12 VIP experiences actually worth the money
Posted by staff / July 26, 2013 Chicago CubsDisney WorldDisney World Premium VIP Tourprivate VIP eventCNN asked, “where and when does it pay to go VIP?”
They have compiled a list of 12 VIP experiences but broken them down by type – for example, wildlife, theme parks, sporting events.
There are a dozen VIP experiences that they recommend, if money is no object. Here’s a bit on a couple of them:
Disney World
The Disney World Premium VIP Tour (from $315) is about as close to that parallel universe as it gets in the Magic Kingdom, Epcot and beyond.
The package includes a door-to-door resort guide overseeing your own personally customized, multipark itinerary — with all the line-skipping, special-seating and headache-saving that groups of up to 10 can pack into six hours.
Wrigley Field
The Wrigley Field Experience (from $25,000) for a private VIP event.
Then the hallowed home of the Chicago Cubs, the nation’s second-oldest ballpark, is yours for the experiencing at home-plate level.Customized events let you tour “The Friendly Confines,” play ball right on the field with accompanying scoreboard and sound system, and even take batting practice with legends of the game.
Will they play the Seventh Inning Stretch song for you? You bet.
Private VIP dining – in the air. Like, up in the air suspended by a crane
You can get the “private room” VIP treatment with great city views at any lofty restaurant worth its African salt-crusted sea bass.
But for the real gravity-defying haute dining experience you have to lose the walls, the floor and the windows and do Dinner in the Sky — a singular multicourse dining adventure that seats you and your closest 21 VIP friends or business associates at a table suspended up to 18 stories high by a specialized crane and equipment.
Developed by Europe-based Events in the Sky, the U.S.-authorized experience can be set up in virtually any 100-foot by 50-foot space accessible by a large truck.
For the other fabulous VIP experiences, see here: CNN.
Photo credit: Texelart – Fotolia.com
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