Pirates of the Caribbean in New Dispute, Human Remains Allegedly Found in Attraction

Comments for Pirates of the Caribbean in New Dispute, Human Remains Allegedly Found in Attraction

Auction scene featuring Pirate Redd, the auctioneer, and townspeople in the Pirates of the Caribbean ride at Magic Kingdom in Walt Disney World Resort

Credit: Ed Aguila, Inside the Magic

3 Comments

  1. GH

    The first time I did the ride I overheard that it was human hair and thought that was cool. Probably taken from a barber shop and glued on, nonetheless. I had also heard about there being real skeletons but what the heck. If a fan wants be part of this iconic ride, then let it be. (With permission of course). The pirates chasing the women is more realistic than women chasing the pirates out of their house but there was one scene where the woman was chasing the pirate with a broomstick. That was funny. Changing these rides to appease the woke minority is making the rides sterile. “Let it Go”.

    1. You are exactly right. The original scenes were historically accurate. I remember when Disney tried building a park in VA and some criticized the idea saying the rides would not be historically accurate – now those same people demand that older, accurate rides be changed to make them woke. Same thing happened with Jungle Cruise.

      1. Steamboat Willie

        Nah, I’m sure the people who wanted the Disney’s America park to be cancelled are on the same team of people who want Disney to be anti-woke, rather than on the group who doesn’t want stereotypes in a Disney Park.

        Also, what was so historically accurate about Jungle Cruise? I can kinda see POTC, but…

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