Disney’s Hollywood Studios turned into a midnight rock arena as the last riders roared through Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster Starring Aerosmith, ending a 27-year streak and teeing up a Muppets rebrand that will wipe the ’90s riff from the park’s skyline.
The Send-Off Disney Didn’t Advertise—And Fans Still Crashed the Gates
By sunrise on March 1, the standby line spilled past Baseline Taphouse and snaked toward Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge. A viral TikTok clip shows a Disney cast member radioing for backup after failing to locate the end of a queue estimated at four hours plus. The park never issued an official farewell celebration, yet die-hards arrived in custom Aerosmith tour shirts, blasting “Walk This Way” from bluetooth speakers to create their own final preshow.
A 32,000-Watt Time Capsule—Why This Coaster Mattered
- Opened July 29, 1999, as the first Disney coaster to feature in-ride audio synced to onboard amplifiers—a tech leap that later influenced Expedition Everest and Guardians of the Galaxy coasters.
- Only place in the world where riders heard exclusive remixes—Aerosmith re-cut “Love in an Elevator” into “Love in a Roller Coaster” just for the attraction.
- Became a Hollywood Studios anchor, pulling capacity crowds during Star Wars construction lulls and maintaining sub-30-minute waits on peak days even in 2025.
The Quiet Demolition Started in December—Pre-Show First to Go
Disney yanked the Aerosmith preshow video—where the band summons guests to a cross-town gig—overnight without announcement in December 2025, boarding up the screening room with plywood. That move previewed today’s full closure and confirmed internal plans to purge licensed IP in favor of Disney-owned Muppets properties, a cost-saving shift that mirrors the wider parks strategy of reducing royalty payments.
Muppets Take the Mixing Board—What’s Replacing the Riff
Expected reopening: summer 2026. Riders will still launch from a recording studio, but the narrative flips to Dr. Teeth and the Electric Mayhem racing Muppet Theater. Early concept art revealed in Entertainment Weekly shows Scooter hustling guests into a super-stretch limo shaped like Animal’s drum kit. The 32-track speaker system remains—Disney confirms the same 125-speaker, 14-subwoofer, 32,000-watt array—only now blasting a funk medley arranged by Disney Legend Paul Williams.
Fan Economy in Real Time—Resale Merch Explodes
On Mercari, limited Aerosmith guitar pick sets handed to riders on closing day jumped from $18 retail to $160 within six hours. eBay listings for 1999 grand-opening pins closed at $250+ per pin. Disney’s own Shop Parks app sold out of “I Survived the Last Ride” tees—printed overnight for cast members—prompting an internal email acknowledging “unprecedented demand for legacy attraction merchandise.”
Band Reaction—Tom Hamilton’s Midnight Goodbye
Aerosmith bassist Tom Hamilton flew in unannounced January 28 for a covert final ride, posting on Instagram: “Huge thanks to the amazing cast members for the warmth, hospitality and respect for what this moment means.” Disney security held back crowds after word leaked; Hamilton exited through a backstage corridor waving to fans chanting “Dream On.”
Why Disney Is Erasing the ’90s—Royalty-Free Is the New FastPass
The switch saves Disney an estimated $3 million annual licensing fee to Aerosmith and clears the way for synergy with Disney+ Muppets content. With Epic Universe opening 2027, Disney’s IP consolidation strategy prioritizes properties it wholly owns, ensuring every merch dollar stays in-house. Expect more legacy attractions—especially those using outside music acts—to get similar Muppet-style makeovers before the Universal rival debuts.
Lasting Legacy—How a Parking-Lot Coaster Changed the Theme Park Game
Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster proved indoor launched coasters could anchor entire lands, influencing Universal’s Revenge of the Mummy and Disney’s Tron Lightcycle. Its tight 200-by-70-foot footprint became a textbook case for shoe-horning E-ticket thrills into shrinking urban parks. Even as guitars come down, every scream in that dark tunnel still echoes in coaster design studios worldwide.
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