Olympic Stars Celebrate At Disneyland

August 9th, 2008

Joey Yung joined TVB’s four Olympic Stars Raymond Lam, Bernice Liu, Linda Chung and Edwin Siu at a rehearsal for the Disney Olympic Parade yesterday at Hong Kong Disneyland. The combination of human and cartoon stars attracted the attentions of many visitors to the park, who stopped to join in and take photographs.

With the opening of the Beijing games just days away, Joey revealed that she still did not know whether or not she will have to go and take part. Asked about the news of terrorist attacks in Xinjiang, Joey said that she was confident in the ability of the security services and was not worried about any attacks in Beijing.

Talking about the reports that Gillian Chung is finally returning to work, Joey said that she had heard the news and had been in touch. She said that Gillian was quite nervous about her appearance at the basketball match.

Linda said that her mother had attended the event and she had arranged a special night’s stay at the Disneyland hotel as a treat. Asked what her mum thought about rumoured boyfriend Raymond, she replied that she did not know. When reporters asked her once again about being particularly friendly with Raymond, Linda said that he just happened to be the one stood closest to her during the photocall.

Talking of the continued rumours linking her to Raymond, Linda laughed that she will just see this as promotion for their series Moonlight Resonance.

Raymond was asked whether or not he had met up with Linda’s mum during the event and he pointed out that he had met Mama Chung before at TVB City, but he did not know her very well. Asked if he thought that Linda was a great girl, he replied jokingly that he wasn’t too bad himself.

My Aggravation With Disney

August 9th, 2008

Disney has been a part of my life since I was a child.  I remember watching Jungle Book, Bambi, Snow White and the list goes on and on and on.

With Disney animated movies I pretty much never have to worry about there being inappropriate content.  Come to think of it, there isn’t one Disney animated movie that would cause me concern to have my child view it.  So with all these positives, what could possibly be wrong with a Disney movie you say?

You don’t have to be a parent to see or understand this, but being one does help.  Follow me along here for a moment…A two year old child who can repeat the word “feeesh” what seems like 400 times in one minute without taking a breath.

As I hurry to turn on the DVD player, the power comes on and as I anxiously wait the tray to open, I quickly sort through the Disney DVD’s to find Finding Nemo. Alas, I found the movie and the tray is open.  Close and the DVD slides in and I’m one step closer to salvation…for the both of us.  “Feeesh” continues to ring in my ears, almost like a hungry bird waiting anxiously as the parent holds a wriggling worm over its open mouth.

Finally…the DVD starts to read.  FBI warning…neither of us care about it at this point.  Of course you can’t fast forward, skip past it or hit the menu button.  Ah, a little closer now…a Disney splash screen. Yes, I know it’s a Disney movie or I wouldn’t be playing it.

The menu appears and I hit ‘play’.  Another Disney splash screen.  I know I have a short memory/attention span but I still remember ten seconds ago when I was first reminded it was a Disney DVD I was playing.  Oh look, they have more titles available for me.  Listen, I could really give a damn at this point.  Just play the friggin’ movie I think to myself as I feel my blood pressure rise as I’m still unable to satisfy my hungry chick’s craving.  I hit skip, think foolishly this MUST be it.  Nope….

New tourist thrill: No lines at California theme parks

August 7th, 2008

We scooted quickly to the front of Indiana Jones Adventure, Disneyland’s herky-jerky thrill ride designed, I’m sure, by a chiropractor looking for business.

We hopped right on Knott’s Berry Farm’s Sierra Sidewinder, a newfangled roller coaster that not only zips you along the traditional up-and-down track but also allows your four-person cart to spin. We could have ridden it again and again without much wait if my queasy stomach hadn’t kept me grounded.

We shuffled through the queue for maybe seven minutes to hop a tram tour of the back lot at Universal Studios Hollywood. I wanted to see the damage from a massive June fire that wiped out acres of old street facades and buildings that served as sets for movies including “Transformers,” “Back to the Future” and “Spider-Man 2.”

Meanwhile, at Wild Rivers, a sprawling suburban water park in Irvine, the line was so short to ride Bazooka Bowls that I flushed myself through it multiple times. Visualize being shot via steep tube slide into a water-gushing toilet bowl the size of a Starbucks coffee shop, swirling around and around, then flushing through a hole for a 3-foot drop into a 9-foot-deep pool.

Yee-ha! Wish you were here.

If you ever wanted to do what we did – experience Southern California’s theme parks, shop Rodeo Drive, sunbathe on Venice Beach – you should do it this summer.

Because America has decided to stay home.

Theme park revenues in the U.S. will decline this year by more than 2 percent – the first decline since travel rebounded from the terrorist attacks of September 2001, according to a recent industry report from IBISWorld, a business intelligence research firm here in L.A.

Staycations have replaced trips to the Magic Kingdom as gas prices have raised travel costs and declining housing values robbed many families of the equity vault they tapped for travel and other luxuries.

“Park admissions are expected to suffer this summer because of the economic outlook and related deferred investment in new rides and facilities,” said George Van Horn, senior analyst for IBISWorld.

The Walt Disney Co., which operates Disneyland and Disney World theme parks in the U.S., accounts for around half of the industry’s revenue as a result of more than 50 million visitors a year.

And since U.S. visitors account for 80 to 85 percent of theme park attendance, an anticipated boost in international tourists can’t offset the number of Americans staying home.

“Even Disney will not be safe” from the economic downturn, Van Horn said.

On the ground here – this is my 13th visit to a Disney theme park – I can report never seeing crowds this light. I wouldn’t even call it a crowd despite a sunny, 80-degree day.

Van Horn said he thinks Disney – and the entire theme park industry – needs to look beyond America’s immediate economic troubles to a longer-term trend if it wants to recapture the magic.

“While the 25- to 44-year demographic and their kids have typically been the main visitors to theme parks, the vast number of baby boomers entering retirement – with plenty of spare time and money on their hands – must not be neglected,” he said.

“Over the four years to 2012, the 60-plus age group will experience an average annualized growth of 2.8 percent, the strongest growth in all age categories,” Van Horn said. “And theme parks may need to adjust their offering to appeal to older Americans and foreign tourists, too, through shows, musical activities and gentler rides.”

That’s all industry insider gobbledy-gook.

I’ve aged beyond the typical demographic, but I’m still a sucker for Minnie Mouse, driving Beverly Hills to see the homes of the rich and famous and sitting down for a warm slice of Mrs. Knott’s boysenberry pie with a scoop of vanilla ice cream. (Although gentler rides agree with me these days.)

If you can afford it, Alaska Airlines still has an airfare deal going – through Thursday – with late summer airfares as low as $79 each way to LAX.

If you can’t afford it this year, start saving up for summer 2009. IBISWorld’s report anticipates the numbers next year will look about as gloomy as they do this year – for the industry.

But for you and me, having smaller crowds to fight through makes the experience much more pleasant.

And we can get flushed through the Bazooka Bowls many more times.

Disney first to sign up to Virgin’s Showcase service

August 7th, 2008

Disney Destinations International is expected to launch Disney Travel on-demand, the first commercial initiative on Virgin Media’s Showcase environment, this week. Showcase is available to Virgin Media’s television subscribers and offers advertisers an area to air ad content.

Disney Travel on-demand is a series of 10-minute programmes, featuring Walt Disney World, Florida, available to view by Virgin Media subscribers at any time.

The programmes feature a “call to action”, enabling viewers to order a Walt Disney World vacation planning kit, as well as details of how to contact a Walt Disney Travel Company representative.

The on-demand ad content will be supported on Virginmedia.com, with a dedicated sub-channel within the travel section of the Virgin Media portal. Additional support will come from Virgin Media’s customer magazine, Electric, sent monthly to more than one million subscribers.

The deal was negotiated by Virgin Media’s sales house IDS.

Hong Kong Disneyland, Ocean Park to celebrate Olympics

August 7th, 2008

With the Beijing Olympics approaching, the Olympic atmosphere in Hong Kong has become increasingly dense. Recently, the Hong Kong Disneyland and the Ocean Park have been well prepared for celebrating the opening of Beijing Olympics.

On August 8, Hong Kong Disneyland will put 500 sets of Mickey Family Equestrian Badge on sale. It is understood that each set is made up of six patterns including Mickey hurdling, Donald Duck’ water hurdling as well as Minnie’s dressage show. The price per set will be HKD 280. On the night of that day, the live show of the Olympic opening ceremony will be seen in the park whilst 500 entertainers will give performances during the last countdown.

Meanwhile, the Ocean Park will bring five Chinese sturgeons, which have been presented by Xiamen Chinese Sturgeon Breeding Center, into the Shark Hall. It is said that the sturgeons are some seven or nine years old, with an average length of 6.5 feet.

Disney raising theme park ticket prices

August 7th, 2008

As if rising gas and food prices weren’t enough, a ticket to the Magic Kingdom will soon cost a few bucks more. The Walt Disney Co. is raising one-day ticket prices.

At Disneyland in Anaheim, Calif., one-day prices are up from $66 to $69 for those aged 10 and older, and from $56 to $59 for children aged 3 to 9.

The price increase applies in varying degrees for longer stays, while the park hopper option, an add-on that allows ticket-holders to move among any of Disney’s parks, will cost $50, up from $45. Tickets for those aged 10 and older to Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla., are up from $71 to $75, while tickets for children aged 3 to 9 went from $60 to $63.

Lions Gate signs distribution deal with Disney

August 6th, 2008

Independent film studio Lions Gate Entertainment Corp. said Tuesday it has reached an agreement with Walt Disney Co.’s ABC Studios to distribute several television series on DVD.

Lions Gate will distribute DVDs of programs such as “According to Jim,” which stars Jim Belushi, “Reaper,” “Hope & Faith,” “8 Simple Rules…for Dating My Teenage Daughter” and “Kevin Hill,” among others.

Terms of the deal weren’t disclosed.

The agreement comes on the heels of a partnership Lions Gate reached last month with cable company Comcast Corp. to distribute DVDs of shows such as “Keeping up with the Kardashians” and “Kimora: Life in the Fab Lane.”

Shares of Lions Gates rose 7 cents to 10.03 in morning trading.

ESPN, Disney Interactive buys websites

August 6th, 2008

Disney-backed US sports channel ESPN has acquired a motor racing website, while Disney Interactive Media Group buys a new parenting website in the UK.

ESPN has taken over 13-year-old Racing-Live.com, which serves up motor sport news to three million unique users per month in English, French, Japanese, Italian, German and Spanish.

“Motor racing has a global fan base, and this agreement will allow us to serve fans more motor sports coverage than ever before,” said Russell Wolff, executive VP and MD of ESPN International.

The purchase, for an undisclosed sum, follows recent acquisitions of Cricinfo.com and Scrum.com, and “complements our extensive NASCAR and classic motor sports coverage,” added Wolff.

Elsewhere in the Mouse empire, Disney Interactive bought parenting website Raisingkids.co.uk to sit alongside into its own three-week-old UKfamily.co.uk within Disney Online.

Raisingkids.co.uk claims 142,000 unique visitors per month, 1.3 million page impressions and a registered database of more than 100,000 parents. It was founded in 2001 by leading child psychologist Dr Pat Spungin, who will stay on board, as will the site’s editor Catherine Hanly and web producer Michael Howard.

Cindy Rose, senior VP and MD of Disney Interactive Media Group Europe, Middle East and Africa, said: “Raisingkids.co.uk has a fantastic reputation among parents.”

Disney plots box-office turnaround

August 6th, 2008

Disney’s film division, experiencing one of its worst slumps at the box office in years, is counting on talking dogs and singing teens to turn things around.

When Walt Disney Co. reported earnings last week, the glaring weak spot in an otherwise strong quarter was the company’s Studio Entertainment unit, which encompasses the movie studio. Operating income plunged 49% and revenue was off 19% from a year ago, mostly because Disney’s pictures didn’t meet expectations.

With its newest release, the political comedy “Swing Vote,” buried in a landslide last weekend and U.S. ticket sales down nearly 30% this year, Disney finds itself in last place among the six major studios in box-office market share — unusual for a company usually at or near the top.

Disney is betting that won’t last long, however. It has high hopes this fall for “Beverly Hills Chihuahua,” about a pampered pooch from the 90210 ZIP Code lost in Mexico, and “Bolt,” an animated film about a showbiz dog. That project is being shepherded by Pixar Animation Studios guru John Lasseter. Disney is also releasing “High School Musical 3: Senior Year,” the third movie in the pubescent franchise and the first premiering on the big screen.

The studio said one reason for its weaker performance in the third quarter was that results in the year-ago quarter were extraordinarily high, pumped up by the blockbuster “Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End,” which generated $961 million in worldwide ticket sales.

In addition, Disney made a strategic decision a couple of years ago to release fewer movies annually, which potentially reduces its box-office total.

Still, other than the current Pixar comedy, “Wall-E,” which has grossed more than $200 million in the U.S., Disney hasn’t hit one out of the park in seven months. Its biggest live-action bet, “The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian,” the second film in the franchise co-owned by Philip Anschutz’s Walden Media, fell below expectations at $140 million domestically. That’s less than half what its 2005 predecessor, “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe,” brought in and less than half the U.S. total that “Pirates” achieved.

The studio made some money on modest-budget pictures such as “College Road Trip” and “Step Up 2: The Streets,” and its Miley Cyrus “Hannah Montana” concert movie beat expectations. But those films’ grosses paled next to those collected last year by the comedy “Wild Hogs,” the action sequel “National Treasure: Book of Secrets” and “Enchanted.”

“What we’re seeing is increased quarterly volatility from fewer film releases,” said Laura Martin, a senior media analyst with Soleil Securities Group.

She said Disney’s off quarter was “widely expected,” given the comparison with last year’s “Pirates” sequel. Because Disney has a strong track record of delivering franchise hits, the market does not penalize the studio when it hits a dry patch at the box office.

Disney Studios Chairman Dick Cook said that, although box-office races “have their place,” public companies such as Disney are “judged on having a great return on capital.” On that account, he said, the Studio Entertainment group — which includes worldwide theatrical, DVD and television sales of movies, stage plays and music earnings — was doing well.

“We’re having the second-biggest year in the history of the studio,” Cook said. He noted that last year the division generated operating profit of more than $1 billion, and in the nine months of this fiscal year has earned $988 million.

Of course, much will depend on fourth-quarter results, which will include the majority of earnings from “Wall-E,” released one day before the end of the third quarter.

Cook and his team are bullish about the films they have lined up for the rest of the year, which also include an Adam Sandler family comedy titled “Bedtime Stories,” scheduled for a holiday release.

The studio could have a tougher time selling tickets to its fall release “Miracle at St. Anna,” a World War II drama directed by Spike Lee that is being touted for its award prospects.

Cook said quarterly results were heavily dependent on when and which films were released in theaters and on DVD.

Disney these days has fewer swings at bat than its competitors. In 2005, in a major cost-cutting move, the studio decided to produce and release fewer movies and maintain a less diverse slate so it could focus more heavily on its “branded,” mainstream family fare.

Results, therefore, can swing more wildly between the hits and misses. The studio now releases about a dozen movies annually compared with more than twice that number a few years ago.

“When you make fewer movies, each one is going to count more,” Cook acknowledges.

Martin said that’s a strategy investors support.

“The live-action film business is a very low-return-on-capital business, and Wall Street likes the fact that Disney is making fewer films because there’s less opportunity to destroy value,” she said.

However, Martin said Wall Street had been asking Disney what its next big live-action franchise would be — a question that, she said, “Disney hasn’t yet answered.”

Disney parks raise ticket prices

August 6th, 2008

A ticket to Disneyland or the Magic Kingdom will cost you a few bucks more: The Walt Disney Co. has raised one-day ticket prices at its U.S. parks.

At Disneyland in Anaheim, one-day prices for those 10 and older are now $69, up from $66. The price for ages 3-9 is $59, up from $56.

Tickets for age 10 and older to Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla., are $75, up from $71, and tickets for ages 3-9 are $63, up from $60.

The price increase also applies in varying degrees for longer visits, and the park-hopper option, an add-on that allows ticket-holders to move among any of Disney’s parks, now costs $50, up from $45.