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In article <3aec4cbe.159494043@lugnet.com>,
Todd Lehman <lehman@javanet.com> wrote:
> To follow up on the point of uniqueness... I think a further advantage of
> the uniqueness (beyond wow factor for visitors, etc.) is that it becomes
> virtually impossible to duplicate the experience. You could never probably
> go out and duplicate Disneyworld attractions, but if you had enough pieces
> in enough of the cool colors, you _could_ kinda duplicate the LEGOLAND
> experience, albeit on a much smaller scale.
...and this would be exactly why I would think that Lego _should_ sell
all the varied parts they use to build their mega-models and their
Legoland parks.
It's sort of the attraction of auto racing. We look at these guys going
a zillion miles an hour and we think, "Gee. If I had a race car, I could
do that, too." Turns out most of us actually can't. So sure, we think,
"Gee, if I had those parts, I could do that, too." But most of us can't.
So we'll still have to pay to go see it. And since some small part of our
brain, even though we've been proven wrong, wants one more try, we _will_
pay...
-JDF
--
J.D. Forinash ,-.
foxtrot@cc.gatech.edu ( <
The more you learn, the better your luck gets. `-'
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Message is in Reply To:
| | Re: Why Gary cannot go to Legoland.
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| (...) To follow up on the point of uniqueness... I think a further advantage of the uniqueness (beyond wow factor for visitors, etc.) is that it becomes virtually impossible to duplicate the experience. You could never probably go out and duplicate (...) (24 years ago, 29-Apr-01, to lugnet.general, lugnet.legoland)
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