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Disneyland’s Season of the Force 2025: Galactic Highlights

February 11, 2025


Must-See Entertainment


Attraction Updates


Character Encounters


Exclusive Experiences


Food & Merchandise

New Eats:

Limited-Edition Gear:


Pro Tips


Disneyland Resort News

A Week of Culinary Delights, Hidden Gems, and Strategic Magic

February 11, 2025


The Foodie’s Frontier

Disneyland’s culinary scene is always evolving. Here’s a look at what’s generating buzz, but remember that menus and offerings can change:


Secrets of the Parks

Discover Disneyland’s hidden charms beyond the main attractions:


Savings Without the Sorcery


Crowd Calculus

Feb 12–25 Forecast (Estimates):

Strategy:


Encore-Worthy Entertainment

  1. Fantasmic! (Disneyland Park, typically 9 PM & 10:30 PM): This classic show, featuring pyrotechnics and water effects, is a must-see. Check the Disneyland app for current showtimes.
  2. World of Color – ONE (DCA, typically 9 PM): DCA’s water and light spectacular features music and scenes from various Disney and Pixar films.
  3. Mulan’s Lunar New Year Procession (DCA, check app for times): A vibrant parade celebrating Lunar New Year. Verify the end date on the official Disneyland calendar, as it can vary.

Disneyland’s magic is often found in the unexpected moments. Be open to serendipitous experiences, and remember that the best trips combine planning with flexibility.

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Disney World Resort News

A Week at Walt Disney World: Where Magic Meets Mayhem

Amidst evolving experiences and culinary adventures, the parks balance ever-changing offerings with timeless charm.

Culinary Currents: Flavors in Flux

Disney World’s dining scene is constantly evolving. At EPCOT, anticipation builds for the 2025 Flower & Garden Festival (March 5 – June 2). Two new Outdoor Kitchens, Yacht Grub and Beach Grub, have been announced, hinting at possible coastal-inspired cuisine. While the specific menus are yet to be revealed, speculation includes dishes like lobster rolls or ceviche, drawing inspiration from Disney’s resort theming.

In Magic Kingdom, Columbia Harbour House (Liberty Square) offers a classic Lobster Roll. (Check the My Disney Experience app for the current price, which is subject to change.) At Animal Kingdom, the Pongu Pongu stand (Pandora) is known for it’s unique and refreshing drink and snack offerings.

Disney Springs provides a wide range of dining options. The Fountain, located at the Dolphin Hotel, offers a variety of American cuisine, including burgers (check the menu for current offerings and prices). Mobile ordering is a valuable tool throughout the parks, often saving time. For instance, at Satu’li Canteen (Animal Kingdom), you can use mobile order to bypass potential lines and enjoy their popular Cheeseburger Steamed Pods (bao buns) – check the app for current pricing.

Secrets of the Kingdom

Beyond the iconic Cinderella Castle, the Adventureland Treehouse (formerly the Swiss Family Treehouse) in Adventureland provides unique views of the park. While it might not always have minimal foot traffic, it’s often less crowded than major attractions. For a moment of tranquility, explore the detailed and often-overlooked courtyard in the Morocco Pavilion at EPCOT.

Character enthusiasts should keep an eye out for Vanellope von Schweetz, who makes appearances near the Tomorrowland Speedway in Magic Kingdom. During EPCOT’s festivals, character topiaries are frequently displayed at the park entrance. For example, a Moana topiary is often a highlight of the Flower & Garden Festival; arriving early (around park opening) can improve your chances of getting unobstructed photos.

Savings Without the Sleuthing

Disney World frequently offers various discounts, but availability and specifics change constantly. It’s essential to check official Disney sources and reputable third-party sites for the most up-to-date information before your trip. Here’s a snapshot of potential savings opportunities, but verify all details before relying on them:

Important Note: All discounts are subject to availability, blackout dates, and specific terms and conditions. Always read the fine print carefully. The best place to find official, current discounts is the “Special Offers, Deals & Discounts” page on the Walt Disney World website.

Crowds & Closures: Navigate the Storm

Pro Tips:

Shows Worth the Spotlight

  1. Fantasmic! (Hollywood Studios): This nighttime spectacular features water projections, pyrotechnics, and scenes from various Disney films, including Raya the Last Dragon and Frozen.
  2. Happily Ever After (Magic Kingdom): This fireworks show features a soundtrack of modern Disney hits. Arriving 45 minutes early to secure a good viewing spot near the Partners Statue (Walt Disney and Mickey Mouse) is a common strategy.
  3. Turtle Talk with Crush (EPCOT): This interactive show, featuring the animated sea turtle Crush, is known for its improvisational humor and appeal to all ages.

Disney World’s magic is found in the details: a peaceful moment in a themed area, the convenience of mobile ordering, or the spectacle of a nighttime show. As the parks transition between seasons and festivals, new experiences and culinary delights are always on the horizon.

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Updates from the Lounge

Brighten your day with a grand circle tour through the MouseWait Lounge! You’ll find incredible posts like the ones below + check out Disneylonestar’s new history posts!

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VOYAGEERS: Finding Hidden Treasures in the Parks

Images courtesy of Parkendium

In the dusky glow of Black Spire Outpost, where the spires of Batuu cast long shadows under twin moons, the whir of a lightsaber hums faintly above the clatter of smuggler’s cantina dice. This spring, as Disneyland prepares to launch its annual Season of the Force—a months-long celebration of Star Wars lore with new character encounters, galactic cuisine, and a projection-mapped Skywalker Saga spectacle—the boundary between Walt Disney’s midcentury imagination and George Lucas’ galaxy far, far away feels thinner than ever. The event, running from March 28 to May 11, 2025, is more than a marketing ploy; it’s the culmination of a 40-year dance between two storytellers who never met but shared a gravitational pull toward mythmaking.

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A Bench, a Carousel, and the Spark of Rebellion

The story begins not with droids or Jedi, but with a park bench. In 1937, Walt Disney sat watching his daughters ride the Griffith Park carousel in Los Angeles, struck by the dismal state of family entertainment. “Why can’t there be a place where parents and children both have fun?” he mused. That bench, now enshrined in Disneyland’s Opera House, became the seed for a revolutionary idea: a themed park where escapism was meticulously engineered. When Disneyland opened in 1955, its lands—Frontierland, Tomorrowland, Fantasyland—were storybooks come alive, each a portal to another world. Walt’s obsession with immersion bordered on fanaticism; he banned gum sales to maintain cleanliness and insisted trash cans be styled to each land’s aesthetic.

Decades later, George Lucas would channel that same fervor. A lifelong Disney devotee, Lucas visited Disneyland on its second day in 1955 and returned yearly, drawn to its “ability to make dreams tangible.” His childhood fascination with Flash Gordon serials and Westerns mirrored Walt’s love of Americana and futurism. Yet their bond runs deeper than nostalgia: both men mortgaged their futures to fund their visions. Walt liquidated his life insurance and sold the rights to his own name to build Disneyland; Lucas risked bankruptcy to film Star Wars, betting Fox’s money on a space opera executives dubbed “a children’s movie.”


When Indiana Jones Paved the Way for Star Tours

The first Star Wars ripple in Disneyland arrived not through a Death Star trench run, but via a fedora-washing archaeologist. In 1986, newly minted Disney CEO Michael Eisner—eager to attract teens to the “kiddie park”—reached out to Lucas, his former Paramount colleague. Their collaboration birthed Captain EO, a Michael Jackson-led 3D spectacle, and Star Tours, the 1987 motion simulator that thrust guests into a chaotic flight to Endor.

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The ride was a gamble. Imagineers retrofitted military-grade flight simulators, while ILM crafted a film so visceral, one technician reportedly vomited during testing. When Star Tours opened, Disneyland stayed operational for 60 straight hours to meet demand. Lines snaked past the remnants of Adventure Thru Inner Space, the Monsanto-sponsored attraction it replaced—a poetic full-circle moment, as Walt had once partnered with corporations to fund his park.

Lucas’ fingerprints lingered. He insisted Rex, the bumbling droid pilot, be voiced by Pee-Wee Herman’s Paul Reubens, injecting humor into the chaos. “Walt would’ve loved that touch,” says Disney historian Jeff Kurtti. “He knew comedy was the spoonful of sugar.”


From Star Tours to Galaxy’s Edge: A $4 Billion Bet

The real seismic shift came in 2012, when Disney acquired Lucasfilm for $4 billion. Bob Iger’s now-legendary pitch to Lucas—“We’ll protect your legacy”—echoed Walt’s own battles to retain creative control. The deal birthed Galaxy’s Edge, a 14-acre land that’s less “attraction” and more living film set. Visitors sip blue milk (a nod to Luke’s Tatooine staple), tinker with droid parts, and pilot the Millennium Falcon—experiences Walt might’ve envied.

Yet the bond between Disney and Lucas transcends transactions. Lucas’ early concepts for Galaxy’s Edge included Tatooine and Endor, but Imagineers pushed for Batuu, a new planet free from cinematic canon. “George wanted it to feel lived-in, like Main Street does,” says Imagineer Scott Trowbridge. The land’s rusted scrap metal and haggling traders mirror Walt’s meticulous detailing in New Orleans Square, where even the pavement cracks were aged with blowtorches.


Trivia Unearthed: Walt, George, and the Hidden Threads


What Would Walt Think?

On May 31, 2019, as Galaxy’s Edge opened amid a throng of lightsaber-wielding fans, Disneyland’s original kinetic energy—the clang of the Disneyland Railroad, the wafting scent of churros—collided with the beeps of BB-8 and the sizzle of ronto wraps. Critics wondered: Would Walt, who once banned overt tie-ins to his films, balk at a land built on another creator’s IP?

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The answer lies in his words. “Disneyland is a work of love,” Walt said in 1954. “We didn’t go into Disneyland just with the idea of making money.” Lucas, who donated his $4 billion sale windfall to education, shared that ethos. Together, they bridged the gap between nostalgia and innovation—one with a storybook castle, the other with a Wookiee’s roar.

As Season of the Force bathes Batuu in new projections of Luke Skywalker’s legacy, it’s hard not to picture Walt and George, side by side on that Griffith Park bench, dreaming of galaxies yet to unfold.

Well, that’s all for this week!

Hit reply and let me know how I can make this newsletter better!

Wishing you the best week,

Kelly

February 11, 2025 Issue #6 to 29,891 Disney fans.

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