unfortunately I think mine closed down about 9 years ago and now it's just another relic of the past at my mall, joining the likes of KB Toys and soon JC Penney.
My town mall used to have a Disney store when I was growing up in the early 2000's, but it unfortunately closed since we didn't have a large enough demand for it. I was sad to see it go since I spent a lot of my childhood shopping there, so I try to visit one every time I'm in a mall that has one. It does cater to children rather than adults, but I still find some good stuff every now and then. Great video!
Yeah this is definately something I noticed! I don't know if it was me growing up or the stores getting smaller haha. I remember the Disney stores seeming so grand and huge; lately theyve unfortunately been a bit more lackluster.
I still remember when I was very young, there was a Disney store in my local mall with a huge store window with animatronics of Mickey, Goofy, Donald, etc. I can't ever remember going in the store, but I remember just sitting and watching the animatronics move around and that was what started my love for Disney
The Disney store where I'm from closed a few years ago and I'm still bitter about it. The closest one now is about 15 minutes away, but it's a Disney store outlet, so the products are usually older stuff they're trying to get rid of. On a side note, I wish the Disney store would act more like the actual stores in Disney. Whenever you go to the ones in the park, there's a nice balance of adult and kids stuff (some of it even being for both).
I was just reading some of the comments from over 1 year ago about the Disney Store not offering a large selection of merchandise for adults, I am happy to give an update! My local Disney Store (in NJ) has recently (in the past 6/8 months) begun selling a large selection of merchandise geared towards adults! Previously, I have had similar complaints about our Disney store- with the exception of having a niece to shop for, so at least I had a reason to keep returning. :) I hope everyone who hasn't already discovered this change find their way to a Disney Store in the near future.
I live in New Zealand (No Disney Stores here) but I traveled to Australia regularly during the 90's. The Disney Stores went from a place where you couldn't decide what to buy, to a place where you had to look very hard for something that you actually wanted to buy. This was a very interesting video detailing exactly what was going on behind the scenes but to a consumer 'downunder' the stores failed because of the merchandise that they were selling. Exactly the same seemed to happen to the Warner Bros Studio stores too. All gone, nothing to see here.
Here in the UK, we've had quite a lot of Disney Stores shut down over the last 10 years but they still exist in most major cities (London has 3, York, Manchester, Birmingham etc) and pop up Disney Stores are now a thing too. Ironically the pop up stores are in large town shopping centres where the permanent stores were in the first place!
I loved my Disney store growing up! I still shopped at it into college, until it closed :( I shop at one every time I see one. It's usually at outlet malls when I'm on vacation.
I also remember Disney Catalog! I used to order a lot from the catalog including my Disney movies. I would preorder them and they would shown up on my doorstep the day they were released in stores! I miss that :(
I’m so psyched you talked about the studio store! I recently got a personal tour of studio with the person who manages this store and many others. I’ll be sure to send him this video!
The Disney Store here in Pembroke Pines recently added a bunch Renaissance era stuff and older films for older teens. I even found a few Robin Hood and Maid Marien plushies and the exclusive dolls. Not sure if Disney is finally banking on the nostalgia, or felt competition from the Hot Topic and Box Lunch a few storefronts down, but it was a nice change to see!
I miss both The Disney Store and Warner Bros Store at my local mall. As a kid, it was the only place to get Disney/Warner Bro merch. Both stores were so cool.
I remember as a kid you went to any mall within driving distance and there was a Disney store, and you could buy just about anything, it seemed. Then, a few years back, when I accidentally went to the wrong park and couldn't get Oswald ears, we decided to just wait until we got home and we could go to the nearest shopping mall, and buy some there. We went to every mall and 1 Disney store was left, and the only Oswald thing there was one of those weird reusable plastic cups. We eventually just had to buy my hat from the internet, but I was shocked.
There is a Disney Store in the Galleria in Roseville, CA. Since it's such a chore to get out to Roseville, I haven't been there in a while, but it's still there.
I think there was definitely some cost-cutting via quality control at some point as well, perhaps when Disney no longer owned the stores I would guess. My parents bought princess dresses for all three of my sisters from the Disney Store. For the older two in the early nineties, and for my youngest sister, born in 1999, in the early 2000s. My nieces, ages 6 & 8 today play dress up with the older sister's dresses whenever they come to my parents' house. The youngest sister's didn't last a full year.
So many stores have closed in the UK over the past 5 years, barely any left except for the major locations, they just sell merch at every other store without the costs...
it was always hard to find good t=shirts at the stores - and I'm one of those nerdy disney people that have to have a t-shirt that actually has a disneyland label. - good info. love your in depth research, rather than just "talking" or discussion "rumours" like a lot of channels are doing these days. thanks.
When my daughter was really little, around 2006-2010 or so, there was a Disney Store at practically every major shopping mall in the Boston area, and those things were irresistible toddler-magnets. Then they all abruptly shut down, then they reopened one at Burlington Mall (which seemed less ambitious than the previous ones). I'm not sure how that syncs with all the gyrations mentioned in the video, though. One thing I remember being kind of striking was the way all the retail employees were referred to as "castmembers", as if they were working at Walt Disney World.
I feel like Disney stores are all toys now. While selling toys is important, I think they should focus a bit more on their older fans. I like the stores at the parks because they include things like pins, artwork, clothes etc. Now, whenever I see a Disney store I just pass it because I see no point in checking it out.
I miss when the Disney stores were heavily themed. There were elaborate window displays and animatronic figures in the stores. It was like going to Disneyland without paying. So sad when the original sf Disney store closed. It was so much fun to go there, now it's back again but different location and so much smaller and plain.
I loved those window displays so much. Spending some time in the Disney Store was a must-do whenever I was at the mall as a kid. A slice of the magic hundreds of miles from the parks.
Larry O The targets with the special Disney theme are better themed.
I miss being able to walk into a Disney Store and see a corner dedicated to beautiful artwork, a mountain of plushies, racks of CDs and movies, things that adults can appreciate as well as kids. Heck the shop next to the Disney Store in my mall has a greater variety of shirts and things for the older generation of Disney fans than the actual store itself!
@ThelTinFIT I agree.
We have in Missouri
I worked at the Disney store from 1989 to 1993. Part of our job was to promote Disney history and culture. It was nostalgic and a lot of fun. I can't say much for the new incarnation of the Disney stores. They lack much of the warmth of the old model, and seem to run away from Disney history, preferring to simply market whatever the company is pushing at the moment. Also, it would be nice, as others have said that there's virtually nothing for an adult Disney fan to buy...Best wishes to all...
What I meant by my comment, is that it would be nice if there were things for adults to buy. Last time I checked, I'm not a six year old girl.
I used to love all the cool Disney characters above the whole store , it really was a warm nostalgic feeling! I feel like after they remodeled the Disney store I go to , it lacked imagination . What a bummer and an end of an era. Hopefully there's more pictures of those old stores
Makes me feel warm inside
Because Disney is for kids. You’re an adult. GROW UP
I miss the old days when they sold art and water globes. The stores felt like you were in a store on main street usa
WickedWood04 the only globes they sell are ones that are less than 3 ounces
The Disney Store here in Bristol, England was amazing in the 90s. Huge two story place in the city centre, and they sold memorabilia and painted cels from Disney productions (at huge costs, but was amazing just to look at). Now it's tucked away in a mall and is a fraction of the size. Still, always have to make a visit when I'm there!
Guksack it's not even in cribbs anymore. Couldn't believe it had disappeared.
It has recently returned to the Cribbs Causeway, but this time as one of many pop-up Disney Stores that have opened up in recent months with a possibility of a re-expansion. One of my local Disney Stores is also a pop-up, having opened 3 years after the original permanent store closed down.
My problem with the Disney store is it keeps catering to a younger and younger audience. You can't find anything in there for adults anymore.
twosharpteeth I know! It really sucks...
I couldnt agree more. I really under estimate how much they could sale if they designate a section of the store to adults.
twosharpteeth
Exactly, the Disney Store near me used to have a whole wall with adult sized clothing and coffee mugs.
twosharpteeth YES! I love Disney but I always go to the store and never buy anything. I feel like I'm in a kids store. They only have toys and kids clothing. The only thing they have for adults are a small table of some "meh" shirts and a few coffee mugs. Why can't the Disney store some what resemble the merchandise they sell in the theme parks?
I agree. I went to the one in Times Square for all of that footage and honestly was a bit bummed at the balance of kid to adult stuff. I was hoping to buy a shirt or something while I was there, but the selection was so limited.
I miss the Disney stores. They were pretty cool, and allowed for a little slice of Disney near home.
One of the issues with the media (cd's/dvd's) is that you could buy it anywhere else for less. Why would consumers pay more when they know they can get it for less anywhere else? I agree, I miss it, too. I think it could've been handled better.
Who goes in the Disney stores for media? I am in the habit of visiting whatever Disney store I stumble over when I am on vacation, because, believe it or not, they often have stuff which I can't even order in my own country. Last time I scored a Nanna plushie, and a really great one of Lucifer.
I think the problem with Disney Stores presently is that they're trying to win the retail game and justify their existence solely thru volume. The merch mix in any one I've visited skews greatly toward the ten-and-younger crowd, which is fine if that's what you're aiming for, but I think their retail arm is forgetting the nostalgia value they're leaving untapped by only catering to the youthful segment. Many adult buyers would happily shell out money for quality branded adult apparel, household items, and nostalgia / collector's pieces. When I visit Disneyland, I always pick up a hat and hoodie because they are Disneyland-branded items that I can't get somewhere else. Perhaps they might rethink their product mix... or perhaps they feel the stores are on life support in the current retail environment and are just aiming for immediate revenue as opposed to creating longer-term goodwill.
I adore the Disney store because it's a tiny bit of Disney at home. The Disney store is where I finally decided that i would start saving for our first big trip with our children.
They gotta sell adult clothes and merch. The keyblade is a great touch though
Jared B at my Disney store they sell adult clothes
I thought it was a keyblade at first too, but one time when I was there and talking to the cashier she told me it was actually the "key to the store" that they used during it's opening ceremony. Kind of a bummer.
My local Disney store had a really cool window display where Mickey, Goofy, Pluto, etc were dancing around a piano. Stuff would spin around, and it was a huge draw. That was back in the 90s. When they removed that in favor of simple cardboard window displays was when the store started losing its luster.
broadwaybaby561 My local one in England used to be just like that too! It was such a magical place with the moving figures and merchandise for all ages. I always remember watching the Disneyland videos and really wanting to go there! I miss the old Disney stores so much. I feel like they ripped the heart and soul out of the place. 😢
broadwaybaby561 I forgot on which mall they had this in but there was also one like that in California ! It was my favorite thing to look at every time I went
The Disney store in the late 90s/early 2000s was my favorite place to be. The decor wasn't flashy and overall a nice environment to be in.
I had hoped you would mention the merchandise. The quality in the beginning was amazing! The finest porcelain figurines that sold for thousands of dollars. Framed cels from different Disney films. Very nice artwork. Then quality began becoming cheaper as in very poorly made dolls. I think they were pumping out low quality Mattel products.
I was too young at the time to make purchases but I've made some since. Very expensive Laurenz Capodimonte Disney Fine and Scmidtts fine porcelain that the Disney Store used to sell. I miss the exquisite merchandise sold back in the 80's/90's.
Earlier this summer I was traveling with family, and we found a Disney store that hadn't changed its decor at all since it opened in the nineties. All the decor and statues inside and even the sign outside were all the originals from the opening; it was like stepping back into my childhood. I was so excited-- I took a bunch of pictures and everything. Thanks for sharing the history! :)
Without collectibles there isn't a reason for someone like myself to visit a store. Every once in a while I'll walk in but I was just turn around and walk right back out. "Nothing to see here, folks".
@@averagecuppajoe You gotta go to the D23 expo or the world of Disney store to buy collectible items.
@@legendaryTMNICO You do now. It wasn't always that way.
I love Japan's Disney Stores much more. It has a mostly adult demographic in mind and makes very beautiful collectibles, fashion, jewelry and cosmetics. The stores here at home have only one or two good things I set my eyes on occasionally.
The Tucson Mall in Tucson AZ still has it's one and only Disney Store in Tucson! The Dianey Store has been at the Tucson Mall on since 1988 & it's been remodeled several times & it still doesn't show any signs of disappearing!! I love the Disney Store because it's so awesome!!
Leia2001forcegrrlify I live in AZ. It's awesome, but waaaaay too expensive. It's cool that they have the old models in the front though.
I remember when it actually had adult clothing in there and other stuff that catered to fans of all ages, now all that's in there now is just a store catering to 5 to 14 year old girls, I miss going in to one of these stores, I love Disney and I miss having one and I miss them having something for someone my age
Yeah
It sucks you gotta order online to buy the adult clothes or go to places like BoxLunch, Walmart, or hot topic to buy adult clothes.
I just found your channel, really interesting video! I agree with the commenter who said the Disney Store caters to a younger audience. Every time I go into a Disney Store, I'm disappointed to find pretty much only children's toys and clothing items. The online selection is better, but I feel like this store could thrive if they had apparel and home decor items for adults.
nerd, ur an adult and u like duisney. im akid and i think disneys lame. grow up nerd
Elijah Ford If you truly believe it's lame, WHY are you commenting on a video about the Disney Corporation? And seriously, "Nerd"? That's the worst insult you could think of?
DisneyKittee they use to have adult clothing and home decor but they stoppped they said they weren't selling. I saw people buying including me. Some reason they over time started focusing more on kids. The warner bros store died out. Hopefully the disney store won't.
Elijah Ford Learn how to spell.
Yeah! I really wish they had exercise apparel with the Incredibles and Elastigirl logos!
It's not Disney but anyone remember the "warner bros studio stores"?? Wonder if any might still be open
ELMatadiablos yes! Our mall was once loony toon themed! The food court had loony toon statues and there was a Warner bros store!
Carson Briggs i’ve been there! I all I remember was the loony tunes play place
I remember the Warner brothers store in Torrance, ca a long time ago. Shoe palace took over that location where the Warner brothers store used to be.
We need an updated edition to this video/topic in light of current events
Great video. Also adding to their problems in the late 90's; the toys/books/media section of the store had the same products as Walmart, Target and any other retailer. A good 20% of the merchandise sold at The Disney Store could be found elsewhere for a cheaper price. Shopping at The Disney Store had become less unique.
Matt Chilcote the last time when USA peaked economically where the middle class had money and such was 99 early 2000.
People paid up for a pleasant shopping experience. And the Disney stores gave that with their decor.
The Disney store should add thier own exclusive items. They should sell some statues and more stuff from the shopDisney website.
Hi Rob,
Love your channel. Just a few points to add to your video. My mother worked for one of the earlier Disney stores (Fairlane Mall in Dearborn Michigan) from almost day one, and worked there almost through to close leaving only a year before it shut down. My family got a first hand view of what happened. Some of the points that caused the downfall:
1) Over expansion: When there was only one mall in Michigan with a Disney store it did extremely well. When every mall in the state had one they barely drew enough people to keep the lights on. Disney didn't grasp this until it was too late, but the employees saw it happen with every new store opening.
2) Degradation of customer service: When the store opened there was a mandate of 8+ people on the floor at all times. The older stores had 4 registers to check out guests that were always manned, a greeter at the entrance of the store, and the rest of the employees floated in the store helping guests. Cost cutting measures came before the stores started to wane causing the number of people on the floor to be cut to the bare minimum. As such the stores suffered. The once immaculate stores suddenly had no greeter, one or two registers opened (causing long lines when busy) and no one maintaining the floor. What was once a mini vacation in the mall turned into a sad trek to a Disney themed junk store.
3) Degradation of merchandise: When the stores opened they had merchandise that was only available in the parks until that point. High quality ceramic figures, painted cells, artwork, clothing, towels, and plush. As the expansion occurred Disney shifted away from this merchandise to turning the stores into essentially a toy store. Plush mountain, movies, and music were kept, but anything that would attract an adult was removed in favor of the same toys you could get from other venues for less. You can see a partial shift back to the old model in current Disney stores. While there are still a lot of toys they now carry mugs, ceramics, and other things that can't be easily found elsewhere.
The slump of the Disney store was a sad event, but unfortunately it was not caused by the 2000's. Disney's own actions to increase profit were the real cause.
I loved my local Disney store! For me it was almost like going to the parks for a day with the statues and the sets (i.e. Castle) in true Disney fashion they took the shopping experience to a whole new level of quality and fun
To be fair the mall is in of itself an outdated concept, they peaked in the 70s and 80s then declined in the 90s due to competition from big box retailers like wallmart and Target, then online marketplaces like ebay and amazon in the 2000s.
So when I looked into it, malls were actually still on the rise in the 90s. It wasn't until the mid aughts that we started to see a decline, and then a few years later (08-09) we really saw a big drop in malls. While I think these larger changes made it harder for Disney to rebound after getting their stores back, I don't consider them to be primary reasons for that initial decline.
Weirdly, the small malls are going out of business while the big ones are getting bigger in my area.
Where I live, what you mention are getting the blame for the decline, but I see more and more outdoor shopping areas open up, which basically are fancy strip malls with a crappy parking layout. At a strip mall, you park where you want to shop, then leave. At these shopping centers, you park far away, because it's hard to find somewhere close, since it's not a real "lot." You have to avoid hitting pedestrians, and you have to avoid being struck by cars. You also have to walk in 110 degree weather, or 20, or rain, or snow, or both, because somehow this is all more desirable than an actual AC/heated mall. Lemme tell ya, you're just going to that one steer, and then leaving because of that. But the area is fancy, and closer than any mall is, so you shop there anyway, voting with your dollar.
This is a major factor in sales, also they have their own shopping website now!
+Rob Plays in the late 90s, when WB stores and even Nick stores (they existed) began to close, there was only TWO Disney Stores in Dallas, which were far away. Those malls were already in the decline due to over saturation of malls in general. One of these two malls already had a mall a block away, and with more and more malls opening in the suburbs, there was little reason to drive out to the city to shop. One of these two malls had an entire floor that was almost empty. The other had begun to lease out stores as office space.
By the late aughts however, these two malls sprang back to life somehow. In an age of Internet commerce, the mall with a vacant floor now has tenants everywhere. The other, DOUBLED in size!! Thankfully at least one, (the one that doubled in size) saw a return of a Disney Store.
Can you review Disney channel today and why there sitcoms are ruining the network?
That Glendale Galleria Disney store was my childhood Disney store. A lot of memories there. Didn't know it was the first.
Believe me, the store at the Cottonwood Mall in Albuquerque is slowly going the way of the dodo, but I do enjoy popping in on occasion.
TheUnholyHandGrenade When I was little I used to beg to go to the mall just to watch the screen in the back at that store. I don't think we ever bought anything (too poor), but my mom had to drag me out a couple times.
the Disney Store left here in Maine in the 1990's... missed.... but the new ones don't have the cool Animatronics of the original stores had...
The Disney store used to be a place of joy for me to keep me satisfied when I was not in Walt Disney World. Now, it's a disappointment and makes me even more depressed that I'm not in the parks.
Brer Oswald They should be selling Disney afternoon stuff like the rescue rangers and ducktales coffee mugs.
Great video Rob! My daughter was born in 1989 so we ate, slept and drank Disney movies and merch all thru the Disney Renaissance! (and still do, really) We probably made weekly trips to our local Disney Store. As a matter of fact, back then, if you preordered your Disney movies thru the Disney Store (as they were released on VHS! lol!), they used to include these really nice lithograph sets with the movie. I think we had all of them, although, where they're at now is a mystery. lol. I even had the Disney Store credit card.
We still have one or two locations here in the Detroit area but the closest one to me is an hour away. I've only ever been out there once. 😕
I loved going into the Disney store. The only issue was, the items were getting less and less impressive. They used to have this GIANT tower of plushies. 100's of different plush. They had a whole wall of Water Globes and Figurines. The rest of the store was separated into different movies. It was great. But then they started just doing "Princess" and the latest movie, they got rid of the big plushie tower, they got rid of the water globes. More than half the store was dedicated to children's costumes and t-shirts. Instead of a full store, it was basically empty with very little to offer. I'm not surprised it's gone now.
Funny you didnt mention that some of the decline was also due to malls closing down...disney stores always had high traffic, but if the mall are not packed then it sadly the stores couldn't survive...well they lasted for over 35 years..thats a pretty good run and not really fits your narrative of biting off more than you can chew..
We don't have a Disney Store near me anymore we have a Disney Outlet there used to be one an hour away but that closed two or three years ago closest one now is in Baltimore which kind of sucks because while the outlet does have a lot of stuff the official stores have some things you can't get at the outlets and it's a pain in the butt to find
I grew up a stone's throw away from King of Prussia, PA, one of the few malls the internet hasn't managed to kill yet. They had (and to an extent, still do have) all the big media outlet stores, especially back in the 90's. Even Warner Brothers was doing amazingly well in the retail business back then, back when kids would buy anything with Taz on it. If anything, WB's fire died down even faster than Disney's did.
The only reason KoP is still alive is because that mall caters to upscale designer brands. Their Disney store left years ago.
I had no idea. We just watched 5 stores open in our area, we thought they where new. It's interesting and paints a much different picture when we know all the facts. Thanks Rob for another great video and giving us a little something to think about. I love the way your videos are thought provoking.
Just saw this video in my Suggestions, and I'm glad I checked it out!
I remember the old Disney Store of yesteryear. The first iteration of the Disney Store at my local mall used to have those animatronics ("animatronics", they weren't anything special like what you would see in the park, they were more stationary, and they were situated on gears that would twist or rock them, and that was about it), and I kinda miss them.
The Disney and Warner brothers stores, a long with Spencer’s gifts, and brookstone, use to make the mall the place to be as a kid/teen, especially in Tucson AZ
I don't think I ever had to be told "no, you can't have that" by my mom as much as when we went to the Disney store when I was a kid (which was every time we went to the mall - practically every other weekend). It was such a magical experience. It's kind of a double-edged sword that my area doesn't still have a Disney sword. On one hand, I miss that magical feeling I got as a kid when I visited the store, but on the other, I'm going to accumulate a couple hundred thousand dollars in loan debt in the next few years, and I definitely do not need the temptation to spend money I don't have on things I don't need.
I'm lucky to have two Disney stores relatively close to me. I wish they would have more stuff for older collectors. There's no reason the Disney store couldn't have exclusive Funko Pops or something. The stores themselves are awesome to look at though
This was super interesting. I remember when they had a catalog. Great video!
The Disney store near where I live, started with a good even mix of stuff. Some girls, some boys, some adult, and some whole family items. But over time the adult stuff vanished, the girls stuff took over half of the store and the rest was the family and boys. Now the girls stuff seems to take 3/4 of the store the boys have 1/4 and sometimes you find family stuff on those racks that sit in the middle of the lane that run from the front to the back.
There's was a Mickey's Kitchen at our Disney Store at the Montclair Plaza! I don't remember the healthy options at all, but I do remember these delicious fries they had that were shaped like Mickey and Donald and Goofy! I mourn those fries...
I think it's more a reflection of changes in shopping trends in general, especially regarding malls. The retail landscape has drastically changed since the 1990s and a lot of huge chains have either closed or greatly reduced. It's genuinely no surprise Disney had the same problems. My question (that I don't expect an answer to) is: Is the online Disney store successful enough to make up for the major cutback in retail locations or has Disney simply started to sell more merchandise through licensing deals again?
I definitely think that played a part, and admittedly I should have mentioned that in the video. E-commerce I think more than anything gave it that final shove, but the decline began just prior to it. It was sort of a 1-2 punch for them.
As for your question, in short , it's likely. The division is doing better today than it was in 1999, even when you account for inflation. The only detail I couldn't find a clear answer on is how that revenue breaks down. Since the consumer products division includes video games, and that's gets lumped in with licensing revenue, I can't really tell how much of that better revenue is due to things like their Star Wars and mobile games.
They seem to have decided to cut way back on major video game projects lately, apart from Star Wars.
I have good memories in the Disney stores as a toddler around 2001-2003. I don't remember much except the blueish design, some buzz lightyear toys, and the projected screen in the back.
My local Disney store got turned into a place that sold ESPN merchandise. They didn't even bother remodeling the place, so all the old design structure from the Disney store is still there. They didn't even replace the sign, they just hung a poster over it
The Disney store by my house was the one with the restaurant. It was so cool. The store looked and felt like Disneyland. I use to love going there as a kid all the time.
I bet the Disney Store is what lead to the Children's Place bankruptcy. When they took the reigns, Disney Stores sprung up everywhere, including malls with low traffic. And, of course, they ran the stores like they ran their own, focusing SOLELY on little kids. I don't think they even had that token adult table of shirts like they have today. I remember walking into one of those stores, and when a "cast member" asked me if she could help me find anything, I asked her to help me find anything with Donald. She could only find one single piece of merchandise, and it was a shirt with the main 3 together. But in their defense, both WB and Nick had their own stores, which closed before Children's Place even bought them. They might've saved the store, even if they dumbed it down completely.
I went to the Disney store every Saturday with my mom as a kid in the early 2000s, they closed the one we went to quite a while ago but moved the figures from the store to a Disney outlet in Hershey. The figures don't move anymore, and it's far from the impressive window displays I remember seeing as a kid.
I worked at The Disney Stores from 1989-1992 and at the Montclair Plaza Disney Store/Mickey's Kitchen combo store!
This was very interesting, thanks for the research
I miss the old version of Disney store, in Staten Island mall now it's small. I used to go there all the time in th 90's. I mostly go to the Times Square store because has more options
My local mall (or "shopping centre" as we call it down here in Australia) use to have a Disney shop. (It was right near the cinema, funny enough.) But then it closed sometime in 2002. It then replaced by a National Geographic store, which was then turned into a store that sells hippy stuff. God how I miss the Disney store. 😖😖😖
I used to have a Disney store in my mall back in the late 2000s. Weird place for a store as I live in a town in the South of England (even though it's the largest town in the country). Years later, the store closed in favour of a gift shop called MenKind, though recently a Pop Up Disney Store (basically a mini disney store) opened up in mid 2017 and still runs today (oh and the giftshop that replaced it closed).
I loved the Disney store as a kid. It was so cool and the characters up on the shelves and on the ceiling were so cool. I walk past it’s old location in the mall sometimes and remember what it was like even though it’s replaced by a h&m style clothes store now.
There used to be a Disney store in a town about an hour away from me and it was AMAZING! You had characters hanging from film reals, the vintage Mickey mouse logo on the floor marking your arrival and they sold EVERYTHING! T shirts for both adults and kids, DVD's, toys, CD's, plates, cups. Just a TON of magic. Unfortunately it closed when I was only about 6 so I don't have all that many memories of it and I thought it was a dream for the longest time. That was until a family car ride a couple years back. We stopped by a mall and were on the home stretch and I just wanted to stay on the road. And in that mall was a Disney Store that was stuck in the 90's and early 2000's. It was so beautiful that I wanted to cry.
I grew up in the early 2000's and I vividly remember the entrance floor having the Mickey face from older Mickey cartoons. I remember statues of the old cartoon characters, and the special room of plushies and a TV. Everything was themed. I miss it. They now only cater to little kids.
This video really takes me back to my childhood. In the late 1980s and early ‘90s, EVERYBODY had a studio store in the mall: Disney, Warner Bros., Paramount, 20th Century Fox, Universal.
Heck, even the Discovery Channel had a studio store.
All of those could be found in the Sunvalley Mall in central Contra Costa County, California. Not exactly in the midst of a bustling metropolis by any stretch of the imagination.
(A follow up to my last comment) I live close to NYC, and have been to the store there. I like how they themed the elevator to Rapunzel, and how everything is set up. I do realize other stores are mostly 1 level. However, I feel other stores could learn some design ideas from not only the past stores, and the NYC store. But that's just my opinion.
Disney stores only reminded me I'd rather be at Disneyland! Thanks for the videos!!!
Hey Rob, I really enjoyed this video. Thanks for always creating videos and making me smile.
I remembered when the first Disney Store came to Ft Lauderdale,Fl at the new Plantation Fashion Mall in the late 80's. It was the most crowded store I've ever seen at the time. Across the Blvd was the Broward Mall which had the Warner Bros Store in the early 90's but after the decline of the Fashion Mall, Disney moved over to the Broward Mall, set up shop directly across from Warners and knocked them out of business there within a year. The Broward Mall briefly had a Hanna-Barbera store too but that didn't last long. 90's was all theme stores.
They used to have Disney stores in Australia. They had one in the shopping centre in my area and one day it just disappeared. I used to love walking around in there and I'm high-key still sad that it's gone 15 years later.
Our Disney store closed around 2005. I had almost 10 years of memories there. I'm fortunate enough to live 2 hours from Orlando, but the Disney Store in our mall was such a nice place to shop if you couldn't go to the parks. It's greatly missed.
The 3 story Disney store on 5th Ave in Manhattan was awesome.. of course I was a baby when I went there but my friends folks talk about how awesome it was!
There used to be a Disney Store in my town (which is in one of the smaller UK 'cities', it's not even really a city) and I always wondered what had happened to it...now it's the most generic grunge clothing store in a mall filled with too many clothing stores
I always make a note to visit a Disney Store when I find one, I remember mine used to have the big screen, AMAZING statues of the characters themed around movies, a distinct smell, and a huge bin of soft toys at the back, with costumes lining the walls
I loved the Disney store at my mall as a kid. It's where I got my Buzz Lightyear toy, it was where my brother got his first Woody toy, and it was where I got exposed to a lot of Disney's older movies. I remember when Lilo and Stitch was coming out and it was huge in my Disney store. I got a Stitch Elvis Plush and it was a great experience. Unfortunately I think mine closed down about 9 years ago and now it's just another relic of the past at my mall, joining the likes of KB Toys and soon JC Penney.
My town mall used to have a Disney store when I was growing up in the early 2000's, but it unfortunately closed since we didn't have a large enough demand for it. I was sad to see it go since I spent a lot of my childhood shopping there, so I try to visit one every time I'm in a mall that has one. It does cater to children rather than adults, but I still find some good stuff every now and then. Great video!
I remember going to the Disney Store in Wichita,KS in the early 2000s when I was a kid I loved going in there. I miss it alot
Btw, that Disney Store actually looks 100x cooler than I remember it. I WANNA GO BACK!! And bring my little cousin as an excuse to go.
Yeah this is definately something I noticed! I don't know if it was me growing up or the stores getting smaller haha. I remember the Disney stores seeming so grand and huge; lately theyve unfortunately been a bit more lackluster.
I still remember when I was very young, there was a Disney store in my local mall with a huge store window with animatronics of Mickey, Goofy, Donald, etc. I can't ever remember going in the store, but I remember just sitting and watching the animatronics move around and that was what started my love for Disney
(The store closed down in maybe 2008 or 2007 and turned into an Aeropostale in 2010 or 2011 I believe)
The Disney store where I'm from closed a few years ago and I'm still bitter about it. The closest one now is about 15 minutes away, but it's a Disney store outlet, so the products are usually older stuff they're trying to get rid of. On a side note, I wish the Disney store would act more like the actual stores in Disney. Whenever you go to the ones in the park, there's a nice balance of adult and kids stuff (some of it even being for both).
I was just reading some of the comments from over 1 year ago about the Disney Store not offering a large selection of merchandise for adults, I am happy to give an update! My local Disney Store (in NJ) has recently (in the past 6/8 months) begun selling a large selection of merchandise geared towards adults! Previously, I have had similar complaints about our Disney store- with the exception of having a niece to shop for, so at least I had a reason to keep returning. :) I hope everyone who hasn't already discovered this change find their way to a Disney Store in the near future.
I live in New Zealand (No Disney Stores here) but I traveled to Australia regularly during the 90's. The Disney Stores went from a place where you couldn't decide what to buy, to a place where you had to look very hard for something that you actually wanted to buy.
This was a very interesting video detailing exactly what was going on behind the scenes but to a consumer 'downunder' the stores failed because of the merchandise that they were selling. Exactly the same seemed to happen to the Warner Bros Studio stores too. All gone, nothing to see here.
Here in the UK, we've had quite a lot of Disney Stores shut down over the last 10 years but they still exist in most major cities (London has 3, York, Manchester, Birmingham etc) and pop up Disney Stores are now a thing too. Ironically the pop up stores are in large town shopping centres where the permanent stores were in the first place!
Gotta agree with prior posts. Disney hurt themselves by catering solely to the younger consumer
When I was in Venice at age13 I was more excited to buy a souvenir from the Disney store than anywhere else. I still have the shirt too!
I loved my Disney store growing up! I still shopped at it into college, until it closed :( I shop at one every time I see one. It's usually at outlet malls when I'm on vacation.
I also remember Disney Catalog! I used to order a lot from the catalog including my Disney movies. I would preorder them and they would shown up on my doorstep the day they were released in stores! I miss that :(
I’m so psyched you talked about the studio store! I recently got a personal tour of studio with the person who manages this store and many others. I’ll be sure to send him this video!
I love the Disney Store in Montclair. Its like stepping back in time, because it hasn't been remodeled since it opened 25 years ago
I loved the Disney Store in the malls back in the 90's. I wish it made a comeback.
*~synergy~* you and Disney’s favorite word
Yup, the Disney store in Sugarloaf Mills has been gone for a while now. Depressing to see my childhood mall go 😢
u have some amazing stock footage. kudos.
The Disney Store here in Pembroke Pines recently added a bunch Renaissance era stuff and older films for older teens. I even found a few Robin Hood and Maid Marien plushies and the exclusive dolls. Not sure if Disney is finally banking on the nostalgia, or felt competition from the Hot Topic and Box Lunch a few storefronts down, but it was a nice change to see!
I miss both The Disney Store and Warner Bros Store at my local mall. As a kid, it was the only place to get Disney/Warner Bro merch.
Both stores were so cool.
When you finally find a Disney store...
but they don't have Vinylmations.
PlanetSmash 😱 That's a terrifying thought.
I remember as a kid you went to any mall within driving distance and there was a Disney store, and you could buy just about anything, it seemed. Then, a few years back, when I accidentally went to the wrong park and couldn't get Oswald ears, we decided to just wait until we got home and we could go to the nearest shopping mall, and buy some there. We went to every mall and 1 Disney store was left, and the only Oswald thing there was one of those weird reusable plastic cups. We eventually just had to buy my hat from the internet, but I was shocked.
I honestly didn't know they were still around. I haven't seen one since they left my local mall probably close to a decade ago.
There is a Disney Store in the Galleria in Roseville, CA. Since it's such a chore to get out to Roseville, I haven't been there in a while, but it's still there.
Being a Historian, I always enjoy learning something new. Thanks for sharing what you discovered.
I think there was definitely some cost-cutting via quality control at some point as well, perhaps when Disney no longer owned the stores I would guess. My parents bought princess dresses for all three of my sisters from the Disney Store. For the older two in the early nineties, and for my youngest sister, born in 1999, in the early 2000s. My nieces, ages 6 & 8 today play dress up with the older sister's dresses whenever they come to my parents' house. The youngest sister's didn't last a full year.
I remember going to the Disney store at my local mall when I was a kid. I was sad when it closed along with the nearby ones around the area.
So many stores have closed in the UK over the past 5 years, barely any left except for the major locations, they just sell merch at every other store without the costs...
it was always hard to find good t=shirts at the stores - and I'm one of those nerdy disney people that have to have a t-shirt that actually has a disneyland label. - good info. love your in depth research, rather than just "talking" or discussion "rumours" like a lot of channels are doing these days. thanks.
When my daughter was really little, around 2006-2010 or so, there was a Disney Store at practically every major shopping mall in the Boston area, and those things were irresistible toddler-magnets. Then they all abruptly shut down, then they reopened one at Burlington Mall (which seemed less ambitious than the previous ones). I'm not sure how that syncs with all the gyrations mentioned in the video, though.
One thing I remember being kind of striking was the way all the retail employees were referred to as "castmembers", as if they were working at Walt Disney World.
I remember when in the early 2000's the Disney store in my town Mall was always crowded, now it's just n empty shell of itself.
I miss this store! I used to buy clothes out of there in high school and even got my daughter’s Halloween custom out of there
I feel like Disney stores are all toys now. While selling toys is important, I think they should focus a bit more on their older fans. I like the stores at the parks because they include things like pins, artwork, clothes etc. Now, whenever I see a Disney store I just pass it because I see no point in checking it out.