Sunday, April 8

Three eggs: purple, yellow and green

Yesterday, Sydney took part in her first Easter egg hunt! She found three eggs, all by herself (not really, but we tell told her that). She was a good girl at Nicci's parents' party, enjoying watching the other kids run around, digging the balloons blowing in the breeze, and sitting quietly (not screaming) on the lap of the Easter Bunny. It was our first family outing, and we had a great time!
I hope that you all are having a good Easter! I'm watching The Office, my kid is sleeping, Brian is off picking us up some lunch, and the sun is shining. All in all, it's a good holiday.

I love it when Disney makes me happier that I have stock in the company, and that I have such a giddy history with them. Witness this article on today's CNN.com:
Disney lets gays and lesbians have fairy tale wedding
Same-sex couples who want to exchange vows in front of Cinderella's Castle now have the chance. The Walt Disney Co. had limited its Fairy Tale Wedding program to couples with valid marriage licenses, but it is now making ceremonies at its parks available to gay couples as well.
"We believe this change is consistent with Disney's long-standing policy of welcoming every guest in an inclusive environment," Disney Parks and Resorts spokesman Donn Walker said Friday. "We want everyone who comes to celebrate a special occasion at Disney to feel welcome and respected."
The company said it made the change after being contacted by a gay couple who wanted to use the wedding service, which offers ceremonies at Disneyland in California, Walt Disney World Resort in Florida and Disney's cruise ships. The service offers flowers, dining, music and many optional Disney touches, from ceremonies in front of the parks' iconic attractions to having Mickey and Minnie Mouse in formal wear as guests. The packages start at $8,000 and can cost more than $45,000.
Groups not affiliated with Disney have held annual "gay days" celebrations at Disney parks for years. Company officials have taken a tolerant attitude to the weekend, allowing party promoters to rent out parks after hours and rebuffing religious groups that condemned Disney. In 2005, Southern Baptists ended an eight-year boycott of the Walt Disney Co. for violating "moral righteousness and traditional family values."

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

There or no family values anymore!

Anonymous said...

I would say that "family values" has more meaning than a man and a woman being married. Family is whatever someone wants it to be, regardless of gender and sexual orientation. It's great that Disney recognizes that.