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Send us a textWhat happens when one Dalmatian puppy decides he's too unique for the pack? Patch's London Adventure explores that very question—plus Nanny's failure as a babysitter, Cruella antics, and Thunderbolt's confidence in improv. Andrea and Ryan are here to break down this straight-to-video sequel and decide if it deserves its spot in the Disney sequel hall of fame (if that exists).Follow us @disneyinsideoutpodcast
Hey everybody! In today's episode, hang out with the Reillys as they chat about Disney shutting down the Disney Movie Club! Do you think DVDs should stick around, or are you all about streaming? Let us know at our instagram @mickeyandthemousepod We hope you enjoy!
Volunteers for Mars habitat needed… United flight diverted / wing issues… Boeing 737 Max head gets the boot… TRANSISTION: oc: helps 9:32 ish… Bezos sells some stock… A look at Lotto… FTC will be busy: Disney DVD deal / Capitol One buying Discover / Universal Music buys Chord / Buzzfeed sells Complex… Another strike possibly coming / IATSE… chewingthefat@theblaze.com New mini series could come / Who TF Did I Marry?!?... TRANSISTION: oc: dot com 24:27 ish… Who Died Today: Ewen Macintosh 50… www.blazetv.com/jeffy Promo code: Jeffy… Commander the dog shipped off… TRANSISTION: oc: never know 32:36 ish… NBA sets a scoring record… Mpox at Philly elementary school… FDA okays allergen medication that might work?... Joke of the Day from Jay… Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this What's On Disney Plus Podcast episode, Roger discusses some of today's biggest Disney+ news, including: Disney Makes New Deal With Sony To Distribute DVD/Blu-Ray/4K Discs What's Coming To Disney+ In May 2024 (US) Fubo TV Suing Disney, Warner Brothers Discovery & Fox Over New Sports Streaming Service Question Of The Day You can subscribe to our podcasts on many different platforms, including Apple, YouTube, Podbean and Spotify. If you enjoy our podcast, please consider supporting it via our Patreon or as a YouTube Channel Membership from as little as $2 a month and get access to exclusive content and much more. What did you think of today's Disney+ news? Let us know on social media!
In this What's On Disney Plus Podcast episode, Roger discusses some of today's biggest Disney+ news, including: Disney Makes New Deal With Sony To Distribute DVD/Blu-Ray/4K Discs What's Coming To Disney+ In May 2024 (US) Fubo TV Suing Disney, Warner Brothers Discovery & Fox Over New Sports Streaming Service Question Of The Day You can subscribe to our podcasts on many different platforms, including Apple, YouTube, Podbean and Spotify. If you enjoy our podcast, please consider supporting it via our Patreon or as a YouTube Channel Membership from as little as $2 a month and get access to exclusive content and much more. What did you think of today's Disney+ news? Let us know on social media!
In this What's On Disney Plus Podcast episode, Roger discusses some of today's biggest Disney+ news, including: Disney Makes New Deal With Sony To Distribute DVD/Blu-Ray/4K Discs What's Coming To Disney+ In May 2024 (US) Fubo TV Suing Disney, Warner Brothers Discovery & Fox Over New Sports Streaming Service Question Of The Day You can subscribe to our podcasts on many different platforms, including Apple, YouTube, Podbean and Spotify. If you enjoy our podcast, please consider supporting it via our Patreon or as a YouTube Channel Membership from as little as $2 a month and get access to exclusive content and much more. What did you think of today's Disney+ news? Let us know on social media!
For Video Edition, Please Click and Subscribe Here: https://youtu.be/_ftG3os0yko Guy Stroman has directed acclaimed productions of The Glass Menagerie, Driving Miss Daisy and Love Letters, all starring Sandy Duncan; The King and I, starring Lou Diamond Phillips (Best Production – Ft. Worth Star Telegram); Twelfth Night – Cleveland Playhouse; Man of La Mancha (Audience Favorite – California Musical Theatre); Steel Magnolias, with June Squibb and Sally Struthers; 1776 (Best Director – Dallas-Ft. Worth Theatre Critics Forum). He has also directed: Art, The Lion in Winter, Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, Joe Orton's Loot (Top Ten Production – Pittsburgh Post Gazette), Boeing, Boeing, The 39 Steps The Gin Game, Ray Cooney farces Caught in the Net and Funny Money, and most recently, Lewis Black's One Slight Hitch. Guy's musical productions include Mame, Oliver, Johnny Cash's Ring of Fire, Murder for Two, Smoke on the Mountain, and directing/choreographing numerous long- running productions of Forever Plaid and it's Christmas version, Plaid Tidings, including the opening productions of new theatres in Pittsburgh, Sacramento, Charlotte and Schenectady. Guy originated the role of Frankie in the original production of Forever Plaid in New York, London's West End, and Los Angeles, where he won best acting awards from the L.A. Drama Critics and Drama-Logue. He can be heard on that original cast album, as well as on the recordings Unsung Sondheim, Girl Crazy, The Busby Berkley Album, the London recording of The Most Happy Fella, and the Disney DVD of Aladdin and the King of Thieves. His latest projects include the musical production of Just Laugh, for the new Ken Davenport Festival, and David Dean Bottrell Makes Love-A One Man Show.
I don't have a plan. Things have kinda shifted around this last few weeks greatly effecting not only the movie industry but the world, thanks to COVID-19. So, the Gone With The Win crew are let off the leash as they discuss what they have been watching during social distancing and self-quarantine. Plus, hear Manning rant about Brosnan's James Bond!! Take a sneak peak into our daily lives without any agenda. Disney DVD opening - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8SsW91e8qP8 Follow the CREW: Abraham "El Jefe" Flores - http://twitter.com/AbrahamF25 Malcolm Lay - http://twitter.com/Malkore Manning Franks - http://twitter.com/Cine_Mann Ryan McKenna - http://twitter.com/Rmckenna19
Aloha, Cousin! Did you ever think to yourself, “Hey if Stitch is experiment #626, just what exactly happened to the other 625 experiments?” Yeah, us neither. We just kind of assumed that they succumbed to a fiery heat death like any other good failed experiment, but maybe evil space scientists do things just a bit differently. So please, join the Dunces while we go over the preamble to the hit animated television show, Lilo & Stitch: The Series, that sparked the japanimated Stitch!, which inevitably leads to the Chinese produced, Stitch & Ai. For your listening pleasure, it's the made for TV special, Direct-to-VHS-and-Disney-DVD feature, Stitch! The Movie!
Yes, we all know about the tale as old as time, song as old as rhyme, blah blah blah blah blah, but did you know these thirteen things about disney's animated Beauty and the Beast? So be our guest as we seperate man from monster and distract you from this subtly creepy kidnapping tale. Angela Lansbury, the voice of Mrs. Potts, thought that another character would be better suited to sing the ballad "Beauty and the Beast". The director asked her to make at least one recording to have for a backup if nothing else worked, and that one recording ended up in the film. The majority of the sculptures seen in the castle are different earlier versions of the Beast. In the 1930s and again in the 1950s, Walt Disney attempted to adapt Beauty and the Beast (1991) into a feature but could not come up with a suitable treatment, so the project was shelved. It wasn't until The Little Mermaid (1989) became hugely successful that they decided to try it a third time. In Gabrielle-Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve's "The Story of Beauty and the Beast," - the original version of the tale - the prince was not turned into a beast for being selfish and unloving, but because he refused to marry his evil fairy godmother. The smoke seen during the transformation at the end is actually real smoke, not animated. It was originally used in The Black Cauldron (1985) and was re-used for Beauty and the Beast. Many scenes were storyboarded but never animated. Those include a scene where Gaston visits the asylum and a scene where the Beast is seen dragging the carcass of an animal he killed. Both were considered too gruesome for the film and the ideas were dropped. However, an animal's skeleton can just barely be seen in the corner shadows of the West Wing. Jackie Chan performed the voice acting and singing for the Beast in the Chinese (Mandarin) dub of the film. By the time Alan Menken and Howard Ashman won an Academy Award for Best Original Song, Ashman had already died. Ashman's longtime romantic partner, Bill Lauch, accepted the award on his behalf. HIDDEN MICKEY: At seperate moments in the film, there are 3 droplets of water, a trio of stones, and three circles that appear in the snow that form the Classic Mickey head. The role of Cogsworth was written specifically with John Cleese in mind but he turned it down. Computer technology was considered for the rooftop fight and the forest chase, but the primitive state of the technology only allowed time to use it for the ballroom scene. The film was previewed at the New York Film Festival in September 1991 in a "Work-In-Progress" format. Approximately 70% of the footage was the final color animation. The other 30% consisted of storyboard reels, rough animation pencil tests, clean-up animation pencil tests, and computer animation tests of the ballroom sequence. According to producer Don Hahn, the audience gave the film a strong, overwhelming standing ovation. In 2001 to commemorate the 10th anniversary of Beauty and the Beast, they added an extra seven minutes to the final film which included a scene where the Castle is preparing for the dinner and dance. The Disney productions got all the original animating and drawing group to complete this scene, which is available to watch on the 2001 Disney DVD and VHS, and any further re release onward. Beauty and the Beast (1991) G | 1h 24min | Animation, Family, Fantasy | 22 November 1991 (USA) A prince cursed to spend his days as a hideous monster sets out to regain his humanity by earning a young woman's love. Directors: Gary Trousdale, Kirk Wise Writers: Linda Woolverton (animation screenplay by), Brenda Chapman (story by) Stars: Paige O'Hara, Robby Benson, Jesse Corti
Yes, we all know about the tale as old as time, song as old as rhyme, blah blah blah blah blah, but did you know these thirteen things about disney's animated Beauty and the Beast? So be our guest as we seperate man from monster and distract you from this subtly creepy kidnapping tale. Angela Lansbury, the voice of Mrs. Potts, thought that another character would be better suited to sing the ballad "Beauty and the Beast". The director asked her to make at least one recording to have for a backup if nothing else worked, and that one recording ended up in the film. The majority of the sculptures seen in the castle are different earlier versions of the Beast. In the 1930s and again in the 1950s, Walt Disney attempted to adapt Beauty and the Beast (1991) into a feature but could not come up with a suitable treatment, so the project was shelved. It wasn't until The Little Mermaid (1989) became hugely successful that they decided to try it a third time. In Gabrielle-Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve's "The Story of Beauty and the Beast," - the original version of the tale - the prince was not turned into a beast for being selfish and unloving, but because he refused to marry his evil fairy godmother. The smoke seen during the transformation at the end is actually real smoke, not animated. It was originally used in The Black Cauldron (1985) and was re-used for Beauty and the Beast. Many scenes were storyboarded but never animated. Those include a scene where Gaston visits the asylum and a scene where the Beast is seen dragging the carcass of an animal he killed. Both were considered too gruesome for the film and the ideas were dropped. However, an animal's skeleton can just barely be seen in the corner shadows of the West Wing. Jackie Chan performed the voice acting and singing for the Beast in the Chinese (Mandarin) dub of the film. By the time Alan Menken and Howard Ashman won an Academy Award for Best Original Song, Ashman had already died. Ashman's longtime romantic partner, Bill Lauch, accepted the award on his behalf. HIDDEN MICKEY: At seperate moments in the film, there are 3 droplets of water, a trio of stones, and three circles that appear in the snow that form the Classic Mickey head. The role of Cogsworth was written specifically with John Cleese in mind but he turned it down. Computer technology was considered for the rooftop fight and the forest chase, but the primitive state of the technology only allowed time to use it for the ballroom scene. The film was previewed at the New York Film Festival in September 1991 in a "Work-In-Progress" format. Approximately 70% of the footage was the final color animation. The other 30% consisted of storyboard reels, rough animation pencil tests, clean-up animation pencil tests, and computer animation tests of the ballroom sequence. According to producer Don Hahn, the audience gave the film a strong, overwhelming standing ovation. In 2001 to commemorate the 10th anniversary of Beauty and the Beast, they added an extra seven minutes to the final film which included a scene where the Castle is preparing for the dinner and dance. The Disney productions got all the original animating and drawing group to complete this scene, which is available to watch on the 2001 Disney DVD and VHS, and any further re release onward. Beauty and the Beast (1991) G | 1h 24min | Animation, Family, Fantasy | 22 November 1991 (USA) A prince cursed to spend his days as a hideous monster sets out to regain his humanity by earning a young woman's love. Directors: Gary Trousdale, Kirk Wise Writers: Linda Woolverton (animation screenplay by), Brenda Chapman (story by) Stars: Paige O'Hara, Robby Benson, Jesse Corti
On this week's Friday with Friends episode, Sarah Evans is filling in for Jonathan Dichter again and joining us for a previously recorded Facebook Live streaming broadcast. We'll share Disney-related topics posted by our listeners on our Facebook page and answer questions from our viewers watching the live stream. This week, we share a review on the Blu-Ray edition of "Saludos Amigos/The Three Caballeros", talk about bonus content on Disney DVD's and digital downloads, more Epcot attraction music, and more.
(((HEADPHONES STRONGLY RECOMMENDED))) This week, the Mouse Lounge explores what its like to have very little brain, which honestly isn’t all that different from most days. Before we delve into this episode’s theme of stuff n fluff, we take in part two of three of a very special feature. Back in 2006, yours truly sat in on a Walt Disney World Audition Workshop. It was an intense couple of hours of enthusiastic performers needing a reality check and casting directors there to provide it, all in the spirit of better preparing those auditioning so they could earn one of the coveted performing spots. Whether you’re a performer a not, enjoy an inside glimpse at what it takes to audition for Walt Disney World. In From the Vault we sample a clip from a classic Disney film, short, television or radio program, or Disneyland Record. Before Disney made their now classic films, several audio interpretations of the Pooh stories were made. Some thirty years after the book’s initial publication, RCA’s Little Nipper series released an Upside Down record, which had a story on each side. We feature here, Winnie the Pooh and the Heffalump, narrated by Jimmy Stewart. Be sure to go to the Mouse Lounge multimedia page to listen to the flip side of the record, Winnie the Pooh and Tigger. Next, from the Disney DVD, the Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, have a listen to a brief history of Winnie the Pooh. Next, sidle up to the Mickey Bar, as Liana and I fling a little Pooh of our own. I even sing a few bars. Don’t be scared. Meet Paul Winchell. Listen to the voice of Tigger tell his story in this wonderful interview with BBC Scotland in 2004, just a year before Paul passed away. From the Disneyland Attraction Archives: In 2005, Disney released the comprehensive, Musical History of Disneyland. Among the tracks are two absolute gems I’ll play for you here: The queue music, When the Rain Rain Rain came Down Down Down, and the attraction music itself, without most of the character vocal tracks and sound effects. Each show we present a high definition ride-through from a Disney Park East or a Disney Park West. This week we serve up both versions of Pooh, from Fantasyland in the Magic Kingdom, where many of you think the attraction truly belongs, and back to the West coast in Critter Country. Listen to the subtle differences between the two. Which do you prefer, and why? Be sure to comment on the podcast page on the Mouse Lounge website. We close the show with a duo of Pooh Tracks! First, from the Walt Disney Records archive collection, the Chieftains perform the title track, Winnie the Pooh. Then, while not really a Disney tune per se, its hard to separate Winnie the Pooh from one of Kenny Loggins most memorable performances, The Return to Pooh Corner. Gary Chambers (805) 270-5785 The Mouse Lounge http://www.mouselounge.com Subscribe to our write a review about the Mouse Lounge Podcast: http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewPodcast?id=180696323 The Mouse Lounge is a fan-based podcast and is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company or its subsidiaries. Non factual statements made by the Mouse Lounge hosts, Gary Chambers and his guests are their current opinions only and are subject to change without notice. All copyrighted material used with permission or under the Fair Use Doctrine in Section 107 of the United States Copyright Act. Although the information in this program is believed to be reliable, Mr. Chambers, and Mouselounge.com do not make any representations or warranties as to its accuracy or completeness, nor do they assess, verify or guarantee the suitability of information.
Win a free Disney DVD in our second contest! The interview with Renata Joy continues as we focus on Disney's last Golden Age & Dark Age and then turn to some theme park discussion. All this as we put UltimateDisney.com in focus again.
UltimateDisney.com... an in-depth look at the web's premiere Disney DVD site. Renata Joy joins us for a great discussion, including a break-down of Disney's timeline into "Dark Age"s and "Golden Age"s. Also, some good news for fans of traditional animation!
Yes, we all know about the tale as old as time, song as old as rhyme, blah blah blah blah blah, but did you know these thirteen things about disney's animated Beauty and the Beast? So be our guest as we seperate man from monster and distract you from this subtly creepy kidnapping tale. 13. Angela Lansbury, the voice of Mrs. Potts, thought that another character would be better suited to sing the ballad "Beauty and the Beast". The director asked her to make at least one recording to have for a backup if nothing else worked, and that one recording ended up in the film. 12. The majority of the sculptures seen in the castle are different earlier versions of the Beast. 11. In the 1930s and again in the 1950s, Walt Disney attempted to adapt Beauty and the Beast (1991) into a feature but could not come up with a suitable treatment, so the project was shelved. It wasn't until The Little Mermaid (1989) became hugely successful that they decided to try it a third time. 10. In Gabrielle-Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve's "The Story of Beauty and the Beast," - the original version of the tale - the prince was not turned into a beast for being selfish and unloving, but because he refused to marry his evil fairy godmother. 9. The smoke seen during the transformation at the end is actually real smoke, not animated. It was originally used in The Black Cauldron (1985) and was re-used for Beauty and the Beast. 8. Many scenes were storyboarded but never animated. Those include a scene where Gaston visits the asylum and a scene where the Beast is seen dragging the carcass of an animal he killed. Both were considered too gruesome for the film and the ideas were dropped. However, an animal's skeleton can just barely be seen in the corner shadows of the West Wing. 7. Jackie Chan performed the voice acting and singing for the Beast in the Chinese (Mandarin) dub of the film. 6. By the time Alan Menken and Howard Ashman won an Academy Award for Best Original Song, Ashman had already died. Ashman's longtime romantic partner, Bill Lauch, accepted the award on his behalf. 5. HIDDEN MICKEY: At seperate moments in the film, there are 3 droplets of water, a trio of stones, and three circles that appear in the snow that form the Classic Mickey head. 4. The role of Cogsworth was written specifically with John Cleese in mind but he turned it down. 3. Computer technology was considered for the rooftop fight and the forest chase, but the primitive state of the technology only allowed time to use it for the ballroom scene. 2. The film was previewed at the New York Film Festival in September 1991 in a "Work-In-Progress" format. Approximately 70% of the footage was the final color animation. The other 30% consisted of storyboard reels, rough animation pencil tests, clean-up animation pencil tests, and computer animation tests of the ballroom sequence. According to producer Don Hahn, the audience gave the film a strong, overwhelming standing ovation. 1. In 2001 to commemorate the 10th anniversary of Beauty and the Beast, they added an extra seven minutes to the final film which included a scene where the Castle is preparing for the dinner and dance. The Disney productions got all the original animating and drawing group to complete this scene, which is available to watch on the 2001 Disney DVD and VHS, and any further re release onward. Beauty and the Beast (1991) G | 1h 24min | Animation, Family, Fantasy | 22 November 1991 (USA) A prince cursed to spend his days as a hideous monster sets out to regain his humanity by earning a young woman's love. Directors: Gary Trousdale, Kirk Wise Writers: Linda Woolverton (animation screenplay by), Brenda Chapman (story by) Stars: Paige O'Hara, Robby Benson, Jesse Corti