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Disney Abandoned America for the 1%

Disney Abandoned America for the 1%

Published 4 months, 1 week ago
Description

Discover how Disney transformed from a family-friendly brand into a luxury experience that’s out of reach for many. In this deep-dive conversation, Simone and Malcolm Collins break down the skyrocketing costs of Disney parks, merchandise, and streaming, and explore why so many fans are willing to go into debt for a taste of the “magic.” The Collinses look at the business strategies behind Disney’s price hikes, the psychology of Disney fandom, and what this shift means for fam

ilies, kids, and the future of entertainment. Whether you’re a lifelong Disney fan, a parent, or just curious about the economics of modern brands, this episode will change how you see the “Happiest Place on Earth.”

As this was another Simone-outlined episode, we also have those episode notes to share if you want them! You’ll find them below and the episode transcript follows.

Episode Outline: How Disney Became a Luxury Good:

Intro

* Disney is no longer affordable and we need to talk about it

* Disney park entrance fees now rise about twice as fast as the cost of an average American’s basket of goods and services, and faster than major competitors’ ticket prices

* Disney is also charging customers for a myriad of add-ons in a way that’s insane

* Jake of Bright Sun Films / Travels puts it well:

*

* At one point, he pays $42 just for himself and his girlfriend to access a new attraction (the Tron ride)

* He dropped 886 USD for one day (not doing anything particularly special)

* Surveys in 2024-2025 show that around 24% of all US Disney park visitors have gone into debt to pay for their Disney trip, with the rate soaring to 45% among parents with children under 18. The average debt for these trips is about $2,000 per family, and most indebted guests took on their Disney debt within the past five years

* Why this matters:

* Disney is not unique; it’s representative of any non-commoditized product in a market

* And discourse around Disney’s unaffordability yields a key insight

* Because non-commodity products will be endlessly exploitative; they will never really be affordable or sustainable

* When you live a mainstream, consumerist lifestyle, you will NEVER have enough money to afford luxuries

* It’s not that you cannot afford fun or kids; it’s that you cannot afford to hedonically survive in modern culture

* And this should be a wakeup call that you need to find contentment from within your own home: Your work, your family, and your community.

Price Hikes

When adjusted for inflation, entrance fee increases at US-based Disney parks have significantly outpaced both the national inflation rate and the price hikes at rival parks such as Universal Studios and Six Flags, though all major parks have seen double-digit real increases in the past decade

Disney Tokyo vs. USA Disney

Park Meals

Park Add-Ons

The original FastPass (1999–2020) was included free with admission; paid add-ons began with MaxPass and evolved into Genie+, Lightning Lane, and Multi Pass, each showing rapid price escalation

Disney+

* Disney+: The Sun: PRICE PAINS Disney slaps fans with higher prices days after Jimmy Kimmel billion-dollar bombshell https://www.the-sun.com/money/15238183/disney-plus-hulu-price-increase-jimmy-kimmel-charlie-kirk/

Disney Debt

Key Debt Statistics for Disney Vacations

* 24% of Disney park attendees have taken on debt for their trip, up sharply from 18% in 2022.

* 45% of parents with children under 18 have gone into debt for a Disney trip, up from 30% in 2022.

* The average Disney-related debt for parents with young children is $1,983 per trip.

* Debt most commonly covers concessions (food, drink), transportation, and accommodations.

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