Why is Disney Selling ‘Fake’ Twilight Zone Tower of Terror Merchandise?

Shannen Ace

A store display features various themed T-shirts, hats, and plush toys. Customers are browsing the merchandise.

Why is Disney Selling ‘Fake’ Twilight Zone Tower of Terror Merchandise?

Walt Disney World is selling mysteriously non-branded, third-party Tower of Terror merchandise.

Fake Tower of Terror Merchandise

A store display features various themed T-shirts, hats, and plush toys. Customers are browsing the merchandise.

Though third-party merchandise is common at Disney Parks, it’s not usually based specifically on an attraction. Third-party items are usually clothing or souvenirs that one might also find at Target, Walmart, or tourist-area shops. You can also find generic pirate merchandise in the Pirates of the Caribbean gift shop, and generic Mount Everest merchandise in the Serka Zone Bazaar at Disney’s Animal Kingdom. These new items, however, are obviously directly based on The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror, yet don’t state the name of the ride or feature any actual ride imagery.

There are shirts, a hoodie, and ball caps, made by different manufacturers. We couldn’t find the items available online from another seller, but it’s also unclear if they were commissioned by Disney. They have the manufacturer’s tags instead of Disney Parks labels.

They feature references to Sunset Boulevard, the 13th floor, and the year 1939, but no mention of the Hollywood Tower Hotel. The designs of the elevator doors, floor indicator, and buttons are different from the actual attraction. The primary reason you would know this is Tower of Terror merchandise is because it’s in the Tower of Terror gift shop.

The merchandise isn’t a cohesive collection, though some items feature similar designs or references. Their arrival comes with a restock of the bellhop Stitch plush, which is actually branded with the “HTH” Hollywood Tower Hotel logo.

When we walk into an attraction gift shop, we expect to see actual branded merchandise for the ride we just rode, not vague references. So why is Disney ordering and selling merchandise for a ride without including their own IP on it? This seems like something an independent fan or an Etsy designer might make, not the owner of the property.

Red t-shirt hanging on a rack with the text "The Ride of Your Life" printed in white.
$29.99

A few years ago, Disney started to stray away from merchandise featuring the name Twilight Zone Tower of Terror. Since then, items have usually been branded for the Hollywood Tower Hotel, seemingly to avoid CBS licensing fees related to “The Twilight Zone.”

There is a real Hollywood Tower in Los Angeles, which partially inspired the look of the ride. Maybe the real Hollywood Tower decided they didn’t like their name becoming more strongly associated with the drop ride, but that seems weird to enact 30 years after the attraction opened.

A maroon hoodie with "Lucky 13 Elevator Company" hangs on display. Surrounding it are plush toys in blue, stacked on shelves.
$54.99

As for supply issues, it’s possible Disney was running out of Tower of Terror merchandise and had to rush these items to fill the store. But why would that happen?

Neither answer explains why Disney wouldn’t put any Disney Parks branding on the items. We don’t think this is indicative of a trend of Disney making cheap unbranded merchandise, but it is odd. Or maybe it’s worse than it seems and the art on these products is AI generated…

The answer may be lost somewhere in the 5th Dimension, but this particular merchandise decision remains one of the most bizarre in the entire history of Walt Disney World.

What do you think? Let us know in the comments.

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5 thoughts on “Why is Disney Selling ‘Fake’ Twilight Zone Tower of Terror Merchandise?”

  1. This is an indication that Disney is trying to navigate around having any Disney-branded items approved prior to production. If the items were Disney-branded, then they would have to send off samples of the products to their legal or copyright departments to make sure that they pass all design requirements for copyrighted images. With no Disney-branded logo on these, production samples don’t have to be sent off; thus, they can get the products made faster by the vendors. Also, since these items contain no Disney-branding, the vendor’s factories don’t have to pass Disney’s audit standards for their factories. Thus, lower factory standards can enable Disney to get the merchandise produced and delivered quicker.

    Reply
  2. So because Disney is giving credit to the company that did the actual production of the item, it’s fake? Y’all are twisted with this take. It’s neat to see Disney crediting the company that made the product because it allows the company to get more business. Having googled it, Fahrenheit Headwear for example is a custom hat wholesaler, and by having their logo on the hat, people who like the quality of the hat and are looking to order a wholesale design can look up the company. This is actually a surprisingly positive move on Disney’s part because normally they like to take credit for everything even though we know they don’t manufacture everything in house.

    There’s also absolutely nothing wrong with subtle merchandise that doesn’t scream the attraction name and slap the logo on it. A lot of people prefer that actually, there’s a whole niche for it. These are fun nods to theming that Disney usually ignores because it leans heavily on recognizable icons and logos. The one valid point is that it’s a little weird that the elevator door and floor indicator doesn’t match the attraction. I will give you that one. But I’m not sure how Sunset Boulevard (the name of the land) and mentioning elevators is considered a vague reference.

    Reply
  3. You should see the dinosaur gift shop. Literally all non attraction generic Dino merch. So sad when I really wanted Dinosaur ride merch to say goodbye!!

    Reply

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