Disneyland continues to be the 'Tragic Kingdom' as long as it fails to pay workers a living wage - Los Angeles Times
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Readers React: Disneyland continues to be the ‘Tragic Kingdom’ as long as it fails to pay workers a living wage

Visitors walk toward Sleeping Beauty's Castle at Disneyland in 2015.
(Jae C. Hong / Associated Press)
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To the editor: My very first day on the job at Disneyland, 18 years old and proudly wearing my costume (I was a Wild West saloon girl), I learned that my fellow “cast members†called it the “Tragic Kingdom.†Why, I asked. You’ll find out, they said.

Later, I auditioned for the “Kids of the Kingdom†show and was excited to be chosen, but then I discovered that the four-week rehearsal period was called a “workshop.†Translation: There was no pay. I declined.

For Disneyland spokeswoman Suzi Brown to say that Sen. Bernie Sanders is speaking in favor of workers seeking a living wage in order to “keep himself in the headlines†not only shows her ignorance of the man, but it is also a lame defense of the corporation’s focus on the bottom line to the detriment of the people who make Disney what it is.

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Eileen Flaxman, Claremont

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To the editor: I am not the biggest Sanders supporter, but I understood his point last Friday after being gifted two tickets to Disneyland from a supervisor who couldn’t attend on that particular day.

I was astonished to see that the parking fee was $20. I casually asked the parking attendant if she earned $20 an hour since there were at least 100 cars behind us; she laughed and said, “No, ma’am.â€

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I find it terrible that a corporation as large as Disney does not pay its employees the amount it charges the public to self-park. Shame on Disney for not paying its workers their fair share of the millions it profits every day it is in business.

Elisa Perez, West Covina

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