Today's Big News...
| Disney Fun |
| Disney execs have seen Doomsday. They're pleased. |
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Avengers: Doomsday doesn't hit theaters until December, but Disney executives have already gotten a look at footage β and according to a new Variety report, they like what they see. That's the kind of early signal the MCU really needed right now.
Why "pleased" is doing a lot of heavy lifting: To be fair, no studio executive is going to tell a reporter they're worried about their biggest film of the year. But the Variety report goes further than a standard corporate vote of confidence β rival studio heads are privately predicting Doomsday will be the highest-grossing film of 2026. That's a competitive field. Toy Story 5, Spider-Man: Brand New Day, and The Odyssey are all on the 2026 calendar, and industry insiders are still picking Doomsday to top them all.
The weight this film is carrying: The Multiverse Saga has been a bumpy road β underwhelming projects, a late pivot away from Kang the Conqueror, and real questions about whether there's been enough setup for a story this big. Directors Joe and Anthony Russo know how to wrangle a massive Marvel ensemble (they've done it before), but some fans are already side-eyeing the nostalgia play of bringing Chris Evans back. The pressure on this film is real, even if Marvel would never say so out loud.
The part worth sitting with: Sources inside Marvel's film division are pushing back on the idea that the entire MCU rises or falls on Doomsday. Kevin Feige has already signaled a quality-over-quantity reset, and projects like an X-Men reboot and Black Panther 3 are in development regardless of how December goes. Secret Wars is designed as a soft continuity reset either way. Marvel isn't betting the whole franchise on one film β but they're clearly betting a lot.
Big picture: Rival studios quietly predicting your movie wins the year is the kind of thing that doesn't get said out loud unless people actually believe it β and that's a very different thing from a press release.
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| Read full story from ComicBook.com |
| Disney Fun |
| Disney World is actually getting better. Here's the proof. |
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Spend five minutes on Disney Twitter and you'll find no shortage of complaints β Lightning Lane confusion, Mickey Bar prices, the general sense that the parks have lost something. But a viral thread started by @DisneyClipsGuy recently flipped the script, and thousands of fans showed up to agree: Disney World has quietly been getting a lot of things right.
The infrastructure wins people aren't talking about enough: The Disney Skyliner has become a genuine cult favorite β not just as transportation, but as an experience. Floating above the tree line into EPCOT's International Gateway at the start of a park day is the kind of thing that makes guests choose Caribbean Beach over a hotel closer to the action. Meanwhile, the bus fleet overhaul added GPS tracking to the My Disney Experience app, which sounds small until you realize it eliminated the specific anxiety of standing at a resort stop wondering if you missed the last bus to Magic Kingdom. Relaxed morning coffee instead of a frantic sprint β that's a real quality-of-life win.
The parks themselves feel like they're dreaming again: Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind's Omnicoaster system raised the bar for what a Disney ride can do. Tiana's Bayou Adventure brought back the kind of physical, tactile animatronic craftsmanship that made Disney rides feel different from everything else. EPCOT's construction walls are finally down, and the park has reclaimed its garden-like flow. And the removal of Park Pass Reservations β the requirement to decide six months out exactly where you'd be on a Tuesday afternoon β has made the whole experience feel less like logistics management and more like a vacation.
The part that actually matters: Disney also quietly restored some of the perks that made on-property stays feel worth it: the Dining Plan is back, overnight resort parking is free again, and Extended Evening Hours for Deluxe guests are delivering some of the lowest wait times the parks have seen in years. A $17 billion expansion commitment, including the groundbreaking of Villains Land, means Disney isn't just patching things β they're building toward something.
Big picture: The complaints are real and the prices are genuinely high, but the thread @DisneyClipsGuy started is a useful reminder that "Disney was better back then" and "Disney is still the best at this" can both be true at the same time β and right now, the evidence for the second one is stacking up.
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| Read full story from Walt Disney World Archives - Inside the Magic |
| Disney Fun |
| Back at your resort after midnight? Here's how to not go hungry. |
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You stayed for the fireworks. Then Extended Evening Hours. Then you waited for the transportation crowds to thin out. By the time the bus drops you at your resort, it's close to midnight, you've logged 20,000-plus steps, and you are absolutely starving β only to find that most resort food courts and quick-service locations have already shut down for the night. Welcome to one of the most quietly frustrating gaps in the Disney World vacation experience.
Why this keeps catching people off guard: Disney is genuinely great at keeping things running late. Transportation runs late. Merchandise stays open an hour past park closing. But dining doesn't follow the same logic. Many quick-service spots inside the parks close before the parks themselves do, and most resort food courts call it a night around 11 PM. For guests who stay out late β which, at Disney, is basically everyone β that math doesn't work.
The options that actually exist: The most reliable nearby solution is a 24-hour McDonald's close to the All-Star Resorts, which isn't exactly a triumphant end to a magical day, but it's there. A Taco Bell in Kissimmee stays open until 4 AM, and a Wawa just outside Disney runs around the clock. DoorDash delivers directly to Disney Resort hotels, though you'll need to meet your driver in the lobby, and fees plus wait times add up fast. The more satisfying workaround is planning ahead: grab packaged treats on your way out of the park β the Main Street Confectionery and Karamell-KΓΌche both sell cookies, caramel snacks, and packaged goods that travel well β or stock up at your resort's gift shop before you even leave for the parks in the morning.
The move most guests don't think of until their second trip: Amazon Fresh delivers groceries directly to Disney Resorts, with Bell Services storing refrigerated items until you pick them up. Delivery is free over $100, you can schedule it up to three days in advance, and suddenly your room has fruit, sandwich stuff, drinks, and snacks waiting every night you roll in late. Some guests even use it to cover breakfast for the whole trip, which eliminates morning food lines entirely.
Big picture: Disney has built a vacation ecosystem that keeps you on property and in the magic as long as possible β it just hasn't quite figured out that hungry guests at midnight are not feeling very magical.
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| Read full story from the disney food blog |
| Disney Fun |
| Disney's pin drops sell out in seconds. A login fix is coming. |
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If you have ever watched a limited-edition Disney pin vanish from your cart before you could finish typing your zip code, you are not imagining things. Pin-Tastic Tuesday drops β new pins released every Tuesday at 8 a.m. PT through the Disney Store β have become a weekly exercise in frustration, with some releases selling out in seconds while collectors are left staring at failed checkouts and empty queues.
How a casual park tradition became a competitive sport: Disney introduced pin trading in 1999 as part of the Millennium Celebration at Walt Disney World. The original idea was simple and social β guests traded pins with cast members wearing lanyards, and the whole thing felt spontaneous and fun. Over the decades, it grew into something much more serious: limited runs, event exclusives, a secondary resale market, counterfeit "scrapper" pins flooding cast member lanyards, and online drops that now function more like sneaker releases than park souvenirs. Tokyo Disney Resort eventually banned pin trading altogether, which tells you something about how far the culture has drifted from its roots.
What Disney is actually changing: The company confirmed it is requiring customers to log in before entering the queue during high-demand pin releases β a direct response to complaints about bots and bulk buyers cutting ahead of genuine collectors. Disney's statement to subscribers acknowledged the feedback plainly: "We've also heard your feedback around availability, and we want to reassure you that we're actively working to make the shopping experience better, and more equitable for Guests." The login requirement is rolling out within the next few weeks, and Disney says additional enhancements are coming as they continue to refine the system.
The part worth watching: A login wall is a meaningful first step, but it is not a complete solution. Disney's statement was careful to frame this as an evolving process rather than a finished fix β "we continue to evaluate and strengthen these protections" is doing a lot of work in that paragraph. Whether the changes actually slow down bots and bulk buyers, or simply add one more hoop for everyone to jump through equally, will become clear pretty quickly on a Tuesday morning.
Big picture: Twenty-five years ago, Disney invented pin trading as a reason to linger in the parks and chat with a cast member β and now they are issuing security statements about queue equity, which is either a sign of how much the community has grown or a sign of how badly something small and joyful got away from everyone.
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| Read full story from disneydining.com |
| Disney Park |
| Disneyland quietly killed the Green Milk. It's not coming back. |
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If you've been saving that Green Milk sip for your next Disneyland trip, here's some news you didn't want: it's gone. Disneyland Park has permanently removed the Green Milk from the Milk Stand in Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge, replacing it with a new Pink Milk that quietly debuted in January 2026. The original Blue Milk is still available β but the green one, a fixture of Batuu since the land opened in 2019, is off the menu for good.
Why it happened now: The Green Milk's exit is tied to something bigger. Disneyland is overhauling half of Galaxy's Edge to shift from the sequel trilogy timeline to the original trilogy β think Darth Vader, Han Solo, Luke Skywalker, and Leia Organa walking the streets of Batuu. That transition officially kicks off April 29, 2026, and the whole land is being reshaped to fit. Oga's Cantina already closed for updates and is set to reopen March 14. The Milk Stand menu change is part of the same wave.
The detail that stings a little: The Disneyland app still lists Green Milk as available β so guests who didn't see the updated menu board at the stand might not know until they try to order it. Cast members on-site have confirmed the removal is permanent. The physical green glass orbs hanging above the Milk Stand haven't been swapped out yet either, which means the dΓ©cor still advertises something you can no longer buy. Whether those get replaced with pink ones is currently unconfirmed.
Big picture: Seven years is a long run for a novelty drink, and the Pink Milk may turn out to be great β but there's something quietly melancholy about a menu item disappearing overnight with no fanfare, no farewell, no last call. The galaxy moves on fast.
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| Read full story from Disneyland Resort Archives - Inside the Magic |
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