Posted: Wed Nov 24, 2004 9:47 pm
I did go hit the strip club after work in costume once. Got me quite a bit of attenntion.
Stories about guest behavior in theme parks.
https://unclewalts.com/forum/
Two important points:GMC wrote:Zazu if your conductor's costumes are the same polyester mess that ours are, they're machine washable, heads up though, i've found that when i wash them at home they kinda get this odd funk to them.
What did you expect? They all live on OBT!BTW those hookers are FUGLY! You'd have to pay ME.
Oh, my God! Your last line just made me laugh out loud! A few months ago I went to a convenience store near my house. I often go in my costume and a lot of the employees think it's really cool that I work at Disneyland. Whatever. Anyway, I was pumping my gas and I look across the street and notice that someone is getting arrested. He was pulled off to the side of the road. There were a bunch of cops there. He was in handcuffs. I'm guessing it was a DUI. I looked closely at the guy and noticed that he was in a Tomorrowland costume. I couldn't help but laugh. I wish the guy luck, wherever he is....screnwriter wrote:You have to love the *geniuses* who take existing, WORKING systems like costume issue - where a small group of dedicated, trained people - manages the hundreds of thousands of costume pieces for the entire park or resort, and manages to keep them all cleaned, pressed, presentable, handy, and issues them with speed and efficiency - and switches it for making every one of tens of thousands of employees responsible for searching the clothing racks and hangers for costume pieces, many of which they've never known the names of, and also giving them the responsibility of wearing them home, taking care of them, washing them properly ("Who says I can't wash a Fantasyland white shirt with embroidery in with my brand new, freshly-dyed t-shirts?"). Not to mention, as stated above - where are these cast members going after work? I'm still waiting to see a DLR CM 'caught on tape' holding up a convenience store or making a drug or prostitution deal. Sure to happen.Zazu wrote:The Magic Kingdom has now gone to Cast Zooming, where everybody gets to wear their costume home (and the market, gas station, liquor store, bar, whorehouse, where ever). We've also had our costuming moved to a new building in the parking lot. Therein lies some major league stupid.
Today, those of us on Special Wash (custom fit or shortages - I've some of each) discovered that each and every piece that had been put into the Special Wash basket last night had gone missing, as had the CM who collected them and was supposed to have done something useful with them.
"What do you want me to do?" I asked my manager.
"Well, I guess if they don't have the costume pieces, you'll just have to go without," he replied.
"Okay, let me double check what you just told me: You just authorized me to go on stage naked today, is that right?"
"Urr....."
So I missed my first two trains while Costuming rummaged around and finally located pants that fit (except for the pocket sewn shut) and a vest only two sizes too large.
But hey, the way this new system works, I can check out five full costumes and take them home, saving me the trouble of changing at work! But if they *had* five costumes my size, I wouldn't have been on Special Wash for the past two years in the first place.
And I'm sure I'll be taking my Conductor's hat off property. Those suckers are going for about $350 on eBay, no way I'm risking that liability. What's that? Oh, CR and CT will loose their lockers and have only day lockers. Cute!
And finally, because the new Costuming building closes at 6pm (very convenient for us with closing shifts who *never* get off that early), we all get our five costumes, then ride the bus in and stuff four of them into our locker for the shift. Can you say "wrinkle city"?
Oh, and the "priviledge" of being "allowed" to wash our own costumes? They have to be dry cleaned. I'm still checking to see what part of the OG includes mention that Conductors have to launder 250 pieces of dry cleaning per year.
Oh yeah, I'm one happy little clothes horse today.