Page 2 of 3 FirstFirst 123 LastLast
Results 16 to 30 of 34

Thread: Shanghai Disney

  1. #16
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,199

    Wanda & theme parks

    Disneyland Paris to Get Challenger Backed By Billionaire Chinese Businessman
    Bloomberg - Feb 28, 2016 1:00 pm


    Image of EuropaCity from a promotional video. EuropaCity

    We hope they’re thinking very long term, because right now there is no market to support another park in the region.
    — Jason Clampet
    A partnership led by by Chinese billionaire Wang Jianlin’s Dalian Wanda Group Co. plans to invest more than $3 billion euros ($3.3 billion) in a retail and leisure development project outside of Paris, taking on Walt Disney Co. in the euro area’s second-largest economy.

    EuropaCity will be built 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) northeast of Paris. It will be the biggest single investment project in Europe to date, including a theme park, show stage, hotel, retail stores and conference centers, the company said in a statement. The project, which spans more than 80 hectares (198 acres), will also provide about 20,000 jobs during construction and 14,000 after it opens, according to the statement.

    For Wanda, which runs theme parks across China, movie theater chains in the U.S. and a soccer club in Spain, the move represents a renewed overseas push, underscoring Wang’s increasingly global ambitions. The conglomerate agreed in January to buy “Godzilla” producer Legendary Entertainment for $3.5 billion, paving the way for the tycoon to become the first Chinese person to control a Hollywood film company.

    France-based shopping center developer Immochan is overseeing the project. Immochan is an arm of Groupe Auchan, a family-owned supermarket operator.

    Wang is also interested in potentially buying Amaury Sport Organisation, a company that runs cycling’s Tour de France race, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

    Wang, who vies with Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. founder Jack Ma for the title of China’s richest person, has set his sights on beating Disney in the theme park business.

    Disneyland Revenue

    In January, he told executives that visitor arrivals and revenue at Wanda’s tourism projects in Wuxi and Guangzhou will beat those of Disneyland in Shanghai and Hong Kong, respectively, according to a transcript of the speech posted on the company’s website.

    Europacity may add to challenges facing Disneyland Paris, which needed a bailout in 2014 to upgrade its facilities and reverse a slump in attendance.

    Already this year, Wanda announced a $2.3 billion investment in three hospitals, the formation of a financial group and the signing a $10 billion development deal in India, in addition to the Legendary acquisition. Wanda has said it’s planning five major acquisitions in 2016 — three of them overseas.

    Wang’s investments in Europe include the Club Atletico de Madrid soccer team and Swiss marketing firm Infront Sports & Media AG.

    Wanda is seeking acquisitions to bolster growth as the group braces for falling sales from its main property business. That’s prompted Wang, estimated by the Bloomberg Billionaires Index to have a fortune exceeding $26 billion, to increasingly look toward expanding his entertainment business.

    Wang’s film, tourism and sports operations all fall under Wanda’s fast-growing Cultural Industry Group, which saw revenue climb 46 percent last year and is forecast to climb 30 percent in 2016. By comparison, Wanda Group estimates overall sales rose 19 percent in 2015 and will probably decline 12 percent this year because of the slump in its property business.

    –With assistance from Helene Fouquet, Mark Deen, Rachel Butt and Lulu Yilun Chen.
    The Wanda Empire is mind boggling.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,199

    a two-fer...

    Okay, maybe a one-and-a-half-fer. The post above is copied off our Wanda & AMC thread.

    Can Mickey make it big in Shanghai?


    The under-construction Cinderella Castle of the Shanghai Disney Resort is seen in the Pudong area of Shanghai on January 19, 2016. (JOHANNES EISELE/AFP/Getty Images)
    By — Gerry Yemen, Elliott Weiss and Steve Maiden February 28

    The big idea: Given the success of Walt Disney’s first two U.S. theme parks, the company sought to replicate its formula globally. Although there had been plenty of mistakes in its launches in Paris, Hong Kong and Tokyo, Disney ultimately adapted to local tastes. Would Disney’s secrets to its service operations work in Shanghai?

    The scenario: Even for a company that was built on the creative risk-taking culture of Walt Disney, the plan to open Shanghai Disneyland this year, the first in mainland China, is an audacious bet. The sixth global Disney resort, its biggest, will occupy nearly 1,000 acres and will feature several themed lands, including Tomorrowland, Treasure Cove, Disney Town and the Enchanted Storybook Castle, which will also be the biggest and tallest Disney castle.

    Disney and its investors are excited about Shanghai for good reason: demographics. The resort will be located in the Pudong district of Shanghai, the wealthiest of all of China’s districts. And 330 million people live within a three-hour drive of the resort site, compared with 19.6 million near Disney’s most profitable park, Walt Disney World in Orlando. Construction complications have delayed the opening. Cost overruns and alterations have increased the final price of the project. The Chinese economy has hit a rough patch since a stock market slump in summer 2015. Can the classic Disney theme park experience be delivered with the right cultural balance to appeal to its largely Chinese customers?

    The resolution: Disney’s key challenges are to maintain its service levels while customizing the experience for Chinese visitors. Disney retains operational control of the park through 75 percent voting power within the management company that oversees it. Its imagineers — architects, engineers and others designing the park — are conducting their work in the Putonghua language, and all business at the park will be conducted in Mandarin and translated into English. Given the former one-child policy, accommodations will be made for the extended family members likely to travel together to the park.

    Near the center of the park will be the Garden of the Twelve Friends, where Disney characters will be featured as the 12 animals of an enormous Chinese zodiac. At the center of a fountain will be a huge glass sculpture of a peony blossom, a symbol of good fortune and majesty. Some spires on the Enchanted Storybook Castle will be painted with lucky cloud patterns. And food will include such local fare as dim sum.

    When Disney opened its world’s biggest store in Shanghai’s Lujiazui area in May 2015, a line snaked down the street for a mile, demonstrating the power of the brand.

    The lesson: Disney’s purpose is to create a magical experience for customers. Disney Shanghai’s park operations will be based on quality service, be clean, be in good repair and the experience will be a Disney immersion. What remains to be seen is whether Disney understands Chinese cultural differences so that profitability will occur faster than in its other non-U.S. locations.

    — Gerry Yemen, Elliott Weiss
    and Steve Maiden

    Yemen is a senior researcher, Weiss is a professor and Maiden is a case writer at the University of Virginia Darden School of Business.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,199

    a two-fer...

    Okay, maybe a one-and-a-half-fer. The post above is copied off our . I've been into copying posts lately as many of the news items are cross topic.

    Can Mickey make it big in Shanghai?


    The under-construction Cinderella Castle of the Shanghai Disney Resort is seen in the Pudong area of Shanghai on January 19, 2016. (JOHANNES EISELE/AFP/Getty Images)
    By — Gerry Yemen, Elliott Weiss and Steve Maiden February 28

    The big idea: Given the success of Walt Disney’s first two U.S. theme parks, the company sought to replicate its formula globally. Although there had been plenty of mistakes in its launches in Paris, Hong Kong and Tokyo, Disney ultimately adapted to local tastes. Would Disney’s secrets to its service operations work in Shanghai?

    The scenario: Even for a company that was built on the creative risk-taking culture of Walt Disney, the plan to open Shanghai Disneyland this year, the first in mainland China, is an audacious bet. The sixth global Disney resort, its biggest, will occupy nearly 1,000 acres and will feature several themed lands, including Tomorrowland, Treasure Cove, Disney Town and the Enchanted Storybook Castle, which will also be the biggest and tallest Disney castle.

    Disney and its investors are excited about Shanghai for good reason: demographics. The resort will be located in the Pudong district of Shanghai, the wealthiest of all of China’s districts. And 330 million people live within a three-hour drive of the resort site, compared with 19.6 million near Disney’s most profitable park, Walt Disney World in Orlando. Construction complications have delayed the opening. Cost overruns and alterations have increased the final price of the project. The Chinese economy has hit a rough patch since a stock market slump in summer 2015. Can the classic Disney theme park experience be delivered with the right cultural balance to appeal to its largely Chinese customers?

    The resolution: Disney’s key challenges are to maintain its service levels while customizing the experience for Chinese visitors. Disney retains operational control of the park through 75 percent voting power within the management company that oversees it. Its imagineers — architects, engineers and others designing the park — are conducting their work in the Putonghua language, and all business at the park will be conducted in Mandarin and translated into English. Given the former one-child policy, accommodations will be made for the extended family members likely to travel together to the park.

    Near the center of the park will be the Garden of the Twelve Friends, where Disney characters will be featured as the 12 animals of an enormous Chinese zodiac. At the center of a fountain will be a huge glass sculpture of a peony blossom, a symbol of good fortune and majesty. Some spires on the Enchanted Storybook Castle will be painted with lucky cloud patterns. And food will include such local fare as dim sum.

    When Disney opened its world’s biggest store in Shanghai’s Lujiazui area in May 2015, a line snaked down the street for a mile, demonstrating the power of the brand.

    The lesson: Disney’s purpose is to create a magical experience for customers. Disney Shanghai’s park operations will be based on quality service, be clean, be in good repair and the experience will be a Disney immersion. What remains to be seen is whether Disney understands Chinese cultural differences so that profitability will occur faster than in its other non-U.S. locations.

    — Gerry Yemen, Elliott Weiss
    and Steve Maiden

    Yemen is a senior researcher, Weiss is a professor and Maiden is a case writer at the University of Virginia Darden School of Business.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  4. #19
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,199

    Mickey Mouse undermines Chinese Youth

    Disneyland parks ‘make children pursue Western culture,’ says CPPCC delegate
    3 March 2016 15:47 Eric Cheung 2 min read
    A delegate to the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) has opposed setting up more Disneyland theme parks in China, for fears that they might make Chinese people less fond of Chinese culture.

    “Since children will pursue Western culture when they are young, they will like Western culture when they grow up. Hence, they will become uninterested in Chinese culture,” Li Xiusong, a delegate from Anhui province to the CPPCC told China Youth Daily on Wednesday.


    Delegate to the CPPCC Li Xiusong. Photo: china.com.cn.

    “If China’s cultural products do not appear attractive to the children, over time, this may affect China’s cultural heritage,” Li added.

    He also suggested that China should establish its own “Chinese Disneyland” with its own classical stories. For instance, he believed that elements of “Journey to the West” – one of the four great classical novels of Chinese literature – could be integrated to create an adventurous theme park for children.


    A depiction of a scene in the book Journey to the West. Photo: WikiCommons.

    Shanghai Disneyland is set to open on June 16, 2016. The resort, which is owned by both Walt Disney and the Shanghai government, was approved by the Chinese government in 2009.


    A rendering of Shanghai Disneyland. Photo: ce.cn.

    Hong Kong also has a Disneyland, which opened its doors in 2005. However, after a decade-long run the amusement park has slipped into a loss. In February, the theme park reported a loss of HK$148 million last year, citing a drop in tourist numbers.
    There already are Journey to the West theme parks. They just aren't as good.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  5. #20
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,199

    Shanghai Disneyland

    Shanghai Disneyland really hits home on this forum in terms of my original intention with this thread.

    See any Hidden Mickeys?

    Look: A Sneak Peek at Shanghai Disneyland










    With just 100 days to go until the official opening on June 16, Shanghai Disneyland has unveiled a countdown clock on its own website as well as new photos of some of the park’s main attractions.

    An actual island has been built for the Pirates of the Caribbean attraction for the Treasure Cove area, while the lightcycles from Tron have been turned into a roller coaster in Tomorrowland.

    Disney’s plans to design Shanghai Disney with “distinct Chinese characteristics” has become also more clear. One of the park’s attractions is the “Garden of the Twelve Friends” in which the 12 signs of the Chinese zodiac have been embodied by 12 animal characters from various Disney franchises. For example, the Year of the Rat is personified by Remy from Ratatouille, the Year of the Pig is represented by Hamm from Toy Story, and the Year of the Tiger has Tigger from Winnie the Pooh.

    Chinese elements can be seen elsewhere in the park’s design, such as putting Toy Story characters Woody and Jessie on traditional Chinese paper kites, originally from Shandong.

    In addition to having the world’s tallest Storybook Castle, Shanghai Disneyland will also feature the world premiere of the Mandarin-language version of The Lion King.

    Meanwhile, at the same time anticipation for the new Disneyland in Shanghai continues to build, revenues at China’s other Disneyland, in Hong Kong, continue to fall. A report last month showed revenue for Hong Kong Disneyland fell by HK$148 million ($19 million) for the 2015 fiscal year ending October. At the same time, last year marked a 9.3 percent decrease in visitors to Hong Kong Disneyland, while the numbers of mainland visitors dropped by 23 percent.

    Calls for Hong Kong Disneyland to expand with a “second theme park” have been raised as a way to stay competitive with the new Shanghai Disneyland. Other suggestions include having the park adopt Mandarin as a way to make mainland visitors feel more at home.

    But while its peers seem to be losing momentum, Shanghai Disneyland is picking up steam with so much force it is resulting in changes to other sectors. After last year’s crackdown on Disney-related copyright infringement, Shanghai has decided to continue to further reform of intellectual property rights protection to such an extent that it hopes to become an IP hub for the Asia-Pacific region.

    Tickets for Shanghai Disneyland go on sale March 28.

    Charles Liu
    The Nanfang's Senior Editor
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  6. #21
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,199

    Opening Day for Shanghai Disneyland

    Shanghai Disneyland Opening Day Tickets Sold Out Online in Hours
    Rachel Chang
    March 27, 2016 — 11:07 PM PDT

    Disney Resort hotels fully-booked first two weeks of opening
    Park tickets are a fifth cheaper than Hong Kong Disneyland

    Tickets for the June 16 opening day of Walt Disney Co.’s new theme park in Shanghai were sold out on its official ticketing website hours after going on sale at midnight on Monday.
    Tickets from June 17 to Sept. 30 are still available, ranging in price from 370 yuan ($57) for non-peak periods, to 499 yuan for peak periods, which include the park’s first two weeks, all weekends, and the summer months of July and August.
    The 963-acre park, Disney’s sixth worldwide, is three times the size of Hong Kong Disneyland, with non-peak tickets costing about 20 percent less. Chief Executive Officer Robert Iger has called the China resort Disney’s greatest opportunity since Walt Disney himself bought land in central Florida in the 1960s. The company plans to court 330 million Chinese who live within a three-hour train or car trip of Shanghai.
    "Relying on the large desire for family-style entertainment and the rising purchasing power of Chinese consumers, Shanghai Disneyland is likely to set off massive consumer demand," Chang Jiang Securities Co. analyst Li Jin wrote in a note released Monday.
    The resort’s revenue is likely to range from 24 billion to 40 billion yuan a year, with up to to 50 million visitors expected annually, according to Li.

    Shares Gain
    Shares of Disney-related companies gained in Shanghai trading today as ticket sales began. Shanghai Construction Group Co., which won a bid for Shanghai Disney park’s site formation project, advanced by as much as the 10 percent daily limit, as did Shanghai Jielong Industry Group Corp.
    Hotel rooms at Shanghai Disney Resort were also quickly snapped up.
    As of noon on Monday, rooms were fully-booked at the resort’s two on-site hotels, the Toy Story Hotel and the Shanghai Disneyland Hotel, for the first two weeks of the resort’s opening, according to the booking website.
    Rooms at the Toy Story Hotel start at 850 yuan while rooms at the Shanghai Disneyland Resort Hotel are priced at about 2000 yuan.
    Shanghai Disney Resort’s ticketing website requires buyers to register their ID numbers upon purchase to prevent ticket scalping. Walt Disney representatives did not reply to e-mailed questions and phone calls seeking comment.
    I suppose we could have predicted this if any of us bother to make such predictions.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  7. #22
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,199

    Now hiring

    Because what China needs from a U.S. franchise is more job opportunities.

    Now Hiring: 10,000 Chinese to Create Some Magic at Shanghai Disney
    Rachel Chang April 11, 2016 — 3:10 PM PDT

    Zhou Jian, a 26-year-old folk dancer, dreams of a stage career, and he believes the Magic Kingdom can help him get there.
    Zhou recently made the 14-hour journey by train from Shanxi, China, to attend a jobs fair in Shanghai, where he hopes to land work at Walt Disney Co.’s 963-acre, $5.5 billion resort set to open June 16. He covets a role in the “Lion King” musical production that will be performed in Mandarin for the first time.
    “I want to be famous before 30 years old,” he said. “I’ve performed on big and small stages for several years and haven’t made much progress. Disney is a world-famous brand. I thought it would be a very good stage for me.”
    Disney has been using brand cachet to its advantage during a four-year recruiting drive to staff up at Shanghai Disneyland. It’s the company’s sixth park worldwide, and Chief Executive Robert Iger called it the company’s greatest business opportunity since founder Walt Disney bought land in central Florida in the 1960s.


    Robert A. Iger, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of The Walt Disney Company. Photographer: ChinaFotoPress via Getty Images

    It’s also a massive management challenge: Iger said last year the park would employ about 10,000 workers in an economy where rapid-fire turnover and uneven customer service can be challenges for multinational corporations.
    Standards ‘Gap’
    “The focus on customer service is very important for Disney, but there is still a huge gap between their standard and normal Chinese standards,” said Sara Wong, Kelly Services’ Hong Kong director of recruitment process outsourcing. “They are not hiring 10 people, they are hiring 10,000.”
    Disney recruited heavily from the Chinese hospitality, retail and food and beverage industries and then trained its new hires to run a park with myriad attractions, musical acts and all manner of retail outlets.
    “The theme-park industry is relatively small, so there are limited resources available,” said Chris Yoshii, vice president for economics in the Asia-Pacific region for the industry consultancy Aecom. “I don’t know of any universities that offer theme-park operations programs.”
    There currently are about 8,000 workers at the Shanghai park, people with direct knowledge of the matter said. Hiring for park and hotel operations, food and beverage outlets and merchandise sales started in October, the people said, asking not to be identified because the information isn’t public.
    ‘Busted Bulbs’
    Burbank, California-based Disney said in an e-mail its pay is on par with the local market and reflects the worker's role.
    Disney will be aiming to set a new high bar for service in China, where local parks’ standards of cleanliness, maintenance and customer service are generally lower than international operators’, said Yoshii, who’s based in Hong Kong. Disney opened a Hong Kong park in 2005, yet it’s less than a third the size of the Shanghai project and in a city where the workforce is more internationalized.


    Applicants wait in line at a job fair for a chance to work at the Shanghai Disney Resort on March 2. Photographer: Imaginechina

    “It’s common to see a lack of upkeep, like peeling, faded paint and busted light bulbs,” Yoshii said of Chinese theme parks. “There’s also a lack of engagement by staff with visitors, as opposed to the norm in Disneyland, where staff proactively greet and help people and are even expected to break into song and do impromptu performances.”
    Companies typically screen seven applicants for every job, recruiting agencies said -- meaning Disney sorted through about 70,000 applications for Shanghai.
    Orlando Training
    Back in 2012, Disney focused on filling 100 openings for highly skilled specialists in engineering, design and other fields to assist with construction. Two years later, Disney recruiters kicked off a campus roadshow to Shanghai, Zhejiang, Anhui and Henan to target talented students for management.
    About 200 went on a two-month internship at the Walt Disney World Resort in Florida, training alongside Americans. They were all offered jobs with the Shanghai park after the internship.
    Later that year, Disney began recruiting 1,000 performers from art schools and performing troupes as singers, dancers and musicians. During the University of Southern California’s global conference in Shanghai in October, Iger said he met with 1,000 Shanghai recruits who went to Florida.
    “I detected not only a great enthusiasm and curiosity, but a real love of Disney, and that made me feel great,” he said.
    Job Fairs
    Disney organized job fairs to hire thousands of waiters, cooks, cleaners and costumed street performers. And the company cast a wide net, regardless of past experience, in hiring, Wong said.
    “They had no limitations on experience or background, even people coming from a factory would be considered,” she said. “What they wanted was the attitude: the friendly, open quality that would fit into their culture.”
    Disney also is using training, benefits and perks (including free passes) as lures rather than base compensation, which from a multinational company is likely to be lower than Chinese state-owned companies, said Kimberly Hubble, executive general manager for recruitment process outsourcing in Asia at Sydney-based Hudson.
    Those who have accepted job offers cite an 8,000 yuan ($1,237) monthly salary for an entry-level job.
    “Disney would give me some security in life” because it provides health and workplace injury insurance, a housing allowance and a one-month bonus, Zhou said. “And there are lots of different types of jobs at Disney. If I don’t want to dance in the future, I could change to another role.”
    Competition Coming
    Disney should be prepared for turnover rates of between 30 percent to 40 percent, recruitment agencies said. Neither the benefits nor the brand would retain ambitious workers seeking better pay packages, said Y.C Tong, vice-president of talent acquisition at China RPO group in Hong Kong.


    A staff member stands next to visitors at the unveiling of six themed parks of Shanghai Disney Resort in July 2015. Photographer: ChinaFotoPress via Getty Images

    “Good quality people, once they work for an organization like Disney and gain experience, have a tendency to leave,” he said. “Moving from one job to another is how they increase their compensation at a very fast pace.”
    Also, Shanghai Disney will face greater competition from local rivals. Industry consultancy Aecom estimated that 59 new theme parks will open by 2020, serving an estimated 220 million park-goers. That’s roughly the size of the entire U.S. market right now.
    The Shanghai region looks set to become the Orlando of China, with five mega-projects to open there, Aecom said. DreamWorks Animation SKG Inc has a $2.4 billion DreamCenter scheduled for 2017; Haichang Ocean Park Holdings will open China’s largest marine park that year; and Six Flags Entertainment Corp. will open its first park outside North America in 2019.
    Zhou, meanwhile, returned home to Shandong and is waiting to find out whether his ticket into the Magic Kingdom has been punched. He got a callback after his initial interview.
    With Shanghai Disney set to open in less than three months, Zhou knows his chances are slim, but he’s hopeful. His strategy now? “Keeping busy and waiting to hear from Disney.”
    More to come on this in a moment...
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  8. #23
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,199

    Counterfeit Disney recruiters

    A timely scam for sure.

    Shanghai police uncover Disney recruitment scam
    (Xinhua)
    Updated: 2016-04-14 17:33

    SHANGHAI - Shanghai police have busted a gang they accuse of having used fraudulent job ads for Shanghai Disneyland to con 3 million yuan ($463,000) in broker's fees from more than 200 applicants.

    Police announced the arrest of three suspected gang leaders on Thursday, two months away from the opening of Disney's first theme park on the Chinese mainland.

    A taxi driver surnamed Li was the first to report the scam to police. He said he quit his taxi business after the Disney job offer, for which he paid 13,000 yuan to the broker.

    However, the management position that was offered by the brokerage turned out to be a cleaning job.

    According to police, one of the suspects confessed that he pretended to be a senior Disney executive to recruit staff.

    The June opening of the Disney park in Shanghai has triggered a sales rush after tickets became available in March. Park passes for the resort's opening day were snapped up in minutes.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  9. #24
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,199

    Mickey braised pork knuckle?

    And why isn't it Peking Donald Duck pizza?

    Mickey Mouse Mooncakes And Pork Knuckles, Minnie Mouse Red Bean Buns And Peking Duck Pizza: Shanghai Disneyland Seeks To Please Chinese Diners
    BY DUNCAN HEWITT @DHEWITTCHINA ON 04/21/16 AT 7:39 AM


    Fireworks explode over Shanghai Disneyland park on March 28, 2016, in Shanghai, China.
    PHOTO: VCG/GETTY IMAGES

    SHANGHAI -- As Shanghai Disneyland — the Walt Disney Company’s first theme park in mainland China — prepares for its opening in June, the company has unveiled a menu designed to cater to local tastes, in an apparent effort to avoid the cultural faux pas that have left diners feeling dissatisfied at some other foreign attractions in China.

    The resort’s food and beverage director Paul Chandler Wednesday invited Chinese media to see a display of the dishes that will be available in some of the resort’s restaurants, which he said were designed to "respect the Chinese traditional diet."

    According to Chinese media reports, the resort’s “Shanghai menu” would feature such delicacies as Mickey Mouse mooncakes (stuffed with meat), Mickey braised pork knuckle, Minnie Mouse Red Bean Buns, and Mickey Peking duck pizza.

    Many items would be served on Disney-themed dishes, while in some cases, the food itself would be cut in the shape of the cartoon rodents’ distinctive silhouettes, as in the case of the pizza, and the pork knuckle, which would be served on a bed of Shanghai cabbage. Beijing-style stewed lamb, meanwhile, would be accompanied by Mickey-shaped carrots.

    And with Disney predicting that the resort will attract visitors from all over China, Chandler said it would feature all of China’s eight major regional cuisines, including Sichuan, Hunan, Shandong and Cantonese. To this end, it has hired chefs from around China, some of whom would demonstrate their skills in front of visitors, a feature that would, according to the resort’s “Guiding Principles,” ensure “a holistic guest sensory dining experience.”

    Western food will also be available in a number of restaurants when the resort opens on June 16 — and other dishes include the not-so-Chinese Donald Duck waffle. But the resort is clearly keen to avoid the complaints that have sometimes plagued foreign-invested attractions in China that there is not sufficient Chinese food on offer to cater to local tastes.

    IKEA’s China stores, for example, now sell a selection of Chinese dishes with rice, as well as Swedish meatballs, while KFC has launched a range of localized dishes under the slogan “Changing for China," including “Old Beijing chicken wraps” and hot and sour soup. McDonald's has also introduced a number of dishes featuring chicken, which many Chinese diners prefer to beef.

    Disney has also emphasized that the resort will include other “distinctively Chinese” elements. Its "Enchanted Storybook Castle" -- the largest of those in any of its parks -- is dedicated to all Disney princesses, including Mulan, the eponymous heroine of the film about a female warrior based on a traditional Chinese story. There will also be an area dedicated to the Chinese Zodiac, with each of the twelve traditional animal symbols represented by a cartoon character, as well as a Wandering Moon Teahouse, inspired by Chinese “wandering poets," and a Fantasia Carousel designed by Chinese artists, the company has said.

    The resort's East-meets-West fusion will include plenty of other elements, including a "Pirates of the Caribbean"-themed Treasure Cove, a Tron lightcycle rollercoaster, a "Toy Story" hotel, and a theater with performances of the "Lion King" in Chinese. But its local flavor has been emphasized by Disney’s recent naming of three Chinese celebrities — ex-NBA star Yao Ming, pianist Lang Lang and actress Sun Li — as honorary ambassadors.

    The Walt Disney Company has bet big on success in the Chinese market, with its 43 percent in the $5.4 billion resort, a joint venture with a Shanghai government-backed group, reported to be its largest overseas investment. And despite delays in construction and opening, there have been signs of enthusiasm among China’s cartoon loving youth — as demonstrated by the recent success of Disney movies like "Zootopia" (though the Chinese army newspaper criticized it for distorted values ) — and the "Jungle Book."

    The Shanghai Disney Resort’s website briefly crashed due to demand when tickets went on sale late last month, while its hotels are reportedly fully booked for the opening two weeks. Scalpers have been offering tickets for opening day for up to $600, compared to the official price of around 500 yuan (some $77) according to Chinese media.

    Some experts say it could attract 11.5 million visitors in first year, and as many as three times this figure annually in the longer term, with annual revenue estimated at between 24 billion yuan ($3.7 billion) and 40 billion yuan (around $6.2 billion) a year.

    However, it could well hit Hong Kong Disneyland, which made a loss last year for the first time since 2011, as visits by mainland Chinese citizens fell.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  10. #25
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,199

    Not even open and already trashed

    The Disney dump: New $5.5billion Shanghai theme park is trashed by visitors dumping rubbish, trampling flowers and letting children urinate in public (and it's not even open yet)

    Crowds gather daily at the theme park, which doesn't open until June 16
    Visitors were condemned after photos showed 'uncivilised' behaviour
    One image showed a woman allowing a child to urinate in a flower bed
    Others showed a vandalised lamp post and rubbish all over the ground

    By CHRIS KITCHING FOR MAILONLINE
    PUBLISHED: 05:34 EST, 4 May 2016 | UPDATED: 10:52 EST, 6 May 2016

    Badly-behaved tourists have already left their mark at Disney’s new $5.5bn (£3.8bn) theme park in Shanghai, even though it doesn’t officially open for another six weeks.
    Visitors have trampled plants, picked flowers, carved graffiti into freshly-painted lamp posts and left bags of rubbish on the grounds.
    One woman was photographed allowing a child to urinate in a flower bed in full view of other visitors, who travelled to the park just to hang out around its locked gates and peer into buildings that aren’t open yet.


    One photo posted on social media shows a Disney Shanghai visitor allowing a young girl to urinate in public


    Visitors were condemned on social media after rubbish was strewn over the grounds at the weekend


    Photos posted on the social-networking website Weibo show rubbish on the floor of a bathroom



    With hundreds or even thousands of eager visitors arriving daily, flowers and plants have been trampled


    Disney Shanghai Resort doesn't open for another six weeks but that hasn't deterred people from showing up

    Visitors were condemned and called 'uncivilised' after the photos were taken on Sunday, the public May Day (Labour Day) holiday in China, and circulated on the social-networking website Weibo.
    Signs warning visitors to stay on concrete paths were knocked over, as the trampled grounds suffered the worst damage.
    So many people are visiting the unopened park that staff have been forced to set up fences in front of a village garden outside the gates, the South China Morning Post reported.
    Groups of 20 are allowed to take photos for up to three minutes before they are told to move on.
    MailOnline Travel has contacted a Disney spokesperson for contact.


    Someone carved graffiti into a freshly-painted lamp post to notify others that he 'was here'


    Every day, large crowds hang around outside the locked gates and restaurants that won't open for weeks


    A crowd gathered at Shanghai Disneyland Resort's locked gates after a metro station opened last month


    A visitor wearing a Mickey Mouse glove poses for a photo in front of a building that won't open until mid-June
    Even though it won’t open until June 16, Disney’s first theme park in mainland China has already become a top attraction, with crowds gathering almost daily on its grounds following the opening of a nearby metro station last month.
    A massive crowd is expected to descend on the 963-acre park when it opens in around a month.
    With a giant castle as the centrepiece, the resort includes Shanghai Disneyland, two hotels, shops, restaurants, a theatre and a man-made lake.
    continued next post
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  11. #26
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,199

    Continued from previous post


    The Enchanted Storybook Castle is the tallest, largest and most complex Disney castle ever built



    There are two hotels at the resort, the Toy Story Hotel (left) and the Shanghai Disneyland Hotel (right)


    Visitors will journey through the adventures of Winnie the Pooh and his friends with oversized storybooks


    A Tron-themed ride where visitors sit on motorbike carriages will be included at Tomorrowland


    Star Wars fans will be able to meet the movie's characters and villains and look at its intergalactic set pieces
    continued next post
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  12. #27
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,199

    Continued from previous post

    Disney has said it will be a Magic Kingdom-style theme park, combining its classic characters and stories with Chinese culture and themes.
    Construction of Shanghai Disney Resort started in April 2011.
    The park is owned by Walt Disney Company and the Shanghai Shen Di Group.


    Fantasyland will be the largest of all the lands at the resort and home to the Enchanted Storybook Castle


    This rendering shows Treasure Cove, where the Pirates of the Caribbean ride is located


    Bronze statues of Mickey and Minnie in formal attire will welcome guests to the Shanghai Disney Hotel


    The carousel located at Gardens of Imagination will pay homage to the Fantasia film with Pegasus horses


    Testing started taking place a few months ago at the Roaring Rapids, a rafting ride at Adventure Isle
    Remember when the world used to talk about the ugly American tourist? PRC is raping us here.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  13. #28
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,199

    Ftw!

    Shanghai Disneyland showcases Chinese influence throughout park



    May 16, 2016
    Disney’s newest theme park will be opening in Shanghai in one month and visitors can expect to see Chinese elements in its newest park.

    CCTV’s Ding Siyue reports on how The Walt Disney Co. is incorporating more Chinese elements into the park.

    While Donald Duck is known around the world, few people know he’s a practitioner of the Chinese martial art of Tai Chi.

    “We were thinking we could let Disney characters tell Chinese stories. I think ‘Donald Duck practicing Tai Chi’ is a wonderful combination,” Xu Chang, assistant producer for Shanghai Disney Resort said.

    “I hope we could create a feeling of familiarity to the tourists through interaction between characters and tourists.”

    There’s even the Garden of 12 Friends with Disney characters representing the Chinese Zodiac signs.

    Chinese elements are not just in some of the storytelling or the characters, but also in a lot of the design.

    The Walt Disney Grand Theater, located in a shopping and dining area and modeled after local architectural styles, will host the Chinese version of the Broadway show “The Lion King”.
    I've been saying "Grasp the bird's tail" in a Donald Duck voice under my breath.

    It's a good thing that there is no Year of the Duck.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  14. #29
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,199

    one tiger is no match for a pack of wolves

    Wang Jianlin promises to squash Mickey in China with his own pack of local theme parks



    Despite a wealth of media coverage, sold out tickets and nearly a million visitors before the park has even opened to the public, Shanghai Disneyland is facing some serious backlash from China’s wealthiest real estate mogul.
    Dalian Wanda founder Wang Jianlin, China's richest man and karaoke king, has decided to pick a fight with Mickey Mouse. Fortune reports that Wanda’s public relations team released a public statement earlier this week in which Wang foretold that the era of Disney has passed and the attraction of its signature characters, like Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck, is long gone. China is ready for new characters that are innovative and appeal to the local culture, Wang argues.
    “They [Disney] shouldn’t have entered China. We have a [saying]: one tiger is no match for a pack of wolves. Shanghai has one Disney, while Wanda, across the nation, will open 15 to 20,” Wang said in an interview with CCTV. “Disneyland is fully built on American culture. We place importance on local culture.”
    Wang also questioned the cost efficiency of Disney's $5.5 billion park in Shanghai, and believes that weather and the high production cost will soon lead to an increase in ticket prices, CNN Money reported. Coincidentally, this weekend will mark the grand opening of Wanda’s new theme park in the southern city of Nanchang. Hopefully, they've got their rollercoaster fixed by now.



    Wanda has grown considerably in the last few years, expanding past its successful real estate business into entertainment. In addition to developing 99 plazas across China and acquiring the cinema chain AMC in 2012, Wanda also acquired Hollywood’s Legendary Entertainment studio earlier this year. Wang is prepared to take on Disney, with a plan to develop Wanda’s tourism and theme park sector across China so that by 2020, its parks will welcome 200 million tourists a year.
    Shanghai Disney doesn't seem too worried. Even amid some unanticipated speed bumps, Disney still expects 10 million visitors this year and the Shanghai government hopes that they will all be on their best behavior.

    By Mary Rosea
    Contact the author of this article or email tips@shanghaiist.com with further questions, comments or tips.
    By Shanghaiist in News on May 25, 2016 4:15 PM
    I've been to local Chinese amusement parks. They are often sketchy, but fascinating.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  15. #30
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,199

    Nanchang Theme Park

    Wanda Opens Nanchang Theme Park, Stirs China Rivalry With Disney
    Patrick Frater
    Asia Bureau Chief


    COURTESY OF DALIAN WANDA
    MAY 30, 2016 | 07:32AM PT
    China’s Dalian Wanda group this weekend opened its latest theme park in Nanchang, Jiangxi Province. And immediately stirred the rivalry with Disney, which will open its first theme park in mainland China next month.

    Snow White and Captain America characters were reportedly seen as part of a parade at the Saturday opening of the Wanda Cultural Tourism City. Disney responded with a promise to protect its intellectual property if the sightings are confirmed.

    “We vigorously protect our intellectual property and will take action to address infringement. Our characters and stories have delighted generations, these illegal and substandard imitations unfortunately disappoint all who expect more,” Disney said, according to a Bloomberg news report.

    The Nanchang park is described by Wanda as its “first city-size culture and tourism project.” It includes an outdoor amusement park, an indoor theme park, hotel resorts and dining and commercial districts. All are built around a Wanda Mall with the intention of offering entertainment throughout the year and in different weather conditions.

    Wanda City spans 200 hectares (2 square kilometers) and the cultural and tourism segment of the project represents a $3.35 billion (RMB22 billion) investment.

    Wanda is betting hugely on theme parks as a means of corporate diversification and of driving business to its malls and entertainment properties. It already has massive parks in Xinshuangbanna (opened in 2015) and what it billed as the world’s first indoor theme park in Wuhan (opened in late 2014.)

    Wanda says it will open its second Wanda City in Hefei this September and another five are planned to open within China in the next three years. “By 2020, Wanda will unveil 15 Wanda City projects in China and five overseas,” the company said.

    That capital intense rivalry explains the recent verbal attack on Disney by Wanda group chairman Wang Jianlin. Speaking on China Central Television, Wang last week suggested that the Shanghai Disney resort might struggle to be competitive due to high ticket prices. He went as far as to suggest that Disney should not have entered China.

    In a separate move Monday Wanda said that it was heading a consortium that is making a $4.4 billion offer to buy up the Hong Kong-listed Wanda Commercial Properties. The consortium is offering HK$52.8 per share, or 10% higher than the HK$48 per share at which it listed in late 2014. Wang has said that the shares have been undervalued by investors on the Hong Kong market and has made it clear that he expects a higher rating if they are refloated on the mainland.
    And how do we know that those Snow White and Captain America characters weren't just cosplayers along for the ride?
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •