Business Will Disney Parks Ban Influencers After Viral Contraband Incident?

Will Disney Parks Ban Influencers After Viral Contraband Incident?​

Disney Parks could be close to a total ban on all Influencers after a video of an incident involving a Guest and contraband materials went viral online.

Since Walt Disney opened Disneyland Park in 1955, Guests have enjoyed documenting their visits to the Disney Parks using personal cameras. As a result, Disney even began to provide designated photo locations sponsored by camera retailers like Kodak and offer professional PhotoPass photographers for select photo ops and character meet-and-greets.

However, with the rise of cellphone cameras, Go-Pro filming equipment, and social media platforms, souvenir mementos have become a mass market ripe for content creation. In fact, Disney “influencers” have developed a niche of curated content, building their brands by visiting Disneyland and the Walt Disney World Resort.

For example, YouTube is rife with ride-through videos filmed by Guests while onboard an attraction and Disney fans have devoted their lives and wallets to capturing the newest and exciting takes for Instagram and TikTok accounts. In particular, a recent incident went viral after one Guest broke Disney Park safety regulations to smuggle in contraband materials for a “perfect shot.”

A video of the Guest posted to TikTok by @thenostalgiclatino gained worldwide attention after fans noticed she had snuck illegal fireworks into the theme park. In the video, you can see the Guest standing before Sleeping Beauty Castle during the Disney 100 Anniversary Celebration at the Disneyland Resort, which celebrates one hundred years of the Walt Disney Company:

The influencer holds what appears to be a cake styled after Mickey Mouse’s signature red trousers, complete with a lit sparkler on top in lieu of a candle. People stare as the Guest, wearing a matching red dress, white boots, and Minnie Mouse ears poses before the Castle until a Disney Cast Member approaches the scene, gesturing for the Guest to stop blocking the walkway and put out the active firework.

Moreover, you can hear the Guest Relations Cast Member (in plaid) tell the offending Guest, “You have to put that out, and I’m going to get security.” Of course, the open flame poses a safety risk to Disney Park Guests and violates Disneyland Resort rules, which prohibit “fireworks or other similarly explosive and/or flammable objects, smoke machines or fog machines.”

Although no one has identified the so-called Disney Influencer yet, plenty more Park personalities would have been easily recognizable to many Disney lovers active in fan spaces online were they to pull a similar stunt. However, as this Guest was likely escorted from the Park at best and banned for life at worst, we don’t recommend their methods to garner online fame.

If similar behavior continues to inconvenience other Park-goers and Disney Cast Members, a full-out ban on live streaming, filming, and personal photography devices could go into effect soon.

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I hope it happens. The wailing and gnashing of teeth that’d occur. It’d be perfect.
 
Hot take but if you're over 25 and not a parent or employee you shouldn't be allowed in a park filled with children. Even the 25 mark is pushing it but I recognize there are a lot of retards who never went to Disney as kids but are still as retarded as kids.
 
Hot take but if you're over 25 and not a parent or employee you shouldn't be allowed in a park filled with children.
Disney's marketing says otherwise. 'Young at heart' and corporate customers are encouraged.
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They're the ones who're spending considerable amounts of money at the theme parks regularly, not children.
 
Disney's marketing says otherwise. 'Young at heart' and corporate customers are encouraged.
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They're the ones who're spending considerable amounts of money at the theme parks regularly, not children.
Don't you find anything disturbing about 30+ year old single men and childless women roaming around a huge kids themed park living out fantasies of being kids though?
 
Considering that Disney parks already have a ton of PR teams and marketing, there’s no need to have social media “influencers” to tell everyone what we already know.

On top of the fact that influencers have been known to promote scams, or businesses that utilize shady practices, their brand is becoming synonymous with fake products.

There’s already entire YouTube channels ran by travel Vloggers who get paid to try everything there, many of which can give information accurate to the time of upload. What do Influencers add to the table?

The sooner the age of the influencer ends, the better.
 
Hot take but if you're over 25 and not a parent or employee you shouldn't be allowed in a park filled with children. Even the 25 mark is pushing it but I recognize there are a lot of retards who never went to Disney as kids but are still as retarded as kids.
For a few years I watched a lot of allears.net with Molly McCormick, who I find quite attractive. The most noticeable thing is just how few children there are in the parks, especially Disney World. It's almost entirely fat middle aged whites. She left allears and insanely put her husband in her videos all the time, and the fad in general wore off for me too.

You can tell they all hated the Star Wars hotel too, but were faking it. Barely mentioned it again after their only free visit. It's an interesting shitshow for sure, the whole genre.
 
I thought the lady brought in legit fireworks and was surprised that anyone would do that, but then I learn it was sparklers... Literal 4 year olds play with those.

Whatever, I don't care either way, the way people obsess of Disney is unhealthy and I don't care what happens to it.
 
Only if they didn't buy top-tier tickets.

They refused to throw out a 'guest' who was shoving waitstaff in a restaurant last week because "they'd have to talk to legal" about it (I.E. - he was a Disney whale and they won't ever ban such a person even if they committed arson against Cinderella's castle)
 
Don't you find anything disturbing about 30+ year old single men and childless women roaming around a huge kids themed park living out fantasies of being kids though?
You don't need to live out a fantasy of being a kid.

Disneyland can be a lot of fun. I've been three times and felt no need to pretend I was a kid.

I just miss the horny pirates.
 
It's really sad when some thot is so starved for attention that she starts simping for Disney on Instagram.

but we all know who the real troublemakers are!

They need to ban negroes

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People in California are so fucking retarded. There's a huge, knock down drag out brawl happening, and that stupid spick with the little kid just stands there and stares, like 5 feet away. How about you get the 3 year old away from the savages trying to murder each other?
 
It's really sad when some thot is so starved for attention that she starts simping for Disney on Instagram.

but we all know who the real troublemakers are!

They need to ban negroes

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Looks like the Silverback in red got six months while his dumptruck sister and her useless husband are/were fugitives from justice.


One of the things that always brings me joy is the thought of a fuckface like this having to be in county with Crips and shit and they're like "What are you in for, nigga?" and he has to admit that he was incarcerated for brawling with his sister at fucking Toontown, which is designed and built for kindergarteners.
 
There's a whole ecosystem of Disney clickbait websites that put out headlines constantly like "SHOCK as popular Disney ride shuts down indefinitely" and then it turns out something was being shut down for scheduled annual maintenance and they don't know the exact date it'll come back online. Or "Disappointment as entire Disney park shuts down unexpectedly" is one of the underutilized water parks saying it's too cold to do waterslides today.

Rule of thumb, if it's got a term in the headline that increases vagueness rather than precision, it's clickbait, don't bother, it won't be interesting. This headline said "contraband." If it had been a gun they'd have said gun. If it had been anything remotely interesting, they'd have said so. When I clicked I wondered if it'd be a vape. A sparkler is equally disappointing. They use vague terms that could mean something really shocking. But when a story's actually lurid, the headline will be as specific as possible.
 
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