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Star Wars Prequels

Disney World Plans Two-Day, Stars Wars-Themed Simulated Space Cruises (gizmodo.com) 123

This weekend Disney revealed more details about Star Wars: Galactic Starcruiser, a cruise-like experience which promises "a two-night, all-immersive adventure," inviting visitors to "live your very own epic Star Wars story."

Gizmodo reports: Like a cruise ship, everyone boards at once and everyone leaves at once. How that works though is, you arrive to a special terminal in Orlando to check in. From there you get on a "launch pod" that blasts you into space. That's where you meet up with the Halcyon, the ship you'll be on the next two days, as you travel through space. Now, when I say "launch" and "travel through space" that's just the illusion, obviously. Disney didn't explain how they will achieve it but, probably lots of screens and different animations to try and make you feel like you are in a real space.

Once you get on the ship, how you experience the adventure is up to you. You can relax and watch the stars fly by as the Halcyon travels through space. Or you can take place in all manner of different activities to learn how to be a hero. You can use a lightsaber, you can help pilot the ship, or you can learn about the ship's defenses so that, just in case the First Order drops by, you'll be able to help. (They'll be dropping by.) The crew will be comprised of "aliens," every window has a view into space (including the one in your cabin), and characters new and old (they showed Chewie, Rey and Kylo) will be part of the experience. An experience that has one stop on it -- Batuu and the Black Spire Outpost, aka Star Wars Galaxy's Edge.

The Disney Parks blog promises the starcruiser "will fully immerse guests in a galaxy far, far away."
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Disney World Plans Two-Day, Stars Wars-Themed Simulated Space Cruises

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  • Oh come on (Score:4, Informative)

    by AndyKron ( 937105 ) on Monday August 26, 2019 @12:39AM (#59124450)
    Not Star Trek?
    • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Monday August 26, 2019 @12:45AM (#59124452) Journal

      Trek blew it: they kept changing the look and feel of the series, making it hard to build theme parks and merchandise around.

      Star Wars mostly kept the 1977 flick's look throughout.

      Whether Trek's changes are good for story telling or not I cannot say, but it's not good for theme parks.

      • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Monday August 26, 2019 @02:44AM (#59124584) Journal
        Star Trek is for adults anyway, not for a bunch of kids who want toys. Slam.
        • Star Trek is for adults anyway, not for a bunch of kids who want toys. Slam.

          Should be +5 insightful. Just about every episode has some dilemma or another. Sometimes some fun as well, but so much that kids wouldn't get outside of the kaboomy parts.

          Which is why I really like Voyager, and why some don't.

          • Oh yes: "Shall I save the day this time by using the power of the Beastie Boys? Or shall I use Public Enemy?"... what a dilemma.

            Maybe Star Trek can recover with the upcoming Picard series. That's probably its last chance to be anything other than not even a new Star Ware, but merely the fast and the furious IN SPAAAAACE. But considering the epic bungling of Discovery, I'm going to remain skeptical until given more than a trailer to convince me otherwise.

            • Oh yes: "Shall I save the day this time by using the power of the Beastie Boys? Or shall I use Public Enemy?"... what a dilemma.

              Maybe Star Trek can recover with the upcoming Picard series. That's probably its last chance to be anything other than not even a new Star Ware, but merely the fast and the furious IN SPAAAAACE. But considering the epic bungling of Discovery, I'm going to remain skeptical until given more than a trailer to convince me otherwise.

              Yeah - Discovery was a disaster. They made all kinds of weird cinematic decisions as well, including way overly dramatic lighting in too many scenes that didn't need dramatic lighting. If we go to the other series, they used even lighting except when needed. It clues the audience in on the gravitas of the situation.

              Strange, it's like a new group of cinematic folks came along and decided that there are no more rules. Or to use a spice example, decide to throw everything out but salt. But use tons and tons

            • by caseih ( 160668 )

              Probably not your thing, but I've found a fan-made audio drama called Star Trek Outpost to be really good (at least it got good anyway), and feels more like classic Star Trek. Been listening fror about a year, and I'm a bit disappointed I've already reached episode 78, which is their most recent production. Has good character development and decent story lines.

      • There used to be an exceptionally good Star Trek theme ride at the Hilton in Las Vegas, "The Star Trek Experience."

        The setup is you're standing in line about to board the usual sort of motion-based simulator ride.

        Then the room goes dark except for whirling sparkly lights all around, and when the lights come back on, you and the whole group are standing on a transporter pad, and the tech at the control panel says "Mr. Riker, we got them." Masterfully done live effects. If I'd done it again, I'd probably h

    • Buy Star Trek Bridge Crew. Even has a very immersive VR option.
    • Not Star Trek?

      If Disney made a Star Trek themed attraction then Paramount / CBS would sue them into the ground.

    • Not Star Trek?

      No Jar-Jar on the Enterprise. The people have spoken, they want more Jar-Jar.

    • Not Star Trek?

      Sitting at a touch screen while someone shouts "warp speed" at you doesn't sound like much fun. How many times would you enjoy realigning the di-lithium crystal chamber? Star Trek is a good series but it's more about the plot than the action. Hands up, who would rather be a science officer on an away mission instead of a Jedi with a lightsaber?

      Oh and wear red to a Star Trek ride at your own risk...

    • Star Trek or Wars. No big difference.

  • by Brett Buck ( 811747 ) on Monday August 26, 2019 @12:48AM (#59124458)

    This is a preview of Hell.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Worse yet, some may be Slashdotters

    • Maybe it is just a hotel with screens replacing the windows. There might be a safe exit.

      • This is Disney, the forefront of capacity optimization. I bet it will be two identical, separated hotels connected to an indoor ride. That way, the description with the launch and "in-orbit" transfer make sense:

        Day One (afternoon) : Arriving guests are packed into groups of probably 5% of overall guest capacity. (10 % of Hotel Building One capacity) and sent onto an indoor ride (anything between Mountain and Terror Tower; Star Wars Themed.) After the ride, don't send them outside through the gift shop, but

        • I think they're desperately in need of something that provides a longer, no-wait "ride" experience than the traditional theme park experience.

          The lines for rides are out of control and fast pass doesn't really help, it just forces you to make sacrifices and hyper-schedule your visit. You can't pack a zillion people into a traditional "theme park" and expect that rationing 5 minute rides is workable long-term.

          I would kind of expect over time that theme parks would begin to morph into something like this, lo

          • I kind of agree with this, but inside such a "hotel attraction" you also need shorter "activities" or "experiences" or ... rides. No matter if you have an actual "ride" throwing people around within a range of G-forces or a cinderella meet&greet or light sabre lessons: In the end you need capacity in guests per hour. That's why I estimated two hotels to one show building that houses the expensive special effects. No matter how nice the theming of the indoor- hotel or theme park is - you'll be paying a l

            • Yes, there will be "sub-experiences" but it will make sense as part of the total experience to have these scheduled and structured as part of the total experience, so they will be able to plan and account for the capacities.

              The problem now is that the existing ride-centered parks are way over their ride capacities now. FastPass bought them the ability to manage this somewhat and gain more density, but it's kind of gone too far, requiring you to basically schedule everything now or you can't even get on som

    • For all their board room grown synthetic entertainment, Disney has been remarkably good at turning their movie experiences into rides that capture some visual and emotional elements and distill them into 2 to 3 minutes. Everyone who has been to Disneyworld knows that, as brazenly exploitative these parks are, the rides are done brilliantly. I have been on the Star Wars ride, and I admit with a tinge of shame: it was eminently entertaining. The "story" was nonsense, as expected, but the amount of VFX craftsm

      • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Monday August 26, 2019 @05:19AM (#59124770) Journal
        I disagree, this is not just a really long ride. Families stay in theme parks for days on end, because they enjoy the atmosphere and because there is enough stuff to do. This is similar, it's like staying in a theme park, but with a single theme, and more focused. This sort of thing has been done before, imperfectly, and only for an evening or half a day or so. People will love to be immersed and take part in the SW universe, and 2 days is not too long if there's enough stuff to do, and enough things going on. I think we can trust Disney to get the environment, the effects, the acting and the experience right just the stuff they are really good at.
        • You want to spend an enforced time with 200 guys cosplaying Boba Fett? Or arguments about how "Grand Moff Tarkin wouldn't ever say anything like that!!"

          The sweet embrace of hypothermia beckons.

        • This is similar, it's like staying in a theme park, but with a single theme, and more focused.

          More precisely, it is like the experience of the Disney cruise ships, without the billion-dollar expenses of actually building and maintaining the fleet.

    • This may feel like troll bait to the die hard fan, but I'm with Mark Hamill and William Shatner on this one. "Get a life people"
      • This may feel like troll bait to the die hard fan, but I'm with Mark Hamill and William Shatner on this one. "Get a life people"

        Disney is grasping at straws a bit here. After rejecting the majority of it's fanbase to court a new fanbase, they might be trying to revive the franchise.

        Disrespectful treatment of loved characters, identity politics clumsily written into movies, their response to criticism via attack which was more clumsy identity politics, and a weird misunderstanding of who was buying the merch led them to the first SW movie to lose money - Solo.

        Odd that after Solo tanking, where they had the silly excuse of Star W

        • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

          by CronoCloud ( 590650 )

          What identity politics? If anything the guys complaining about identity politics are the one with identity politics because they're complaining about having a female lead. White male IS an identity, boys, and if you start complaining about SJW's ruining things by having non-white or non-male characters..well you're engaging in identity politics...and bigotry, though you probably don't think you're being the latter..because YOU don't think of "White male" as an identity.

          • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

            by cayenne8 ( 626475 )

            What identity politics? If anything the guys complaining about identity politics are the one with identity politics because they're complaining about having a female lead. White male IS an identity, boys, and if you start complaining about SJW's ruining things by having non-white or non-male characters..well you're engaging in identity politics...and bigotry, though you probably don't think you're being the latter..because YOU don't think of "White male" as an identity.

            Well, the problem is, trying to rewri

            • Well, the problem is, trying to rewrite history or redo something classic that worked.

              Rather than try to squeeze women/minorities, etc into old classics why not come up with NEW compelling stories with more women and minorities?

              How are the current movies re-writing history? The old movies still exist...the new movies are NEW stories in the same universe. How is that a problem?

              People grew up with Star Wars, with Vader, Han, Luke and Leia.....leave that be, that's how it was made and how ti works best.

              Vader and the Jedi were inspired by Samurai. Toshiro Mifune was the original choice for Obi-Wan. How is adding new characters to the universe a problem? Heck, that's been done since "Splinter of the Minds Eye"! The concept of a new generation of heroes taking over for old retiring heroes is a VERY old one.

              I think most of the cry for SJW is it just seems that people are trying to change the classics with on real good reason other than to just be more politically correct.

              Perhaps your impression is wrong and showing you

            • Dude, the formula for the movies didn't change, you did. First of all, you left out one of everyone's favorite characters, LANDO. You know, the only black guy in the original universe. Not to mention that Leia was a bad ass in her own right, she was about as feminist as she could get.

              The fact that you unironically brought up original characters as something antithetical to SJ pretty much says it all. Maybe if you watch the movies without whatever lense makes you think the character choices were some kin

              • I was just answering what the perception is out in the general public on the remakes of recent classic movies and franchises.....and why they are not being successful and not making money.

                People perceive the remakes more as a PC, make everything right socially product, rather than a good story. Change for change sake alone.

                • what the perception is out in the general public
                  People perceive the remakes more as a PC

                  I think you're conflating "alt-right gamergater anti-sjw types" with the general public. And also your statement says more about YOUR perceptions than anything else. Perhaps you are seeing an agenda that isn't there?

                  • It's pretty clear to see....perhaps it is you that are being blinded from seeing the obvious agendas out there in media.
            • What are you talking about. Not only did they not change the gender/race/identity of any of the existing characters, they got the same actors to play them! Or are you upset they they keep adding new films instead of infinite reboots?

              I will grant that TFA was too much like ANH, if that's what you meant. But it didn't make me say "gee, they made Luke a girl" in this reboot, it mademe say "gee, why didn't they do something more original". I'm joking of course, I knew it was going to be like that when they h

          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 )

            What identity politics? If anything the guys complaining about identity politics are the one with identity politics because they're complaining about having a female lead. White male IS an identity, boys, and if you start complaining about SJW's ruining things by having non-white or non-male characters..well you're engaging in identity politics...and bigotry, though you probably don't think you're being the latter..because YOU don't think of "White male" as an identity.

            Well lookie here and who showed up! Thank you! You are the very model of what I am talking about. Do you think that women were nonexistent in cinema before 2016? Do you think that women before 2016 were porterayed as barefoot and pregnant, and kept in the kitchen?

            Do you think that Characters of what you racist bigots call black or non male didn't exist before then?

            You are the sexist - you are the racist. You are the dyed in the wool full scale bigot. Sorry - Race is the ultimate social construct, an

            • Do you think that women were nonexistent in cinema before 2016?

              No, but we're talking about star wars here and how some people like you are claiming to see an "SJW agenda"

              You are the sexist - you are the racist. You are the dyed in the wool full scale bigot. Sorry - Race is the ultimate social construct, and you are racist to the core.

              How predictable, the old "liberals are the real racists" dialog. Parrot that from D'nesh D'Souza or some "alt right atheist rationalist" website or something?

              Just because you went right to "White Guys". Welcome and say hi to your brethren. You just have a different group, based on skin pigmentation and geographical recent origins that you hate.

              I said white guys because YOU started going on about identity politics, not realizing that by doing so you are engaging in it, but don't realize it because "white male" is considered the "baseline" so you don't think of it as an identity. I'm whi

              • Do you think that women were nonexistent in cinema before 2016?

                No, but we're talking about star wars here and how some people like you are claiming to see an "SJW agenda"

                You are the sexist - you are the racist. You are the dyed in the wool full scale bigot. Sorry - Race is the ultimate social construct, and you are racist to the core.

                How predictable, the old "liberals are the real racists" dialog. Parrot that from D'nesh D'Souza or some "alt right atheist rationalist" website or something?

                Any pridictability is based on your assumptions and not reality based.

                First off, I'm no liberal. I sometimes might take what might be a "liberal stance" such as I'm pro-choice, and accepting of people with alternate sexual preferences as long as it's two adult humans. But other concepts I have might be considered somewhat right wing. But I would be otherwise considered middle of the road. I think about things before I make a judgement, unlike the far left and right, who usually just get told what their op

        • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

          Especially when the "Star Wars Galaxy's Edge" attendance has been off by enough to reduce employee hours, and overall, both Disneyland and DisneyWorld attendance is down.

          Of course attendance is down. Disney's advertised this awesome new area that's immersive and is a theme that many people enjoy, but it's not open yet in Orlando and the Disneyland version isn't fully open and required reservations for most of the summer. It costs a lot of money to go to Disney, so it makes sense that a lot of people are waiting until the area is fully open.

          It's the same idea as console sales dropping when a new generation is coming out.

  • What on earth is the first order anyways.. and why should I care?
    The Empire was defeated.. the nonsensical first order is lame. They really jumped the shark, especially with the last movie.

    • Agreed. What is the "First Order", what is their goal, and why do they hate the resistance so much? Where do they get the funds to build their massive armies and fleets?

      The Empire we understood. It was the massive galactic military government and they wanted to quell any rebellion.

      • You ever read the Expanded Universe stuff? Well the First Order IS the equivalent of the "Imperial Remnant" in the Expanded Universe. They control certain areas outside of New Republic control. The Resistance is a splinter faction of the New Republic who have been trying to get the New Republic to see the First Order as a more serious threat. They have some "unofficial" support from the New Republic but not enough.

        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          And that's the problem. You have to be familiar with a hundred novels, and then do some handwaving, to sort of understand the plot of the new movies. A hundred novels that the new movies explicitly render non-canon, by the way.

          • The First Order is mentioned as being the remnant of the Imperials in the new movies. It's mentioned several times that they consider themselves the real government and the Heir to the old Empire.

            There's no need to read the Thrawn novels or whatever...though as I said, the First Order is basically the canon version of the Imperial remnant of the non-canon Expanded Universe.

            Thrawn himself was made canon though, brought in the new canon novels.

          • And that's the problem. You have to be familiar with a hundred novels, and then do some handwaving, to sort of understand the plot of the new movies. A hundred novels that the new movies explicitly render non-canon, by the way.

            I understood the plot perfectly... sure, I don't know everything that happened between the old movies and the new, but I didn't feel like I needed to. I haven't read any novels, or watched their stupid animated crap... I just watched the films.

            I don't think the films are as good, but I don't feel like I need to read any novels to understand them either.

            • I know everything that happened between the old movies and the new too, and that's why the new movies have ruined the old movies.

              The end of Episode 6 was a triumphant victory. All our characters came together and defeated the enemy.

              The start of Episode 7 was a smack in the face where:
              -The Emperor was defeated, but there is basically a new emperor with a new Darth Vader terrorizing the galaxy with a new Empire, new fleet, and new super weapon
              -Han and Leia turned out to be a shitty couple that got separated a

              • The end of Episode 6 was a triumphant victory. All our characters came together and defeated the enemy.

                I am going to quote The Last Unicorn at you:

                There are no happy endings because nothing ends. - Schmendrick the Magician.

    • It's the "we couldn't think to do anything creative so we tried to soft-reboot ANH, but we never bothered to understand the Jungian archetypes."

      I could waste my time rattling off a dozen better plotlines that they could have used, but Disney has killed the already-wounded franchise (by Lucas, deliberately).

      They're going to do time-travel in their next movie to undo some of the stupid plotlines they've backed themselves into. The kind of people who will go on Disney Rebellion cruises will shout, "clever!" a

  • Really? /. has no nerd cred any more.
  • If you happen to be a divorce lawyer.
  • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Monday August 26, 2019 @02:29AM (#59124570)

    As a kid, Star Tours was one of my favorite Disneyland rides, and this sounds like a super-sized extended version of it. The thirteen year old me would have absolutely loved this, I think. Disney does a great job at putting you in different worlds, and I've always appreciated that attention to aesthetic. My favorite place to eat in Disneyland was the Blue Bayou, the restaurant at the entrance of the Pirates of the Carribean ride, and the immersive quality of that environment was amazing, down to artificial fireflies floating in the distance. I can imagine, if they do this right, it could really be an amazing experience.

  • Cant wait for it to be on 50% sale. No way I'm going either way.

    get woke, go broke!

  • It seems like having characters from the movies present like the above mentioned Rey and Kylo would ruin the immersiveness of this thing as they would obviously be played by different actors and would therefore not look like the characters they are portraying.

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      It seems like having characters from the movies present like the above mentioned Rey and Kylo would ruin the immersiveness of this thing as they would obviously be played by different actors and would therefore not look like the characters they are portraying.

      With Kylo just leave the mask on, problem solved. In fact, I'm pretty sure Adam Driver should just always wear that mask. He doesn't really have the "evil bad guy look" like Tarkin, Palpatine, or even Dooku did. I don't get "evil" from him at all, mostly just whiney. As for Rey, well, you can bet they've already had other people playing her in the existing Star Wars part of the park, and they have a large enough pool of employees and potential employees to find someone that looks like Daisy Ridley. Bas

      • by skam240 ( 789197 )

        "Basically the same thing they do with the Snow Whites, Cinderallas, and Elsa/Annas they have walking around the parks."

        Those are all cartoon characters so that really isn't the same thing at all. Even some one who looks kind of like Daisy (which is about as good as it will likely get) she'll still stand out like a sore thumb in an otherwise immersive environment.

        I do agree that Adam Driver should keep his mask on though.

        • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

          "Basically the same thing they do with the Snow Whites, Cinderallas, and Elsa/Annas they have walking around the parks."

          Those are all cartoon characters so that really isn't the same thing at all. Even some one who looks kind of like Daisy (which is about as good as it will likely get) she'll still stand out like a sore thumb in an otherwise immersive environment.

          I do agree that Adam Driver should keep his mask on though.

          It's Disney, so this experience is at least theoretically aimed towards kids. So in that case, as long as the girl somewhat looks like Rey, she's good enough to be Rey.

          • as long as the girl somewhat looks like Rey,

            Disney has put on numerous stage shows based on their movies
            (Lion King and Alladin were both boxoffice smashes)
            and the actors look nothing like the characters in the movies.

            Nobody cares.

          • by skam240 ( 789197 )

            "It's Disney, so this experience is at least theoretically aimed towards kids. So in that case, as long as the girl somewhat looks like Rey, she's good enough to be Rey."

            Every single one of the Star Wars movies that have been made since Disney acquired the franchise have been rated PG-13 so they clearly are not aiming this franchise towards kids, at least not the young ones which you seem to be getting at.

  • Like the Futureworld moive?

  • by Livius ( 318358 ) on Monday August 26, 2019 @09:00AM (#59125150)

    If it's not a cruise, doesn't that make it just a theme park that's somewhat more specialized than usual?

    • A cruise kind of indicates that there will be stops at designated destinations. So here they are just stuck on the ship for the days.
      • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

        A cruise kind of indicates that there will be stops at designated destinations. So here they are just stuck on the ship for the days.

        It's a 2-day "cruise" with a "port day" on Batuu(Galaxy's edge). The "at sea(space)" day would have different activities on board. So it's literally structured like a cruise.

    • Golgafrincham Ark Fleet Ship B

      • by dpille ( 547949 )
        I think the problem is, what with their attention to detail in hospitality, Disney probably does have a fair number of telephone sanitizers.

        Oh, dear. Have cell phones made telephone sanitizers redundant?
  • Years ago I was at Canaveral and they had a "launch simulator" ride that was open. The launch part primarily consisted of being constantly beaten on the back of the head for a couple minutes before reaching "space". I'd pass on ever doing that again.
  • It wasn't a two day ride, more like a two hour one. You had to check in at the spaceport in the basement of the CN Tower, where things like lasers (made visible by mist) would scan you, providing wonderful security theatre. It was all pretty fancy for a children's ride in the 1980's. Eventually you would get in to "the spaceship" which purportedly launched from the basement of the tower right out the very tippy top! I went two or three times as a kid, and had a blast. The last time that I went, there was a malfunction with the set, a gap in the facade, and I got to see the "spaceship" from the outside. It was of course just a flight simulator that had been converted in to a smallish movie theatre held up by a bunch of hydraulic pistons that allowed it to tilt and bump and turn. Great fun. I was sad when it shut down.

    From Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]:

    Tour of the Universe was a space shuttle simulation ride located in the basement level of the CN Tower. Operating between 1985 and 1992, it was the world's first flight simulator ride.

    The ride was the idea of Moses Znaimer and designed by SimEx. The name of the ride, Tour of the Universe, and its content were adapted from a work of the same name cowritten in 1980 by Robert Holdstock and Malcolm Edwards, who sold the rights for the ride.

    Construction began in 1984 and the ride began operations in 1986. Built by Showscan Film, the ride used two Boeing 747 simulators designed and built by Redifusion Ltd in Crawley, UK. Showscan designed and built the spacecraft themed cabin that seated the 40 passengers. Director, special effects expert and Showscan owner Douglas Trumbull produced the show film. The ride system and its controls were later the basis for Disneyland's Star Tours ride.

    The ride was replaced in 1992 with a similar attraction entitled "Space Race." It was later dismantled and replaced by two other SimEx rides in 1998 and 1999.

    The ride featured a round trip spaceflight to Jupiter. Passengers first boarded an elevator that took them into the depths of the CN Tower (CN stands for Canadian National, one of the two major railroad companies at the time, and as far as I know, the only one that is still in operation, hence "CN Tower") and forward to the year 2019, arriving at Spaceport Toronto. Operated by CP (Canadian Pacific, the former competitor the CN) Air Interplanetary (or Canadian Interplanetary after CP Air was absorbed by Canadian in 1987), the shuttle resembled the US space shuttle, but instead of a cargo bay the ship had a passenger compartment.

    Before boarding their flight, passengers moved through various themed areas of the spaceport such as Customs, Security and Medical. Passengers would be able to print out their tickets and be inoculated against space diseases such as "Ganymede Rash".

    When aboard the interplanetary shuttle, passengers were launched upward through the hollow core of the CN Tower, arriving at a space station in orbit, and traveling to Jupiter while dodging an asteroid.

  • by pgmrdlm ( 1642279 ) on Monday August 26, 2019 @01:06PM (#59126342) Journal
    Everyone stays in a dirty trailer that is on it's last legs. They each get a Schwartz ring that is in a cracker jack box left on their flea/bed bug ridden cot. As they are directed to their individual trailer, they are let through the door with the greeting of "May the Schwartz be with you". come on, most of the people that go to Disney are nothing but trailer trash anyway. They would love it
  • This might be cool. I mean it would be cool until I get escorted out by Storm Troopers for pushing a kid down who cut in the lightsaber line.
    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      I just want to know if, when the First Order "attacks" the hotel, if you can join in and help them instead of defend the "ship"

  • why are we still worshiping this bloated corpse ffs...

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