When MuppetVision 3-D* closed last year, most fans assumed that was the end of the story. The beloved attraction, which had entertained guests at Disney’s Hollywood Studios for decades, shut down quietly to make room for the park’s next major expansion: Monsters, Inc. Land.
No farewell event.
No final celebration.
Just construction walls and a future promised.

But months later, Disney fans have stumbled upon something unexpected — a hidden remnant of the closed attraction still circulating inside the park.
And it is hiding in plain sight.
Guests riding Toy Story Midway Mania recently noticed something unusual in the bins of 3-D glasses. Mixed among the standard orange frames were light purple glasses that looked strangely familiar. For longtime visitors, recognition came quickly. These were the same frames once used exclusively inside MuppetVision 3-D*.
Not replicas.
Not themed variants.
The originals.
After the attraction closed, those glasses briefly became something of a cult collectible. Some guests reportedly took them as souvenirs during the final days of operation, while others speculated that Disney would archive or dispose of the remaining stock.
Instead, Disney did what it often does best: reused them.
From a purely operational standpoint, the decision is logical. 3-D glasses are expensive to produce, and Disney has a long history of recycling ride equipment when attractions close. In past years, frames from shuttered 3-D shows have quietly resurfaced at newer attractions.
But for fans, this moment feels more meaningful than that.

MuppetVision 3-D* was not an attraction that faded away. It was removed deliberately to make room for a major land transformation. Monsters, Inc. Land is now under construction where Muppets Courtyard once stood, and when it opens, that entire section of Hollywood Studios will be fundamentally different.
Very little will remain to mark what came before.
Which is why this small discovery resonates.
Those purple frames now cycle through Toy Story Midway Mania every day, handed to guests who may have no idea where they came from. For most, they are just another piece of ride equipment. But for fans who recognize them, they are a quiet reminder of an attraction that once anchored this park.
There is no sign explaining their history.
No acknowledgment from Disney.
No official tribute.
Just an artifact from a closed show, repurposed and released back into the wild.
It also highlights how Disney manages the past. Attractions rarely receive formal goodbyes. They disappear, are replaced, and slowly fade from memory. What survives are fragments — reused props, repainted walls, equipment that moves from one story to another.
Meanwhile, Monsters, Inc. Land continues to rise, promising a suspended family coaster inspired by the door vault chase from Monsters, Inc. (2001) along with new attractions and themed environments. When it opens, few physical traces of the Muppets will remain in this corner of the park.
Except, perhaps, for a pair of purple glasses.
In a park built on storytelling, that may be the most subtle kind of tribute Disney ever offers — not a memorial, not a farewell, but a quiet continuation of something fans thought was gone for good.



