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Blogger Major Pepperidge said...

This magazine is pretty interesting. Never seen it before! You are right about the snooty tone. Or is it "snarky"??

I like the photo of the crowds on the first page of the "Chaos In Disneyland" article, because it closely resembles a slide that I posted a while ago, one that somebody suggested might be from opening day. Now I'm starting to believe that it really was!

Tuesday, 03 June, 2008

Blogger Chris Jepsen said...

As for the guys on the cover, here's a blurb about Lucius Morris Beebe and Charles Clegg, from cobbmansion.com: "Lucius was a famous socialite and newspaper writer in Boston and New York and Charles Clegg was an accomplished photographer. Together, they decided to leave the 'hoity-toity' life of the east behind and move to Virginia City (in their private train car), where they reestablished the 'Territorial Enterprise' newspaper and built it into the most widely published weekly in the west. Many credit Beebe and Clegg with bringing Virginia City 'back from the ashes'."

There's a much more interesting article about them at http://www.onlinenevada.org/ -- Just type "Clegg" into the search window.

Tuesday, 03 June, 2008

Blogger Unknown said...

VDT, let's put it this way. The Territorial Enterprise would've been the thinking man's equivalent to today's Onion. Mark Twain published in the Enterprise and this somewhat tongue in cheek article is fairly representative of its style.

Tuesday, 03 June, 2008

Anonymous Anonymous said...

@ Major Pepperidge: "Snooty", yes. "Snarky", yes. And even more "Stick-up-their-butt"y!
And did you catch the cost analysis?
Figuring most conservatively, I don't see how anyone can get off for less than a buck apiece for food." Outrageous!

Sunday, 08 June, 2008

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I dunno. Having read countless theme park trip reports on rec.roller-coaster it sounds like many reports written by someone who visited a good park on a very bad day (as it most assuredly was, historical significance notwithstanding). We now know that the lack of drinking fountains was not a soft-drink-sales ploy but simply a last-minute plumbing choice between drinking fountains or bathrooms, and the bathrooms won (they don't complain about lack of bathrooms so Disney probably got this one right).

Theme parks still can accidentally underestimate capacity, causing chaos (the recent Knott's 5-cents for Cinco de Mayo promotion comes to mind, though they shut off the entrance when Haunt gets too full).

The visiting once prediction is the fate that befell Long Beach's Queen Mary, which surrounding residents tended to visit once and then never again, despite regular advertising.

Their advice to visit on an off-season weekday still holds up though.

Wednesday, 12 August, 2009

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