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The Disneyland Report > Disney News > Minor Disneyland Changes Make It More of a Jungle Out There

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Minor Disneyland Changes Make It More of a Jungle Out There

By Kimi Yoshino
The Los Angeles Times

Hippos beware: The Jungle Cruise skippers are packing heat again.

And a caution to humans: Disneyland engineers are devising a safe way to return the stomach-churning spins to the teacups in the Mad Tea Party ride.

Many fans are cheering what appears to be a turnaround on political correctness, after watching the park in recent years not just disarm the skippers and de-spin the teacups, but also strip mock frontier rifles from Tom Sawyer Island and stop marauding pirates from threatening maidens in Pirates of the Caribbean.

Disneyland officials describe the changes as a move to recapture some of Walt Disney's original vision by "restoring the magic" to the park as it gears up for its 50th birthday next year.

"I've just been happy as a pig in mud," said Disney watchdog Al Lutz, founder of miceage.com. "I think they went too far in one direction and now they're course-correcting. They've gone back to the way they used to do things."

Not quite. Tom Sawyer Island is still gun-free, and the pirates continue to chase the wenches for their food, not their bodies.

But Disney watchers say the park is making improvements, apparently responding to complaints about altered rides and declining ambience.

Indeed, longtime fans had grown increasingly frustrated with the Walt Disney Co. for cost-cutting measures that became evident in faded paint and burned-out lightbulbs on Main Street.

Disneyland didn't publicly acknowledge the rundown, but is resurrecting details that had helped set the park apart, such as personalized nametags for the horses pulling a carriage down Main Street.

Costuming is also being restored. In New Orleans Square, for example, where employees have been wearing Victorian styles in subdued grays and browns, outfits that will debut in a few months will reflect the jazz era in vibrant greens, purples and golds, Tucker said.

And on Main Street, generic food carts are being redesigned to match the architectural style and paint colors of nearby buildings.

"That's what we're known for — the quality, the detail," said Disneyland spokesman Bob Tucker. Park guests keep Disneyland honest, deluging the park with hundreds of letters and calls a week on topics ranging "from the minutiae all the way to the big stuff," he said.

Changes on rides like the Jungle Cruise and the Mad Tea Party sent fans marching to Disneyland's City Hall in protest. Some boycotted the attractions.

Disneyland, Tucker said, was listening. Engineers will return the spin to the teacups early next year. And the guns came back to the Jungle Cruise this month.

As recently as one day before the Oct. 1 return of guns, Jungle Cruise skippers said guests were complaining about the notable absence of the Smith & Wessons — even though they'd been taken away in 2001.

"At least once a week somebody would get off the boat and say, 'Hey, what happened to the guns?' " said Sherri Ribble, a second-generation Jungle Cruise skipper.

Since their return, Ribble said, some passengers on the cruise have spontaneously burst out in applause after she fired blanks at the hippopotamuses.

One youngster even thanked Ribble for saving her life by fending off the hippos.

The whole experience was so true-to-life for 4-year-old Andrew Hansen, a visitor from Washington state, that he hid behind his mother as he got off the ride.

"It really feels like for the 50th anniversary, we're bringing the adventure back," said Ribble, who recalls riding the African-themed cruise when she was 8 and "thinking I was a goner for sure."

To read the rest of this story, click here.

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