Three news items this week, all of them about change: when to make it, when to skip it, and how to communicate it.

Disneyland is facing backlash after replacing one of the old skeletons in the Pirates of the Caribbean with a new projection-mapped animatronic. Screens and AI are deeply unpopular right now, and replacing a classic animatronic with a projection might have been a misstep.

Enchanted Parks eliminated the legacy dining plan at its six former Six Flags properties. CEO James Harhi told Attractions Magazine the company is prioritizing "rides and improvements, not chicken tenders." The line is good. The underlying strategy is not visible yet, and a smaller chain almost certainly lost the bulk discount that made the plan profitable. The cleaner play would have been to lead with the price reductions and let the cut follow.

Meanwhile, Walt Disney World extended its 2026 holiday season to nearly two months, from November 13 through January 6, without adding anything new. Christmas at Disney is built on nostalgia, and changing the product would break the emotional logic guests come for. Halloween needs novelty. Christmas needs tradition.

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