When Disneyland reopens, it s going to have even more of a privilege problem
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Guests stop to take a selfie at Magic Kingdom Park at Walt Disney World Resort on July 11, 2020, the day the park reopened.Courtesy of Walt Disney World
At the best of times before the pandemic, Disneyland was hard to afford. Even if you lived near the park and could snag the most affordable entry the Southern California Resident Ticket, a limited three-day pass offered every spring that worked out to just over $66 per day there were still enormous costs once you arrived on Disneyland Drive, from the $25 parking to the $4 bottles of water to the $6.99 churros that are essentially flour and cinnamon sugar but are all-but-impossible to resist.