They look appropriately ant-like, with shadows. Now compare it to the images in Epcot (some of which were taken, as pointed out to me on Twitter, during a marathon). It looks like a clumsy artist’s attempt at a princess in a dress. Check out the smudge standing in the street in the upper right detail of this image. The people are too big and unlike most places on Google’s Satellite View, they lack shadows. Disney’s razor-precise crowd control measures would never permit it. What’s more, the people have been allowed to block the entrance to Main Street, USA. You often have to line up nearly an hour ahead of time to get a decent view. Anyone who has been to Disney World knows the crowds at the parade can be six deep. There is practically no one at the park, and a thin bare line of people watching the floats. (Update: One commenter, below, has a suggestion for how this float configuration, at least, might have occurred.) That may be because the images were taken at different moments and the grafted together, but there is still a big problem, because of other oddities. Here, there are no further floats on Main Street, USA until you get down to Town Square. In real life, floats pack together, with lots of dancers between them, and with no large gaps. Here, the floats go round and round the entire Hub as if it’s a carousel. Normally, the enter the Hub from the bridge at 10 o’clock, travel clockwise, and exit at 6 o’clock. Why?Ĭheck out the configuration of the parade. What’s the deal with these bird’s-eye photos of Disney’s Magic Kingdom in Orlando, Florida? They appear on Google Maps when you zoom in and click “Satellite.” They seem fabricated. Posted Maby Jason Cochran & filed under Blog. Are Disney’s Magic Kingdom Google Maps images fake?
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