Cup_Of_Coffee
Veteran Member
- Aug 7, 2018
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This is rude and unnecessary.It’s a studios park and this all has been a fruitless endeavor to appease terminally online weirdos who write paragraphs about USF.
This is rude and unnecessary.It’s a studios park and this all has been a fruitless endeavor to appease terminally online weirdos who write paragraphs about USF.
...and yet ops is still stuck in 1990 lolToday is the Anniversary of the park's opening, which was disastrous since hardly any attractions worked. Universal has come a long way, and is just about as crowded as AK, DHS, and Epcot on a daily basis.
What exactly are we meant to discuss in a forum about Universal?It’s a studios park and this all has been a fruitless endeavor to appease terminally online weirdos who write paragraphs about USF.
There can only be so many gentle "Come on, now..." responses that you blatantly disregard before it seems like you simply don't care and will continue to be a bully to everyone on here you disagree with.It’s a studios park and this all has been a fruitless endeavor to appease terminally online weirdos who write paragraphs about USF.
Joe, come on man, you've made this too easy. You literally write enough paragraphs to make full articles about Disney and Universal at Parkscope and Touring Plans. The poll is literally sitting at 32 yes and 30 no currently so clearly there's a split.It’s a studios park and this all has been a fruitless endeavor to appease terminally online weirdos who write paragraphs about USF.
Incredibly slim, because as I mentioned the move away from “studio” parks is just one manifestation of the shifting priorities of the entertainment industry, a shift being driven by the fundamental economic structure of the various studios. It’s the same reason the Disney parks are becoming increasingly thematically homogeneous. The industry’s entire focus has become the creation and leveraging of ongoing narrative universes across multiple platforms - the decision-makers at the various studios have been very explicit about this. They want consumers to become loyal to these immersive universes, and “studio” parks’ focus on the “magic of movies,” with its implicit acknowledgment of films as artificial things, can only distract from this. Any “behind-the-scenes” elements in parks like Universal Studios will be old, vestigial elements of an earlier industry logic.Anyway. What do you think the likelihood is that a new “studio park” will be built overseas/as future expansion for either company?
Paragraphs don't need. Park not studio. However, very ironic.It’s a studios park and this all has been a fruitless endeavor to appease terminally online weirdos who write paragraphs about USF.
Incredibly slim, because as I mentioned the move away from “studio” parks is just one manifestation of the shifting priorities of the entertainment industry, a shift being driven by the fundamental economic structure of the various studios. It’s the same reason the Disney parks are becoming increasingly thematically homogeneous. The industry’s entire focus has become the creation and leveraging of ongoing narrative universes across multiple platforms - the decision-makers at the various studios have been very explicit about this. They want consumers to become loyal to these immersive universes, and “studio” parks’ focus on the “magic of movies,” with its implicit acknowledgment of films as artificial things, can only distract from this. Any “behind-the-scenes” elements in parks like Universal Studios will be old, vestigial elements of an earlier industry logic.
Currently, we have Hello Kitty by Silver Screen, Scooby characters around Bourne, Marilyn and Betty Boop towards the middle section around Five & Dime and Studio Styles, The Simpsons between HMS and F&D, Beetlejuice in front of Horror Make-Up, Dora characters in front of the Hollywood sign, Gabby, Alex, or Gloria on the side of Cafe La Bamba, Trolls characters or Alex & Gloria near Mel's, The Penguins or King Julian in front of NBC, Shrek characters by Kidzone, and Doc Brown between the ends of Central Park.How have the characters been in Hollywood recently? As long as that area still has Marilyn and her show, Scoobs and the gang, Lucy and Ricky, etc… I’m happy. That area should be a day long parade of famous characters. That alone would help the park and make Hollywood a terrific hang spot.
Yes a media themed park with less cohesion than ever before with the Hollywood Bowl sitting inside New York with an attraction that has Hollywood in the name adjacent to a random Minion themed street bisecting it, E.T. nestled in the middle of Dreamworks Land next to an Animal Show and a pizza restaurant themed to a land that no longer exists sitting next to Spongebob and then a Minion Land serving as the gateway entrance that is actually just themed to studio soundstages. A+ management decisions.With the removal of Production Central as a park land, I think it solidifies the idea that Universal no longer sees the park as a "studio-themed" park, but rather a "media-themed" park.
Spatula let’s keep this convo going in the other thread for now. It’ll streamline it, instead of having two going at the same time.Yes a media themed park with less cohesion than ever before with the Hollywood Bowl sitting inside New York with an attraction that has Hollywood in the name adjacent to a random Minion themed street bisecting it, E.T. nestled in the middle of Dreamworks Land next to an Animal Show and a pizza restaurant themed to a land that no longer exists sitting next to Spongebob and then a Minion Land serving as the gateway entrance that is actually just themed to studio soundstages. A+ management decisions.
USF is the new Epcot except arguably worse. They really should zone London as part of Springfield while they're at it. It makes no sense and the two areas don't touch but who cares?? It doesn't really matter right? Wizarding World should be part of Minion Land and Fast & Furious should be considered an Islands of Adventure attraction too. Why not!?
I certainly agree that, as a theme, "Production Central" was never exceptional, though it was seemingly designed to allow for that area to be a hodge-podge of whatever.
The Minion area is more unified, definitely (yet HRRR is now more displaced than it was before).
9.9/10 post, deducting a tenth because you didn't post the music video that demonstrates what you wrote here:This is very true. USF was built as both a theme park and a movie studio backlot... a backlot which was designed for actual use (regardless of how the industry never fully embraced FL). So design quirks like Central Park being over near Hollywood and Cafe La Bamba were intentional. If you were filming in the NY section by where Starbucks is now, the camera would capture across the water and thus Central Park was meant to be caught on camera as looking like NY, not Hollywood. Some simple set dress and signage changes and the USF "Central Park" could be made to look like somewhere in Hollywood. It was all for filming purposes. Other examples: The buildings on the waterfront in NY are intentionally designed in similar architectural styles to San Francisoo... in case you were filming in USF's SF area and the camera pointed towards NY. Ever wonder why the building atop the old Disaster exit (now where the SF and London transition is) says "Amity" and was wood? Because back in the day when Amity was around, the camera needed a New England style building in the background when filming in Amity.
Today, that design choice is creating thematic issues for USF as UDX is now focused on hyper-theming and immersion. The very premise of USF being a backlot has seemingly been abandoned as part of the theme park language they use with guests today. Back in the day, we couldn't even refer to USF as a "Theme park" or "park"... it was always the "Studio". Even tickets were not tickets, they were a "Studio Pass". Look up the original blue and white admission media, it's printed right on it. It seems all of the original park concept has been abandoned and a new design "language" has yet to emerge... or hopefully, is a long-term goal of the new design regime as they transform USF bit by bit. I'm sure there is still an internal struggle between the parks side of things and the production side which still offers the "backlot" for production. Will be interesting to see where things go design-wise as more opportunities to transform areas at USF arise.