March 30, 2024
Although we were still tired after our big adventure the day
before, we were excited about seeing “our” park again. We had already noticed
from our room how much bigger USJ had grown since it was built. We also knew
ET, Back to the Future, Backdraft, Terminator-2, Western Stunt Show, Animal
Actors, and other original attractions were long gone. ET was replaced by
Spiderman, and it, too, closed the week before we arrived.
We had been in touch with Christiane Sentianin, the Area 3
admin in Hollywood, prior to our trip. She and Hunvey Chen had planned to visit
the park on the 30th. They told us what tickets to get. Yuki
Nakamura and Mark Adams and his wife also planned on going the same day. We had
bought our tickets and express passes for the same date and time as they had
before we left home.
We went down to breakfast early, but not quite as early as
the day before. Everything seemed to be back to normal. Regular length lines.
No overflow restaurant. A full selection of items.
We knew the park would open at eight a.m. I had texted
Christiane to see when they would get to the park. She said they planned to
arrive about nine.
We returned to our room and got ready to go. We decided to
go early in case there were any issues with our tickets. Fortunately, there
were none. We carried our express passes for the most popular attractions. Our
first scheduled ride was Mario Cart at 11:30, so we had lots of time.
We entered the park about eight-fifteen and found a table
outside Boulangère on Hollywood Boulevard. From there, we could look down the
street toward the entrance.
Christiane texted a couple of times to let us know where they were. Before long, I looked up and saw her running around the corner with her arms outstretched. Hunvey and Yuki were not far behind her. We hadn’t seen her in person since our last morning at USJ 2001 when we ate breakfast with her. (We have stayed in touch through email and Facebook.)
Christiane, Larry, Yuki, Lorna,
Hunvey
Our next objective was to find our names on the windows in
the park. With the replacement of some of the areas and attractions, several of
our friends lost theirs, but all of ours are still there.
Larry is on the 2nd floor,
second from right (Bail Bondsman). I am diagonally above him (Tailor).
Christiane is on the yellow sign.
Yuki’s window is the one on the left.
Hunvey is on the window.
We then walked around the lagoon past Mel’s Drive-in. The
vintage cars are still there, but we weren’t sure they were the same ones Cathy
arranged for in 2001.
Next, we went on the JAWS ride. Since we had the express
passes, we bypassed the long regular lines and got on the ride in just a few
minutes. We checked to be sure Larry’s footprints were still on the beach. They
are.
The sharks seemed to be missing their skins. They now look
like painted metal. Not quite the same effect as the original, but they all were
working.
We stopped at the restrooms opposite the ride and SURPRISE!
When we built the park. 75% of the toilets were Japanese style (squat type)
even though originally they were supposed to be 75% American. (Many discussions
occurred about the type, but the Japanese ones took up less room and were
cheaper.) Today, ALL of the toilets are American-style! In fact, every one we
saw in the park was.
We went to Jurassic Park, but the ride was closed for
refurbishment. However, there is a new rollercoaster next to it called The
Flying Dragon. You hang on this one with your legs dangling, and it carries
riders upside down, sideways, and facing the ground. Larry and I decided we
didn’t really want to try it, but the other three did. I guess they enjoyed it,
but as we watched it, I was glad we had passed.
It was getting close to the time for our scheduled ride on
Mario Cart, so we headed in that direction. There, we met Mark Adams and his
wife.
Lorna, Larry, Christiane, Yuki,
Hunvey, Mark. Jessica
It was getting hot, and the access to the Mario ride was
insane! We all agreed that it never would have been allowed in the US. To get
to the start of the ride, we had to climb up and down about nine flights of
stairs. By the time we reached the final queue, my knees were hurting. They
handed each of us a headpiece—a heavy one. It was adjustable, but it slipped on
my hair, sliding forward over my eyes or falling backward. (I never did get it
to fit correctly.) When we finally reached the ride vehicles, they handed each
of us a viewer glass that hooked onto the head piece, making it even heavier
and more inclined to slip around.
Since I had absolutely no idea how the game was supposed to
be played, I couldn’t figure out what to do, and I couldn’t see correctly
through the view screen anyway.
I hated every minute. (The day before, we had been told by a
kid that it was his favorite ride, and I could understand how it might be if
the headset fit and worked and you knew how to play. But nothing worked for
me.)
When we got out, Larry spotted an elevator, so we took it to
get back down to the exit, where we met the rest of the gang.
We decided to go on Yoshi’s Adventure while we were there.
It reminded me of the beginning of the Alice in Wonderland at Disneyland.
Halfway through, I said to Larry, “What if they created a ride that did
absolutely nothing?” By the end of the ride, we discovered that they had! It
might have been fun for a child under four-years-old, but for anyone older than
five, it was truly boring.
By this time (after 1:00 p.m.) we were hungry. We still had
a wait before we could go on the Harry Potter ride, so we went back to the
Discovery Restaurant in the JP area for lunch. Jessica and I held down a large
table while the others got food. It was surprisingly good, and we enjoyed it
very much.
We went back over to Harry Potter. We still had about half
an hour to wait, so we found some shade and sat down.
Finally, our scheduled time arrived, and we entered the
queue. This one was fine, and we got on the ride vehicle. I loved it! We had
gone on the one in Hollywood once, but it had stopped soon after we got on.
They started it again after about an hour, but they ran the ride with the work
lights on, so we couldn’t see the film and missed all the effects. However,
Larry enjoyed seeing how all the mechanical devices worked. This time, we got
the full story and enjoyed the ride.
After our very long day the day before, we were getting
tired. We decided to go back to the hotel since it was late afternoon. The rest
of our group decided to stay for a while longer.
We were still impressed with how terrific “our” park was,
and we remained proud of our part in creating it.
When we got back to the hotel, we rested. We didn’t want to
go anywhere for dinner, so we ate granola bars and had tea. Just what we
needed.
We went to bed early anticipating a busy day on Sunday.
Me, Marilyn, again. Great post. Love reading these!
ReplyDeleteEvery time we go back, we are impressed with the park. I still find it hard to believe that we helped to make it possible!
Delete