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Disney’s California Grill – Sushi Anyone?

A great video from Disney’s California Grill and also a great video on how to make sushi..go figure.

Under the Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom

Do you ever wonder how the characters at the parks seem to appear as if by, well, magic? There is a story behind that. One day while strolling through the park, Walt Disney saw a Frontierland cowboy walking through Tomorrowland. He then decided that for Disney World that some needs would have to be hidden. Trash, costume characters, etc. had to be out of sight. To do this, each area, section, or ride was first planned out in story boards. Then, the Imagineers constructed models, and viewed them in every angle. To hide the utilities, underground tunnels put in for Walt Disney World. Disney built a nine acre network of tunnels so Cast Members would be able to move around out of the public view!

The park was built over a huge underground complex. Disney did not dig tunnels under the Magic Kingdom. The corridors were built at ground level. The tunnel complex consists of 15 foot high walkways, meeting rooms, computer rooms, etc. with all having exposed utilities (it somewhat resembled a parking garage). The tunnel complex originates from the castle and spreads out like spokes from a wheel to the other lands. In fact, the bottom two floors of the castle consists of the tunnel complex.

The soil from the excavation of the Seven Seas Lagoon, around 5 million square feet, was heaped over this complex. Additionally, sand from the Seven Seas Lagoon excavation was used to line the Lagoon, Bay Lake and many other bodies of water.The Seven Seas Lagoon is Walt Disney World’s man-made lake. Although Bay Lake is a natural lake, soil from its bottom was also used to cover the complex. Thus, the pseudo-tunnel system was born. Another name for the system of tunnels under the Magic Kingdom is Utilidors, even though the internal Walt Disney World phone book does use the term “tunnels.” Utilidor stands for utility corridor.

No guests under 16 is allowed in the tunnel system because it would bother children, seeing two Goofys passing each other, Mickey without a head, seeing Minnie eating with Snow White, and ruin the magic.

Walt Disney World guests do not realize the existence of this underground complex because they enter from the monorail. But, the tunnel system is considered by Cast Members as the 1st floor, and not really a tunnel system. The entire Magic Kingdom is technically on the second and third floors. While most areas are on the 2nd floor, Fantasyland is on the 3rd floor. If you notice while in the park you will see how Fantasyland and the castle are higher.

You have never seen a delivery truck at Disney – have you? Magic Kingdom’s first floor has all the access roads for the Cast Members (employees) and service vehicles, the “tunnels” or Utilidors, the AVAC, service rooms, wardrobe and costuming, male and female locker rooms, offices, storage, kitchens, break rooms, two employee cafeterias, including the Fantasyland Dining Room, Kingdom Kutters, a Fire Prevention Center, Studio “D” and many of the support departments for the Magic Kingdom. The Fantasyland Dining Room and restrooms are to the left.

Cast Members use the utilidors to get from place to place. Walt Disney was very concerned with themeing and “the show.” He did not want a Cast Member in a Tomorrowland costume walking through Main Street or an Adventureland Cast Member in Fantasyland. The utilidors allow each Cast Member to show up where he/she belongs without walking through the other lands.

The walls are color coded for the land in which they are under to allow easy navigation. Since some people are color blind, the names of the different lands and pictures relating to each land also appear on the walls. This is to allow Cast Members to quickly know where they are and to avoid the mixing of lands. If you walk around Magic Kingdom, you will notice that Disney tried very hard to position things so that lands do not interfere with one another.

The Cast Member parking lot is a restricted lot. The road, called Magic Kingdom Drive, leads from the underground entrance out to the Emergency Services, Center Building, Monorail Central, Security Booth, Disney University, and Reams Road. Magic Kingdom Drive is the road directly behind the attraction 20,000 Leagues. It is hidden behind a row of mostly evergreen trees which can be seen looking across the attraction’s lagoon. If you are a normal Cast Member at the Magic Kingdom, you actually have to park at the parking lot, approximately 500 yards behind the Magic Kingdom itself, and take a bus to the main tunnel entrance! However, if you have a Gold Walt Disney World football shaped parking sticker on your car, you can enter into any backstage parking area with whomever you want in your car. You can even park at the mouth of the tunnels.

After taking “The Great Bus Ride,” you end up at the main tunnel entrance underneath the Pinocchio’s Village Haus right next to Fantasy Fair and Small World in Fantasyland. There is a sub-tunnel to the left that goes to costuming, and locker rooms. The tunnel has the costumes for all the characters and themed areas hanging for the Cast Members. With 1.2 millon pieces of clothing, it is the largest operating wordrobe department in the world. Each Cast Member has 3 costumes. The one s/he is wearing, on on the rack and on in the wash (or bag as the Cast Members call it).

As you walk in the main tunnel, there is a relatively short central corridor with pictures on the walls of the Magic Kingdom during construction. After the short corridor, it opens into the main tunnel system. This can be described best as an octagon underneath the entire park, with a central corridor cutting right down the middle to security offices at the front of Main Street. The central corridor slopes down in the center of the park then back up again. this probably has something to do with the moat around Cinderella Castle.

From the center, an elevator with a special key, goes to the famous “secret” apartment inside the castle.

From various sites inside the octagonal tunnel, stairs and elevators go up to points “On Stage,” usually, elevators go to kitchens, and stairs go right out into the park or into a shop. The next time you see an unmarked door remember the tunnel system. There are many hidden entrances throughout the park. As an example: in Main Street there is a door that leads to the back of the bank where Cast Members get their checks; there is a door besides the carrousel. Walk through the door and go down some stairs and you are in the utilidors.

The tunnels connect all of the theme areas in the Magic Kingdom, except for Mickey’s Toontown Fair since it was added much later to the Magic Kingdom. The utilidors go into Frontierland as far as Peco Bill’s Cafe. There is a stairwell behind Peco Bill’s Cafe, and there is one at Diamond Horseshoe which also lets Cast Members out in Adventureland. Stairwells are also in Liberty Square, Small World, Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride, Snow White, Alien Encounter, East and West Main Street and the Adventureland Veranda.

Here are the list of tunnels from the internal phone book.

  1. Stairway 1 – to Pinocchio Village Haus
  2. Stairway 2 – unknown
  3. Stairway 3 – unknown
  4. Stairway 4 – to Liberty Square, Columbia Harbor House and Peter Pan
  5. Stairway 5 – to Fantasyland Theater (Lion King)
  6. Stairway 6 – unknown
  7. Stairway 7 – unknown
  8. Stairway 8 – unknown
  9. Stairway 9 – to Fantasyland and Tomorrowland
  10. Stairway 10 – to the Hall of Presidents
  11. Stairway 11 – unknown
  12. Stairway 12 – to Ye Old Christmas Shoppe
  13. Stairway 13 – to Liberty Square and Adventureland Veranda
  14. Stairway 14 – unknown
  15. Stairway 15 – unknown
  16. Stairway 16 – to Adventureland and Frontierland
  17. Stairway 17 – to Crystal Palace and First Aid
  18. Stairway 18 – to MO-8
  19. Stairway 19 – to MO-6 and West Parking Lot
  20. Stairway 20 – to Town Square Kitchen
  21. Stairway 21 – to MO-5 and East Parking Lot
  22. Stairway 22 – to MO-7
  23. Stairway 23 – unknown
  24. Stairway 24 – to Cosmic Ray’s Starlight Cafe
  25. Stairway 25 – to Mickey’s Star Traders
  26. Stairway 26 – unknown
  27. Stairway 27 – to Transportarium
  28. Stairway ? – to Tinkerbell’s Treasures

You can also see them on the map.

The bigger restaurant kitchens are split in two, with a cooking kitchen on the tunnel level, and a prep kitchen at park level. The tunnels are also used to store merchandise, and hurricane provisions. Gasoline powered vehicles are not allowed in the tunnels for safety reasons. Normally, the only exception is the Brinks truck which collects money from Cash Control. Cash Control is located underneath Pinocchio’s Village Haus. It never closes. Ambulances are allowed to drive in the tunnel, but only in cases of extreme emergency.

The utilidors occupy 392,040 square feet of space under the Magic Kingdom and are bustling with action. Beside navigation information the walls are covered with motovational information, such as the 7 rules of a Cast Member, guest feedback and other items to insure that your stay is magical.

Epcot, Animal Kingdom, and the Hollywood Studios do not have tunnels like the Magic Kingdom does. At Epcot, there is a small tunnel under connecting the two parts of Innoventions and The Land. It’s mostly for storage, kitchens, and break rooms. And another tunnel that leads from Universe of Energy, under Spaceship Earth, and ends at The Living Seas.

Disney’s Night of Joy ROCKS!

Held Sept. 11-12, 2009, Disney’s Night of Joy is a musically-diverse Christian music event featuring artists like P.O.D., Jars of Clay, MercyMe, newsboys, Skillet, Flyleaf, Chris Tomlin, Kutless, Grits, Leeland, Superchick, Mandisa, Family Force 5, Francesca Battisteli, Revive, Josh Wilson, Above the Golden State and Abandon. All the details about tickets for groups and individuals are available online at www.nightofjoy.com.

Disney, Zemeckis board ‘Yellow Submarine’

yellow_submarine

Disney and Robert Zemeckis are looking to catch the wave of Beatlemania, floating a new 3-D “Yellow Submarine” for the bigscreen, with merchandising in tow and prospects for spinning off both a Broadway musical and a Cirque du Soleil stage production.

Disney hopes to have the film ready to premiere around the 2012 Summer Olympics.

The deal has been months in the making, with armies of Blue Meanies…er, lawyers sorting out the complicated rights clearances necessary to remake the 1968 psychedelic toon.

Key to the deal is Zemeckis access to 16 classic Beatles tunes, ranging from the title song to “Baby You’re a Rich Man,” “All You Need Is Love,” “When Im 64,” “Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds” and “Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band.”

Zemeckis plans to use the 3-D performance-capture format he utilized on the upcoming “A Christmas Carol,” in which Jim Carrey plays Scrooge as well as the ghosts that haunt him. His ImageMovers banner would produce.

Though the Beatles broke up in 1970, interest in their music has remained high, as reflected in such recent projects as Julie Taymor’s “Across the Universe” pic and Cirque du Soleil’s “Love” production in Las Vegas. September will bring a flurry of remastered Beatles albums and the release of vidgame “The Beatles: Rock Band,” which incorporates some 45 of the band’s songs.

The storyline of the original “Yellow Submarine,” directed by George Dunning, was set in Pepperland, an undersea paradise protected by Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. When the band is captured by the music-hating Blue Meanies, a soldier is sent to Liverpool to fetch the Fab Four, who hop in the submarine and save the day.

The Beatles appeared only in the film’s closing live-action scene. Actors provided the voices for the animated incarnations of Paul McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr.

Disney D23 Expo Uncovered!

D23s Jeffrey and Carmen are determined to get the inside scoop on the “Treasures of the Walt Disney Archives” exhibit that will be at Disney’s D23 Expo — The Ultimate Disney Fan Experience — September 10-13. After a Jack Sparrow encounter, things take an unexpected twist with Herbie the Love Bug.  For more info on the D23 Expo, visit http://www.D23Expo.com

Disney’s – “When in Rome” First Look w/ video goodness

wheninrome
wheninrome

wheninrome

An ambitious young New Yorker (KRISTEN BELL), disillusioned with romance, takes a whirlwind trip to Rome where she defiantly plucks magic coins from a fountain of love, inexplicably igniting the passion of those who threw them in:  a sausage magnate (DANNY DEVITO), a street magician (JON HEDER), an adoring painter (WILL ARNETT) and a self-admiring model (DAX SHEPARD).  But when a charming reporter (JOSH DUHAMEL) pursues her with equal zest, how will she know if his love is the real thing?

“When in Rome” opens in theaters on January 29, 2010.

D23 Expo Walt Disney Studios Theater Program of Events

D23 EXPO Mickey web
D23 EXPO Mickey web

D23-EXPO-Mickey-web

Thanks to the guys over at Stitch Kingdom for the full article and more details.

D23 EXPO – WALT DISNEY STUDIOS THEATER PROGRAM OF EVENTS

THURSDAY 9/10
1:00 PM “Beauty and the Beast” panel discussion; and screening of selected scenes in Disney Digital 3D™
4:00 PM  “The Lion King” music program
7:00 PM “the boys: the sherman brothers story” panel discussion/ screening
10:00 PM “Darby O’Gill and the Little People” screening

FRIDAY 9/11
11:00 AM Dick Cook / Walt Disney Studios presentation (in the Arena)
1:00 PM Screening of “The Nightmare Before Christmas” in Disney Digital 3D™ plus Tim Burton shorts, “Frankenweenie” and “Vincent”
4:00 PM  “Tron”/ “Tron: Legacy” presentation; Digital debut screening of original “Tron”
7:30 PM “Walt & El Grupo” presentation; Followed by screening of “Saludos Amigos”
10:00 PM   “The Shaggy Dog” screening

SATURDAY 9/12
10:00 AM Disneynature presentation
12:00 PM   “Snow White” panel discussion;   Followed by screening of Restored Print
3:00 PM  “Princess and the Frog” presentation
5:30 PM “Prep and Landing” presentation
7:30 PM “Trail of the Panda” screening
10:00 PM   “Sleeping Beauty” screening

SUNDAY 9/13
11:00 AM John Lasseter / Walt Disney and Pixar Animation Studios presentation (in the Arena)
1:00 PM  “Muppets” presentation
4:00 PM  “Tinker Bell and the Lost Treasure” screening
6:30 PM “Toy Story 3” presentation;
7:00 PM “Toy Story” and “Toy Story 2” debuts in Disney Digital 3D™

Tickets to the D23 EXPO are available at http://www.D23Expo.com.  Admission includes access to all experiences and entertainment at the D23 EXPO and can be purchased for single days or for the full four days of festivities. Admission is $37 for a one-day adult ticket and $27 for children 3-12.  Four-day passes are $111 for adults and $81 for children. Members of D23: The Official Community for Disney Fans will receive a discount on up to four admissions, as well as early entry to each day of the D23 EXPO for themselves and their guests.

US Dept of Labor to probe Disney Deaths

An accidental death of a 30-year-old performer at Walt Disney World in Florida on Tuesday has prompted an investigation by the U.S. Department of Labor, OSHA and a state official, The Wall Street Journal reports.

It’s the third death among performers at the park since July.

Anislav Varbanov died late Monday after sustaining injuries from a rehearsal for a show based on the character in the Indiana Jones “Raiders of the Lost Ark” series. The investigations are trying to find out what exactly happened.

Walt Disney World is owned by The Walt Disney Co. (NYSE:DIS) of Burbank.

Occupational Safety & Health Administration has six months to report what it finds in the investigation, a spokeswoman told the Journal. A local sheriff’s office has launched its own investigation into the death, and Disney is probing the situation as well, the report states.

Last week, 47-year-old Mark Prince died from head-injury complications he sustained during a pirate show. In July, 21-year-old Austin Wuennenberg was killed when another train backed into a monorail he was operating.

Varbanov’s death, an autopsy shows, was caused by an accidental neck fracture, the Journal stated. Varbanov trained as a gymnast and joined the Orlando, Fla., park last month.

CNN Reports on Anislav Varbanov death at Disneyworld

All-platform journalist John Couwels reports on Anislav Varbanov’s death at Disney World.

Classic Disneyland Footage from 1956

Home Movies At DisneyLand – 1956 from Jeff Altman on Vimeo.

This footage was taken a year after the California theme park opened.

Power Outages at Disneyland

zurg
zurg

zurg

Disneyland seems to have been attacked by Zurg the past few days. Some rides were shut down at the ‘Magic Kingdom’ because of a power outage for the second day in a row.

Disney spokesman John Nicoletti confirmed that the outage affected some attractions including Space Mountain. Buzz Lightyear Astro Blasters was also shut down, but other ‘Tomorrowland’ rides were up, including Autopia and Star Tours.

The Monorail was initially closed, but started again after operators ran it around a few times, an employee told guests.

Official Report: A power surge originating from the Anaheim Public Utilities’ electrical grid shut down the rides at Disneyland briefly at around 11 a.m. this morning.

Disney spokesman John Nicoletti couldn’t say exactly how long the rides were down for, but he said that in the event of a power surge, it’s routine to cut the power for each ride and then power it back up for safety reasons.

Anaheim Public Utilities spokeswoman Margie Otto said: “One of our auto-transfer switches failed, causing a momentary dip in voltage. Disneyland was not on that circuit, but they experienced a momentary dip in voltage.”

Disney cancels Indiana Jones stunt show performances today following death

From the Orlando Sentinel

Walt Disney World has canceled all performances today of a popular stunt show, following the death of a worker during a rehearsal yesterday.

Anislav Varbanov, 30, died Monday evening after he was hurt while performing a tumbling roll during a rehearsal for the Indiana Jones Epic Stunt Spectacular, the 30-mimnute show at Disney’s Hollywood Studios.

The Indiana Jones show is typically performed five or six times a day. But a Disney spokeswoman said this morning that resort opted to cancel all performances today “out of respect for the cast.”

From the Orlando Sentinel

  • Disney performer dead after accident at Hollywood Studios
  • Disney performer dies days after performance fall

From other Orlando sources

  • Disney Cast Member Dies After Stunt Show Accident|wftv.com
  • Disney Performer Dies After Tumbling Roll|clickorlando.com
  • Cast Member dies after Indiana Jones Stunt Show Rehearsal Accident|thedisneyblog.com

Around the Web

  • Disney Worker Dies After Show Accident|news.aol.com
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