As The Walt Disney Company enters another period of leadership transition and strategic recalibration, former CEO Michael Eisner is once again speaking candidly about the direction of Disney Parks — and this time his comments go straight to the heart of the guest experience.
During an appearance on In Depth with Graham Bensinger, Eisner reflected on the current cost structure of Disneyland and Walt Disney World, expressing concern that the parks have drifted away from one of their foundational operating principles.
“I’m not wild of the fact that it’s so expensive now to go to Disneyland or Walt Disney World,” Eisner said. “I’m not wild about the fact that it’s harder than ever to have everybody be a VIP (at the parks) because they’re selling things…”
While the quote itself is brief, the philosophy behind it represents a defining pillar of Eisner’s parks-era leadership — one that stands in stark contrast to the monetization framework guiding Disney today.
The Origins Of The “Everyone Is A VIP” Philosophy
The notion that every guest should feel special inside Disney Parks traces back to Walt Disney himself.
When Disneyland opened in 1955, Walt’s vision was radically different from the carnival and amusement park model of the time. He wanted a clean, immersive, family-friendly environment where visitors — regardless of income or status — shared the same magical experience.

Walt Disney in Walt Disney’s Wonderful World of Color (1966), Walt Disney Productions
Celebrities and first-time visitors walked the same streets. Families and executives rode the same attractions. The magic was communal, not tiered.
But while Walt established the philosophical foundation, it was Eisner who transformed that ethos into a codified operational strategy decades later.
Eisner Institutionalized The Shared Experience Model
During his tenure as CEO from 1984 to 2005, Michael Eisner formalized what had previously been cultural instinct into corporate doctrine.
His guiding belief was simple:
Once guests passed through the park gates, everyone should feel like a VIP — regardless of what they paid to get there.

Michael Eisner being interviewed in Walt Disney World in front of the pink birthday cake castle – YouTube, Top Clips
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Under Eisner, that philosophy shaped park operations in tangible ways:
- Free line-skipping systems
- Limited premium upsells inside the parks
- Shared attraction access as the baseline
- Emotional equity prioritized over tier segmentation
Premium experiences did exist — guided tours, luxury hotels, private events — but they were structurally peripheral, not embedded into the core attraction system.
Eisner viewed the parks as story environments first and revenue engines second. If guests began to feel stratified by spending power, immersion — and therefore the magic — would erode.
His latest remarks signal concern that this erosion is now well underway.
The Modern Disney Parks Monetization Framework
Under the leadership of Disney CEO Bob Iger and Parks Chairman (and incoming Disney CEO) Josh D’Amaro, the Disney Parks business model has shifted dramatically toward yield management — maximizing revenue per guest rather than prioritizing experiential parity.
Today’s parks feature a layered, paid-access structure that monetizes time and convenience:
- Lightning Lane multi-pass systems
- Individual attraction purchase access
- High-priced VIP tour packages
- Exclusive lounges and restricted spaces
- Hard-ticket after-hours events

Bob Iger via CNBC Television YouTube
What was once a rare premium upgrade is now a structural component of the standard park experience.
Guests willing to spend more wait less, access more, and experience more.
Those who don’t — wait.
Prices Climbing Faster Than Inflation
Eisner’s criticism also speaks to the broader affordability crisis surrounding Disney vacations.
Ticket prices, resort stays, food, and add-on experiences have all risen sharply over the past decade — grossly outpacing U.S. inflation rates.

Josh D’Amaro by Cinderella Castle – Disney
A multi-day Disney trip for a family now routinely reaches into the several-thousand-dollar range, particularly when Lightning Lane access and on-property accommodations are included.
This escalation has coincided with Disney’s strategic pivot toward higher-spending demographics:
- Adults without children
- Luxury travelers
- Corporate groups
- International tourism markets
Middle-class families — historically the backbone of the parks — are increasingly priced into shorter stays or pushed out entirely.
From Shared Magic To Tiered Access
Eisner’s warning about it being “harder to have everybody as a VIP” illustrates the cultural shift inside the parks themselves.
The guest experience is no longer universally shared.

Empty Main Street USA and Cinderella Castle hub on Labor Day 2025 Magic Kingdom Disney World – Photo Credit: That Park Place
Instead, it is visibly tiered:
- Paid line-skipping versus standby
- Exclusive DVC lounges versus public seating
- Private tours versus self-navigation
The optics alone create a class structure inside environments originally designed to erase them.
Where Eisner saw a unified audience immersed in a single story world, today’s parks resemble stratified entertainment ecosystems — more akin to airline boarding tiers than fantasy kingdoms.
A Leadership Philosophy Divide
Eisner’s comments arrive at a pivotal time for The Walt Disney Company as leadership succession planning and long-term parks strategy continue to dominate corporate discussions. Bob Iger will step down as CEO in March 2026 and D’Amaro will take his place.
In light of that, these Michael Eisner remarks don’t read as casual nostalgia — they read as a philosophical critique of the modern Disney company.

Josh D’Amaro by the Tree of Life – Disney
At the center of that critique is a fundamental question: Is Disney maximizing revenue at the expense of experiential magic?
Under Iger and D’Amaro, the company has clearly prioritized per-guest spending growth.
Eisner, by contrast, built his parks strategy around emotional equity — the belief that a once-in-a-lifetime guest should feel just as special as a celebrity on a private tour.
The Magic Equation Is Changing
For decades, the Disney Parks model thrived on the illusion that everyone inside the gates was part of the same story.
That illusion — according to Eisner — is becoming harder to maintain as visible monetization expands.
His concern isn’t simply that prices are high. It’s that the structure of the experience now reinforces who paid more — and who didn’t.

Former Disney CEO Michael Eisner – Photo Credit: Ed Schipul, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons
And in doing so, it risks dismantling one of the core operating philosophies that defined the modern Disney Parks era.
If everyone is no longer treated like a VIP, Then the very foundation of Disney’s immersive magic becomes harder to sustain.
What do you think of Michael Eisner and his tenure as Disney CEO? Sound off in the comments and let us know!



It’s not “disappearing”. It’s long gone and it’s thanks to iger and d’amaro. There is no saving disney at this point.
Do you have to pay extra to have your kids molested by park employees?
I’m really starting to hate that smug twat damaro’s face.
I’ve been in a hotel all week. At the end of the evening, it’s all cable television for me. I’ll still watch the hell out of a two hour block of certain shows I loved in the past. Tonight I’ve been watching “the Office” on NON-comedy central.
I cannot believe how much they’re pumping john stewad’s daily show.
How 2007 of them. What a pathetic attempt to claw back at some relevancy at this point. They fired the fag, colorfully dressed, peacock with the hair helmet. And a dusted off, white haired tribe member, in some last ditch Hail Mary, that’ll come up 25 yards short.
These retards have no idea that they’re dead men walking. Yet they still strut, smugly, instead of walking.
Stupid peacocks, fanning their tales like the french bourgeois, right before their revolution.
I actually hope comedy (left of) central folds, and dies.
Pimping, not pumping. Although they’re interchangeable in this case. But pimping is a way more apt description.
I guess Disney cannot bear the idea of the goyim being VIPs. Boycott the parks, everyone!