-Caveat Lector-

http://www.sacbee.com/news/calreport/data/N2001-09-03-2045-0.html

Jungle Cruise no longer has boat
                         captains shooting hippos

                         ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) -- Disneyland's eight-minute Jungle
                         Cruise no longer has its khaki-wearing tour guide boat
                         captains shooting at hippos that emerge with wiggling ears
                         and open mouths from the river bottom.

                         "It's sad to see the tradition go," said former
                         safari-hat-wearing skipper Mike DeForest, who once spent
                         summer college breaks guiding visitors through the ride.
                         "What's next, disarming the Pirates of the Caribbean?"

                         Well, the pirates are still armed, but a little more 
politically
                         correct.

                         On March 7, 1997, the pirate ride was rededicated and
                         reopened without a pirate who brandished a piece of lace in
                         a boast about a sexual conquest.

                         Gone too is a woman who hid in mortal fear from drunken
                         buccaneers. A swashbuckler still chases a woman, but she
                         now carries a plate of food and drink. Next door, a woman
                         with a rolling pin chases a pirate who filched a ham. But
                         there's still a sign that says: "Take a wench for a bride."

                         The Jungle Cruise doesn't have skippers who reach for hand
                         guns to fire a few blanks at the hippos. They don't even shoot
                         into the air to scare them.

                         Changes were made in spring and reported in Monday's Los
                         Angeles Times. Curiously remaining are a gun-wielding
                         gorilla and indigenous people carrying shrunken heads and
                         apparently preparing to attack tourists.

                         "The fact of the matter is, we have to be responsive to what 
our guests tell us," said
                         Disneyland spokesman Ray Gomez. "At the end of the day, they 
come here to
                         experience what they want to experience, not stuff they might 
find out of place or out
                         of date. ... Anecdotes, jokes and actions that were funny or 
exciting then may not
                         resonate now."

                         Other changes made to coincide with modern sensibilities 
include removal of violent
                         video games after the deadly 1999 shooting at a Colorado 
school.

                         This year, souvenir muskets and antique-style guns, once a 
Frontierland staple, were
                         yanked. In January, after a girl had part of a finger pulled 
off when it caught in a toy
                         rifle on Tom Sawyer Island, the rifles were removed.

                         Parkgoer John Vallejo, 39, of Anaheim said the changes were 
ridiculous.

                         "It does nothing. It's caving in to pressure," he said.

                         But others liked the changes.

                         "That's better," said Karla Jervis, 35, of Ohio, who rode the 
Jungle Cruise for the first
                         time. "I wouldn't have taken the kids on the ride if it had 
guns. I don't even buy toy
                         guns."

                         Debbie Leahy, a spokeswoman for People for the Ethical 
Treatment of Animals, also
                         applauded Disney's changes.

                         "I don't think somebody would find it funny," Leahy said. 
"It's not humorous. It's really a
                         form of animal cruelty."

                         Jamie O'Boyle, a Philadelphia-based cultural analyst who has 
studied Disneyland, said
                         the changes are in tune with mainstream thinking.

                         "As society's views change, the social message changes," 
O'Boyle said. "New
                         generations grow up with new ideas. This is the way society 
evolves its norms and
                         Disney has to reflect that."

                         In six months, only 10 people have lodged formal complaints.

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