Pirates of the caribbean ride4/4/2023 ![]() Every time Sparrow made an appearance, my kids would point and stare, neglecting everything but the celebrity they recognised. I was chaperoning a class trip for my students, and so I was sitting in the back of the boat. The last time I rode Walt Disney World’s Pirates of the Caribbean was in 2012. Together, these multiple appearances turn the ride into a version of Where’s Waldo? as far as riders are concerned. He had become so identifiable with the Pirates of the Caribbean brand that it seemed inevitable. No one ride was exactly the same for any two audience members.īut in 2006, Disney announced they were adding Captain Jack Sparrow to the ride. The audience members had their heads on swivels, trying to take in every last detail. Since no one pirate was the focus, all the pirates were the focus. ![]() Instead, they saw all manner of pirates, doing all manner of things, in different parts of the town. ![]() Visitors didn’t see a pirate in one scene, and then see the same pirate in another scene, advancing his plot. It was an immersive experience of what it was like to be a pirate, rather than a linear, A to B story. Instead, guests floated through a coastal town as it was being invaded. Until 2006, Pirates of the Caribbean wasn’t a narrative ride like Splash Mountain, which told a cohesive, sequential tale of Br’er Rabbit and his beloved Briar Patch. Then, the guests’ boat slid down a slight incline, and guests went further back in time to when these skeleton pirates had flesh on their bones. ![]()
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