Disneyland Resort in Anaheim, California, has spent generations building a reputation as the world's premier operator of themed entertainment. Central to that brand is a strict corporate commitment to guest safety and theatrical illusion. When a high-profile ride experiences a technical glitch, standard operating procedures dictate that riders remain securely seated inside their vehicles until trained Cast Members arrive to guide them out safely.

However, a highly unusual and deeply unsettling operational failure completely shattered that decades-old safety playbook.
During an unexpected breakdown at the iconic Haunted Mansion, stranded riders were subjected to an unscripted, real-world scare. Rather than hearing the comforting, pre-recorded voice of the “Ghost Host” asking them to remain seated, guests were startled by an overhead intercom announcement telling them to abandon their vehicles and find their own way out of the attraction. The resulting chaotic self-evacuation has ignited a wave of criticism across the digital theme park community, calling into question Disney’s emergency protocols.
Breakdown in the Dark: The “On Your Own” Incident
The failure occurred on a high-traffic afternoon when a localized system error caused the continuous Omnimover conveyor track to halt abruptly. Instead of a temporary pause, the show lights flickered completely to life, and a live operator's voice blared over the intercom, instructing passengers to manually unlatch their protective lap bars, exit their vehicles, and locate the nearest building exit entirely on their own.

This unprecedented command created an immediate physical hurdle for families stuck inside the dark ride. The Haunted Mansion's custom “Doom Buggies” feature a mechanical clamshell lap bar that locks passengers in place during the journey. Because Cast Members were completely absent from the floor to execute a standard tool-assisted release, guests were forced to take matters into their own hands. Eyewitness reports indicate that startled riders had to pry open the tight clamshell doors and force their way out, stepping onto the track to help free children and elderly passengers in neighboring vehicles.
Social Media Firestorm: @disneyspaces Exposes the Lights-On Chaos
The surreal reality of an unescorted, self-directed evacuation quickly spread across social media. A highly viral video clip shared on X (formerly Twitter) by the prominent theme park platform @disneyspaces showcased the complete breakdown of standard operating procedures.
The footage revealed a completely unguided crowd of tourists wandering through the attraction's most famous show environments. With the bright work lights turned on, the illusion of the afterlife instantly vanished, exposing bare black drywall, unpainted plywood structural backing, and heavy electrical wiring grids.
The footage uploaded by @disneyspaces highlighted dozens of guests stepping directly onto the active conveyor track, carefully squeezing past frozen, silent audio-animatronics. Tourists were documented walking past the floating head of Madame Leota in her seance room and pacing along the perimeter of the grand ballroom scene, without a single Disney employee in sight to manage the flow or point out emergency escape doors.
Veteran Imagineer Jim Shull Sounds the Alarm
The public relations crisis surrounding the self-evacuation intensified dramatically when prominent theme park veterans began evaluating the footage. Most notably, retired Walt Disney Imagineer Jim Shull took to his official X account to voice immense concern over the operational breach.
Shull, who dedicated over thirty years to designing world-class experiences for Walt Disney Imagineering globally, explicitly questioned why the park's management completely bypassed standard, staff-guided evacuation steps. From an architectural and mechanical engineering standpoint, allowing untrained guests to walk freely on an unshielded Omnimover track poses a severe safety threat.
An Omnimover track is a continuous, heavy steel chain conveyor drive. If a secondary computer glitch or an accidental manual override suddenly caused the track to jolt back to life while hundreds of tourists were balancing on the narrow path, the risk of catastrophic injuries or falls would be high. Furthermore, the Haunted Mansion features deep drop-offs, hidden stairwells, fragile theatrical scrims, and exposed high-voltage mechanisms just inches away from the ride path. By telling guests to “fend for themselves,” the park created a massive, unnecessary safety hazard.
Why This Violates Disney Protocol
The safety warnings outlined by Jim Shull were quickly validated by a wave of former Disney Cast Members—particularly those who previously wore the servant attire of the Haunted Mansion’s host crew. Across various theme park forums, former operational employees expressed deep shock at the intercom directive.

According to Disney's standard operating procedures, a full dark ride evacuation is supposed to be a highly controlled, zone-by-zone operation. The track is divided into distinct sections. When a park supervisor approves an evacuation, Cast Members must walk the track in pairs using specialized foot-pedal keys to unlock each Doom Buggy one by one. They are trained to deliver clear spoken directions, assist guests down safely, and physically walk them along stable, designated evacuation paths out the nearest emergency exit.
Instructing a crowded theater of paying parkgoers over a generic loudspeaker to manage their own exit breaks the most fundamental rules of Disney’s core safety training. While Disneyland officials subsequently confirmed that all guests ultimately exited the building safely without any reported physical injuries, the structural damage to Disney's premium brand identity remains significant. Forcing families to pry open their own locking ride vehicles and navigate an unlit, industrial backstage environment entirely on their own is a massive departure from the magical, premium care Disney promises.



