Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

TRAVEL BLOG
ASK ROLF
image

As a Woman, Can I Really Travel Without Much Fear for my Safety?

Vagabonding traveler Rolf Potts answers your questions about travel

AUDIO SLIDESHOW
image

Inside Slum Tourism

With mixed feelings, Rob Verger recently signed on for a tour of Rio de Janeiro’s favelas. He looks back on the experience—and the photos he was allowed to take.


HOW TO
image

Break Bread and Brie in France

Great cheese abounds in the land of Gaul, but dig in and you risk committing any number of faux pas. Terry Ward explains how to partake of the nation’s famed fromage with savoir faire.

THE LIST
image

10 Wanderlust-Inducing Summer Concerts

Call it world music or global pop or the sound of the world hum. Ben Keene reveals 10 acts on tour that are sure to transport you. Plus videos.

Q&A
image

Bryan Mealer: ‘War and Deliverance in Congo’

The former AP correspondent traveled up the Congo River. Frank Bures asks the author of “All Things Must Fight to Live” about following in the wake of Joseph Conrad. 

SPEAKER'S CORNER
image

A Journey Into ‘The Second World’

Some bureaucrats joke that they would never claim expertise about countries they had not at least flown over. In an excerpt from his new book, Parag Khanna argues that real global understanding can only come from serious travel.

BOOKS
image

‘The Worst Guidebook Writer Ever’?

Lonely Planet author Robert Reid reviews Thomas Kohnstamm’s “Do Travel Writers Go to Hell?” and weighs in on the controversy surrounding it

TRAVEL BLOG
4.11.08

A Clash of Civilizations Over Disney’s ‘It’s a Small World’

imageDisneyland fans are abuzz—and many are up in arms—over news that changes are coming to the classic boat ride “It’s a Small World.” The attraction was inspired by a conference Walt Disney attended in 1956, at the invitation of President Eisenhower, aimed at promoting “world peace through international civilian travel,” according to Wikipedia. Slow-moving boats pass scenes depicting various countries and cultures, all set to music. (See this YouTube video.)

The ride closed for work earlier this year, and since then, Web chatter and speculation about changes have become so heated that a Disney exec responded on Mouse Planet, saying: “Now the rumors are swirling that we are ‘ruining Walt’s creation.’ I’ve heard that we are planning to remove the rainforest, add Mickey and Minnie Mouse, create an ‘Up with America’ tribute, to effectively ‘marginalize’ the Mary Blair style and Walt’s classic (all not true).”

So what is true?

According to the exec, the company plans to “seamlessly integrate Disney characters into appropriate thematic scenes in the attraction.”

As the Los Angeles Times has pointed out, relatives of the ride’s creator and designer have called plans for changes “idiotic,” and the Times’ Daily Travel & Deal Blog notes that a number of Disney and Pixar professionals are also up in arms.

Of course, whenever changes are proposed on a Disneyland ride that many associate with their childhoods, nostalgia comes into play and long-time fans get upset.

Virginia Postrel has an interesting take. She writes on TheAtlantic.com (yes, even the venerable Atlantic is in on the “It’s a Small World” action):

Like the Miss Universe pageant’s opening ceremony and the International House of Pancakes, “Small World” portrays a happy, colorful internationalism. But, like the Star Trek universe, where intraspecies mating is more common than interracial marriage, it also assumes segregation and stasis.

“Small World” was designed for an audience that would rarely, if ever, encounter foreign cultures. Now it’s a time machine back to a world in which international travel was rare and large-scale trade and immigration unknown.

Saying large-scale immigration and trade were “unknown” seems a bit of an overstatement, but I get her point. She goes on to contend that the appeal of Disney characters around the globe is evidence that disparate cultures really do have a lot in common—the implication being, one assumes, that she has no objection to Disney characters on the ride.

I’m not sure I’d go that far, but I think she’s onto something. On the one hand, even World Hum’s tag line, “Dispatches from a Shrinking Planet,” evokes something of the “It’s a Small World” notion. But the most interesting aspect of today’s shrinking planet, in my mind, at least, is the mixing of peoples and cultures and the ways the world is changing and evolving as a result; the fact that within a few miles of Disneyland you can find people born in almost every nation on the planet—all basically getting along. Or that the emo craze has caught on in Mexico City. Or that, from a purely selfish standpoint, not far from my San Diego home I can order Mexican sushi, or go surfing with biotech engineers born in Mumbai.

That’s the real-life, globalized small world we now inhabit, and that’s the sort of world I’d like to see reflected on an “It’s a Small World” ride.

Related on World Hum:
* Disney’s Tom Sawyer Island: Too Old Media
* Disneyland’s ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ Ride to Close for, uh, Synergy
* What Would Mark Twain Make of Disneyland’s Tom Sawyer’s Island?

Related on Travel Channel:
* Travel Channel’s Family Guide to Walt Disney World
* Explore: Disneyland Paris
* Explore: Disney Cruise Line (slide show)

Posted by Jim Benning • 4.11.08
Categories: WeblogGlobal VillagePlanet Theme Park

Share this item at del.icio.us PermalinkComments (4)


COMMENTS

Do they need to improve on it by adding disney characters there’s enough of that around the park.

they should try to show how the world could be in harmony (it’s the real thing)

By SciFiDrive  on  4.11.08  at  08:23 PM

Leave SmallWorld just as it is.Nothing taken away,nothing added.It is just as Walt intended it to be.The world in harmony.

By  on  4.13.08  at  08:22 AM

I love the small world ride and have been a big fan since I was a small child. It is like a work of art and should not be changed.  Too many things have been edited to be politiacaly corrects and I hope this is not an issue here.  the ride is fun and entertaining and should not be taken seriously.  Thats why we go to disney, to have fun and escape the mundane life at least just for the day.

By  on  4.14.08  at  11:39 AM

Dagnabbit. Every time this post pops up on my Google Reader, I’m stuck with the dadblame song for another day. It’s the earworm to end all earworms.

By Sophie  on  4.14.08  at  12:53 PM


ADD YOUR COMMENT

We reserve the right to remove comments with profanity, personal attacks, spam, overt advertisements or other inappropriate material.

Name:
Email:
Location:
URL:

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Submit the word you see here:



WEBLOG CATEGORIES

Adventure Travel
Afghanistan
Air Travel
'Airworld'
Africa
Alaska
Albania
Antarctica
Architecture and Travel
Argentina
Asia
Audio/Video
Australia
Bali
Bookstore Tourism
Belize
Ben's Place of the Week
Bhutan
Bolivia
Botswana
Brazil
Brand That Nation!
Budget Travel
Burma
California
Cambodia
Canada
Caribbean
Celebrity Travel Watch
Chile
China
Colombia
Costa Rica
Cruising
Cuba
Denmark
Czech Republic
Dominican Republic
Dubai
Eco-Travel
Ecuador
England
Egypt
El Salvador
Estonia
Ethiopia
Europe
Family Travel
Fiji
Finland
Florida
Food: The Moveable Feast
France
Geography for Fun and Profit
Germany
Georgia
Global Village
Ghana
Greece
Greenland
Guatemala
Guest Blogger: Thomas Swick
Guest Blogger: Michael Shapiro
Haiti
Hawaii
History Travel
Holland
Honduras
Hong Kong
Hot Americans on Television Botching Geography Questions
Hotels
Iceland
Icons: Ernest Hemingway
Icons: Che Guevara
Icons: Jack Kerouac
Icons: Mark Twain
In the News
India
Indonesia
Iowa
Iraq
Iran
Ireland
Islands
Israel
Italy
Jamaica
Japan
Jordan
Kenya
Kosovo
Las Vegas
Latvia
Life of a Travel Writer
Lebanon
Libya
Literary Travel
Los Angeles
London
Malaysia
Mali
Media Addict
Mexico
Moldova
Mongolia
Morocco
Moscow
Movies and Travel
Music
Nation Branding
Nepal
New Orleans
New Travel Books
New York
New Zealand
9.11.01
Nicaragua
North America
North Korea
Norway
Outdoors
Page Turner
Pakistan
Paris
Peru
Planet Theme Park
Poland
Portugal
Puerto Rico
R.I.P.
Road Trips
Romania
Russia
San Diego
San Francisco
Saudi Arabia
Scotland
Shameless Self-Promotion
Shanghai
Shrinking Planet Statistic of the Day
Singapore
Somalia
South Africa
South America
South Korea
Space Travel
Spain
Suriname
Sweden
Switzerland
Syria
Taiwan
Tanzania
Technology and Travel
Thailand
The Critics
Thomas Swick on Travel Writing
Three Great Books
Three Travel Books
Tibet
Tokyo
Top 30 Travel Books
Train Travel
Travel and Security
Travel Disease du Jour
Travel Fashion
Travel Headline of the Day
Travel Lexicon
Travel Photography
Travel-Terror Fatigue Index
Travel Tips
Travel Writer Book Tours
Tres Loco
Turkey
Ukraine
United States
Venezuela
Vietnam
Voluntourism
War and Travel
Washington D.C.
What We Loved This Week
What Would Edward Abbey Think?
Where in the World Are You?
Why We Travel
World Hum Travel Zeitgeist
Zambia