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Not surprisingly, many of those people identify, identified, or probably would have publicly identified, if it was more accepted in that day and age, as LGBTQ+.
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Walt Disney was a creative man, as were and are the thousands of people who have worked for the company named after him – particularly their Imagineers (people who devise and implement new or highly imaginative concepts or technology) and designers. You know, stuff like using boats (like in the It’s A Small World attraction), Omnimovers (ride vehicles gliding along on a continuously moving track, like in The Haunted Mansion) and audio-animatronics (all three of these were introduced at the 1964-1965 World’s Fair) in attractions, guests being completely immersed in a park’s theming (such as Main Street U.S.A., Fantasyland and Tomorrowland), the concept of destination resorts, the development of Celebration, FL (the not-so-perfect town that Disney built) built next door to WDW, etc. The park, and the other Disney parks around the world that followed, lent themselves to all kinds of creative ideas. They opened Disneyland, the world’s first theme park, which had rides and attractions like no typical amusement park, in 1955. They released the world’s first full-length animated feature, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, in 1938.
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If you ask people to give one-word adjectives that describe Walt Disney World, you might hear words such as, “magical,” “expensive,” “fun,” “crowded” and “creative.”įrom the very beginning, it’s been that creativity that’s given The Walt Disney Company its edge.