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This week we're chatting with Butch Rigby, a Kansas City developer — or restorer, might be a better term — entrepreneur, lawyer and founder of Thank You, Walt Disney.Rigby has developed real estate in and around the Kansas City area for more than 30 years, starting when he was a full time student at the University of Missouri-Kansas City where he obtained a Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies, and a Juris Doctor from the UMKC School of Law.Right after school, he headed to Hollywood to work in movies. A few years later, Butch returned to Kansas City with some great stories.He founded the Screenland Movie Theatre Circuit, and as a part of that venture, he restored the Historic Granada Movie Theatre Building in downtown Kansas City, Kansas. He then renovated the historic Armour Theatre Building in North Kansas City, Mo. He placed the two buildings on the National Historic Register.In the 1990s he formed Thank You Walt Disney Inc., and as Chairman of that organization, he and a group of volunteers purchased Walt Disney's first cartoon studio, the Laugh-O-Gram building near 31st and Troost and took the building off of the city's condemned building list, restored its structural integrity and have prepared it for re-use as an interactive historic site.Butch will talk about those things and much more, including taking a swing at some "Pregame Batting Practice." LINKS:To learn more about Thank You, Walt Disney, please visit their site.For more information about the C-10 Mentoring & Leadership program for high school students, visit our website.To make a financial gift to give students life-changing one-on-one mentoring, visit our secure donation page.For all episodes of the C-10 podcast and ways you can listen, click here.If you'd like to make a comment, have a suggestion for a future guest, or your company would like to help underwrite this podcast, please visit our contact page.
This was actually the very first Walt Disney Cinderella, and man was it fascinating to watch. It was also bizarrely streamlined and cohesive, given the weirdness we've come to expect from the early animations. Still there was definitely enough nightmare fuel and rabbit holes to go around in this, our Ragtime Cinderella!Please subscribe, give us some stars or a rating, tell your friends, or share this episode, it really helps us out!Follow us @cinderpod on Twitter and InstagramLike our Facebook pageEmail us at TheCinderellaPodcast@gmail.comSupport us at Patreon.com/cinderpodOur music is Bad Ideas (distressed) by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://filmmusic.io/song/3412-bad-ideas-distressed-License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license"Free Sounds Library"Free Sound Effects Site.Licence: License: Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0). You are allowed to use sound effects free of charge and royalty free in your multimedia projects for commercial or non-commercial purposes.http://www.freesoundslibrary.com
Podemos afirmar que uma das técnicas de animação mais antigas da história é a técnica de Sombras Chinesas, usadas há milênios. Pra muitos, a primeira animação foi feita por Émile Reynaud usando uma técnica chamada praxinoscópio, que é um sistema de animação de 12 imagens por segundo, e filmes de aproximadamente 500 a 600 imagens Mas a primeira animação oficialmente mesmo nasceu em 17 de agosto de 1908, com o título de "Fantasmagorie" feito pelo francês Émile Cohl. Mas independentemente de quando foi feito ou quem fez, a animação ganhou o mainstream mesmo Walt Disney entrou no jogo. Com o irmão Roy e o amigo Ub Iwerks, criou a Laugh-O-Gram, um embrião do que viria a ser futuramente a Disney. O papel da animação deixou de ser apenas o entretenimento rapidamente, e foi utilizado como propaganda durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial, além de também ser utilizada animações feitas pelo próprio Walt Disney para treinamento de soldados. Walt Disney foi indicado 59 vezes ao Oscar e ganhou 22. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Podemos afirmar que uma das técnicas de animação mais antigas da história é a técnica de Sombras Chinesas, usadas há milênios. Pra muitos, a primeira animação foi feita por Émile Reynaud usando uma técnica chamada praxinoscópio, que é um sistema de animação de 12 imagens por segundo, e filmes de aproximadamente 500 a 600 imagens Mas a primeira animação oficialmente mesmo nasceu em 17 de agosto de 1908, com o título de "Fantasmagorie" feito pelo francês Émile Cohl. Mas independentemente de quando foi feito ou quem fez, a animação ganhou o mainstream mesmo Walt Disney entrou no jogo. Com o irmão Roy e o amigo Ub Iwerks, criou a Laugh-O-Gram, um embrião do que viria a ser futuramente a Disney. O papel da animação deixou de ser apenas o entretenimento rapidamente, e foi utilizado como propaganda durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial, além de também ser utilizada animações feitas pelo próprio Walt Disney para treinamento de soldados. Walt Disney foi indicado 59 vezes ao Oscar e ganhou 22.
This is Entrepreneurs of Faith, a Sunday episode of Monetization Nation. I'm Nathan Gwilliam, your host. In today's episode, we're going to discuss an inspiring commencement speech Hugh B. Brown gave about coming to understand God's method for helping us learn, grow and improve. All of us have challenges and trials. We each have times we feel cut down, and we need to remember that God is our gardener. He may cut us down, but he does so with the purpose of making us greater than we are now. We will also look at five successful people who were fired before becoming rich and famous and how they continued on despite their challenges. The Currant Bush In 1968, Hugh B. Brown, an attorney, educator, and church leader, gave a commencement speech at BYU. He encouraged the graduating students to develop a personal relationship with God and to keep close to Him as they moved onto the next stages of their lives. As part of his message, he shared a story of a currant bush. While Brown was on a farm in Canada, he found a currant bush. The bush had grown over six feet tall and showed no signs of blossoms or fruit, so Brown grabbed his pruning shears and cut the bush down until there was nothing left but a clump of stumps. As he looked at what was left on the bush, he saw what looked like a tear. He asked, “What's the matter, currant bush? What are you crying about?” And he thought he heard the bush speak. It seemed to say, “How could you do this to me? I was making such wonderful growth. I was almost as large as the fruit tree and the shade tree, and now you have cut me down. And all in the garden will look upon me with contempt and pity. How could you do it? I thought you were the gardener here.” With that, he responded, “Look, little currant bush, I am the gardener here, and I know what I want you to be. If I let you go the way you want to go, you will never amount to anything. But someday, when you are laden with fruit, you are going to think back and say, ‘Thank you, Mr. Gardener, for cutting me down, for loving me enough to hurt me.'” Ten years later, Brown found himself in Europe as a field officer in the Canadian Army during World War I. One day there had been a casualty. The man standing between Brown and the rank of a general had been lost in war. The day after, Brown received a telegram from London from General Turner, requesting he be brought to his office the following morning. Brown polished his boots and buttons and prepared himself for the meeting, expecting to be appointed an army general. However, when he went to London, the general roughly told him to sit down. He said, “Brown, you are entitled to this promotion, but I cannot make it. You have qualified and passed the regulations, you have had the experience, and you are entitled to it in every way, but I cannot make this appointment.” With that, he left the room. Brown leaned over the table and looked at his personal history sheet and saw a sentence written at the bottom that had his religious affiliation written with each letter capitalized. They had denied him the position because of his faith. On his way back to his tent, bitterness rose. He shook his fist at heaven and asked, “How could you do this to me, God? I've done everything that I knew how to do to uphold the standards of the Church. I was making such wonderful growth, and now you've cut me down. How could you do it?” Then he heard a voice that sounded like his own. It said, “I am the gardener here. I know what I want you to be. If I let you go the way you want to go, you will never amount to anything. And someday, when you are ripened in life, you are going to shout back across the time and say, ‘Thank you, Mr. Gardener, for cutting me down, for loving me enough to hurt me.'” Years later, Brown realized that if he had taken the position of a senior commanding officer, he wouldn't have experienced many of the blessings he had later on in life. Now, looking back, he is able to say, “Thank you, Mr. Gardener, for cutting me down.” God is our gardener. He knows what's best for us and sometimes we need to be cut down in order to grow. We may not understand it at first, but God knows where He needs us to be. We just need to trust Him. This same principle applies in business. As entrepreneurs with faith, we need to remember that God knows what is best for us. Sometimes our ventures may fail, or we may run into a dead-end where we have to pivot. We need to trust that God is in control and maybe using the failures to help us grow and lead us down a better path. 5 Successful People Who Were Fired Many successful entrepreneurs were fired before they made their big breakthroughs. God had to “cut them down” so they could find a path that would lead to something better. Elon Musk Before Elon Musk became the founder and CEO of SpaceX, became the CEO and product designer of Tesla, and gained a net worth of $166 billion, he was “cut down.” In 1999, Elon Musk started X.com, an online financial services company. He invested a large amount of money into the company as he took on his venture. However, in 2000, when X.com merged with a competing company to become PayPal, Musk was fired from his role as CEO due to disagreements (Source: Business Insider). Only a couple of years later, in 2002, Musk founded SpaceX, a space exploration technology company that is now valued at about $74 billion (Source: Forbes). Then, in 2004, Musk joined Tesla and in 2008, he took over as CEO (Source: Interesting Engineering). If Musk hadn't been fired from PayPal, there is a chance he would not be leading SpaceX and Tesla. Sometimes it takes failure to be pushed into something greater. Walt Disney Before Walt Disney created one of the largest media companies in the world, a company that is now worth more than $120 billion, his editor fired him from the newspaper because he “lacked creativity” (Source: Business Insider). This forced Disney to experiment with hand-drawn animation and eventually led him to start his first animation business, Laugh-O-Gram. When Laugh-O-Gram went bankrupt, it forced him to move to Hollywood and open his own studio. Then, when his distributor took the rights for his cartoon, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, it forced Disney to use his imagination and he created Mickey Mouse (Source: Walt Disney Archives). Disney experienced multiple setbacks within his career, however, he didn't let it stop him from moving forward. Each setback led him to a greater opportunity. We need to remember that sometimes we are stopped on the path we are on because God has something greater in mind for us. “All the adversity I've had in my life, all my troubles and obstacles, have strengthened me,” Disney said. “You may not realize it when it happens, but a kick in the teeth may be the best thing in the world for you.” Steve Jobs Steve Jobs was fired from Apple, the company he co-founded. When Jobs was 21, he co-founded the Apple Computer, and by the time he was 23, he became a millionaire, but when he was 30, he was fired from his own company. Jobs and John Sculley had a power struggle, and in 1985, Apple's board sided with Sculley (Source: ABC News). However, this setback ended up being one of the best things that could have happened to him. While Jobs was away from Apple, he learned valuable lessons that helped him achieve his future success. In 1996, Apple Computer asked Jobs to come back to the company. Jobs returned as Apple's CEO and led the company in the creation of great innovations, such as the iPod and iPhone. "I didn't see it then, but it turned out that getting fired from Apple was the best thing that could have ever happened to me. The heaviness of being successful was replaced by the lightness of being a beginner again, less sure about everything. It freed me to enter into one of the most creative periods of my life," Jobs said. J.K. Rowling J.K. Rowling was fired from her secretary position because she spent too much time daydreaming at work. Business Insider reported that Rowling secretly wrote stories on her work computer while dreaming up the story of a teenage wizard named Harry Potter. However, this setback actually paved the way for Rowling to start her novel. Her severance check helped support her while she focused on her writing (Source: Bustle). Now, J.K Rowling is worth just over $1 billion and is the author of one of the most successful series ever written. More than 500 million copies of the Harry Potter books have been sold worldwide, with 180 million sold in the United States alone (Source: MediaRoom). The first Harry Potter movie made $974.71 million (Source: Forbes) and all together, the films made over $7 billion (Source: ShowBiz CheatSheet). However, it is safe to say that Rowling wouldn't have been pushed to write the Harry Potter books if she wasn't fired. Oprah Winfrey Oprah Winfrey was fired from reporting the evening news for Baltimore's WJZ-TV. Her producer told her she was “unfit for television news” since she showed too much emotion (Source: Inc.). However, this setback led Winfrey to work for a daytime television show, People Are Talking. The show became very popular and eventually led her to create her own show, the Oprah Winfrey Show. Her show has aired nationally for 25 seasons (Source: TVdb), and she's currently worth about $3 billion (Source: Forbes). Being fired was one of the best things that could have happened to Winfrey. "Wherever you are in your journey, I hope you, too, will keep encountering challenges. It is a blessing to be able to survive them, to be able to keep putting one foot in front of the other—to be in a position to make the climb up life's mountain, knowing that the summit still lies ahead," Winfrey said. Trusting in God As we trust in God and his plan for us, recovering from our setbacks will become much easier. God is our gardener. He may cut us down at points in our lives, but it is because He loves us. While we may be prevented from going down one path, the next path could lead to much greater things. While Brown gave his speech to a group of graduates, we can apply this same lesson as we move forward onto new stages of our lives. As we come closer to God and understand His love for us, we will have the courage to continue on. Brown said: “Now some of you as you go forward is going to meet with disappointment—perhaps many disappointments, some of them crucial. Sometimes you will wonder if God has forgotten you. Sometimes you may even wonder if He lives and where He has gone. But in these times when so many are saying God is dead and when so many are denying His existence, I think I could not leave with you a better message than this: God is aware of you individually. He knows who you are and what you are, and, furthermore, He knows what you are capable of becoming. Be not discouraged, then, if you do not get all the things you want just when you want them. Have the courage to go on and face your life . . .” Key Takeaways Here are some of my key takeaways from this episode: God is our gardener. He knows what's best for us and sometimes that means we need to be cut down in order to grow. Sometimes our ventures may fail, or we may run into a dead-end. Instead of giving up, let's learn and pivot. Many successful entrepreneurs were fired before they made their big breakthrough. God may stop us from going down one path because He knows there is another path that will lead to greater success. As we come closer to God and understand His love for us, we will have the courage to continue on His path for us. Join Entrepreneurs of Faith If this episode of Entrepreneurs of Faith resonated with you, please subscribe for FREE to Monetization Nation so you can receive Entrepreneurs of Faith each Sunday. Subscribe to the free Monetization Nation eMagazine. Subscribe to the Monetization Nation YouTube channel. Subscribe to the Monetization Nation podcast on Apple Podcast, Google Podcasts, Spotify, or Stitcher. Follow Monetization Nation on Instagram and Twitter. Share Your Story What is the biggest challenge you've experienced and what have you learned from it? Please join our private Monetization Nation Facebook group and share your insights with other digital monetizers. Read at: https://monetizationnation.com/blog/101-5-successful-people-who-were-fired-before-becoming-rich-and-famous/
Show Notes Main TopicLaugh-O-Gram!1922 Little Red Riding Hood is the first Laugh-O-Gram and full length short cartoon made by Walt Disney Monthly Reminder and Upcoming EventsAugust’s Book Club SelectionWalt Disney’s Silly Symphonies by J.B. Kaufman https://amzn.to/3jQIhJy
The junkyard dogs of the business community are those misfits and mavericks, renegades and rebels, innovators and improvisors who know that traditional wisdom is often more tradition than wisdom. Lee Iacocca was a junkyard dog.The son of an immigrant hot-dog vendor, Iacocca was the visionary who gave us the Ford Mustang. He was later fired by Henry Ford II, a showdog, because Henry II said he didn't want Iacocca to become CEO. Aware that the time for his own retirement was approaching, Henry II made it clear that he wanted to turn the company over to his son Edsel II, then just 28. After being fired, Iacocca cheerfully went to work at Chrysler where he rescued that company from extinction by inventing the minivan. Later, when he told Chrysler's head of engineering that he needed a prototype LeBaron convertible to use in a TV ad, the showdog engineer told him how many months it would take to design one. A true dog of the junkyard, Iacocca smiled and said, “Just get a LeBaron and cut the top off. I need it tomorrow.” Focused on the outcome rather than the process, junkyard dogs are always messy.Junkyard dogs worry about accomplishment. Showdogs worry about appearances. When the weather is calm and the water is smooth, the showdog owns the horizon. But when the storm is upon you and people are about to die, you want a junkyard dog at the helm. In 1962, 16-year-old Miguel fled Cuba wearing a jacket his mother had hand-stitched from cleaning rags. He arrived alone in America. “Hamburger” was his only English word. Five years later Miguel married a teenage mother and adopted her 3-year-old son, little Jeffrey Jorgensen. Miguel gave Jeffrey the skill and confidence to survive and thrive. He also gave Jeffrey his proud Cuban name: Bezos. When Junkyard Jeffrey was 30, he borrowed money from friends and family to start a business in the garage of his rented home. He named that business after the largest river in South America. Perhaps you've heard of it. As a boy, one of Jeffrey's heroes was Walt Disney, the fourth of five children in a family so poor that two of his older brothers, sick of the constant work and poverty, ran away when Walt was just 4 years old. When Walt was 16, he tried to join the Navy so that he could serve in WWI but was turned down because of his age. He then tried unsuccessfully to join the Canadian Armed Forces. Finally, he was accepted as a Red Cross ambulance driver. Walt did not have an impressive résumé. Junkyard dogs rarely do.When the war was over, Disney's first company, Laugh-O-Gram, went bankrupt in Kansas City, so he moved to Hollywood where his first animated series, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, was a big success. Disney lost the rights to that character when his distributor cheated him. So Walt, ever the junkyard dog, started working on another animated character, a mouse. Perhaps you've heard of him, too. Disney Studios went on to make Lady and the Tramp, a movie about a showdog princess who falls in love with a junkyard dog. And then they made The Aristocats, a movie about an alley cat named O'Malley who rescues a housecat named Duchess who then falls in love with him. And when we saw The Rescuers a few years later, we all fell in love with a little junkyard girl named Penny when she stood up to the alligators of Madame Medusa. Now that I think about it, has there ever been a successful Disney film that didn't give us a misfit, junkyard dog to cheer for?For the record, (and I quite literally mean “the record,”) no individual has ever received as many Academy Awards as Walt Disney. In fact, no other person has ever been nominated for as many. I began contemplating today's memo when I paused the movie, Public Enemies, to transcribe a bit of dialogue between J. Edgar Hoover, that little showdog director of the FBI, and Melvin Purvis, his golden-boy agent who was tasked with bringing the murderous bank robber, John Dillinger, to...
The birth of the Walt Disney Company started in on the streets of Kansas City, Missouri at the Laugh-O-Gram Studios. This week we have Disney Historian Dan Viets on the show to discuss the Disney Families history in Missouri and the importance of Laugh-O-Gram studios. Enjoy this episode of the Disney Dads Podcast and the stories you haven't heard about Walt. BECOME A PATRON MEMBER AND GET ACCESS TO THE PRIVATE FACEBOOK GROUP AND WEEKLY EXTRA CONTENT. If you would like to support all of the Disney Dads shows and help us bring you more content commercial free, click the link https://patron.podbean.com/DisneyDadsPodcast We appreciate all our Patron Family for all of your support. You can find all of our shows at www.disneydadspodcast.com Contact Away With Me Travel, the official travel agency of the Disney Dads Podcast, for all your travel needs. show@awaywithmetravel.com
Music Credit: OurMusicBox (Jay Man) Track Name: "Flights Of Fantasy" Music By: Jay Man @ https://ourmusicbox.com/ Official "OurMusicBox" YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/c/ourmusicbox License for commercial use: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/... Music promoted by NCM https://goo.gl/fh3rEJSocial Media: Facebook: Faith Trust and Pixie Dust - Podcast Email: 1stgeek411@gmail.com Twitter: @FTPD_PodcastPersonal Twitters: @Sparkle_Fists @SpilledXWater @deanna790Check us out on iTunes, Stitcher, Google Podcasts, and Spotify!!!This episode of Faith, Trust, and Pixie Dust is sponsored by Thy Geekdom Come.When dragons invade your time with God, don’t run from it, embrace it. And let your geek and faith flags fly together with Thy Geekdom Come: a 42-day devotional that merges the geeky things you love with the God you love. Get your copy today at Amazon or use the promo code PIXIEDUST to get 25% off the e-book at mythosink.com. ● “Feature Film” – Cinderella (1950 version)● If you aren’t familiar with the story of Cinderella…○ Trivia:■ Ilene Woods beat out 309 girls for the part without even knowing it■ Escape coach has 2 hidden Mickeys■ The prince was originally supposed to play a larger role, and the early characterization was incorporated into Prince Kit in 2015.■ Originally ALL of the animals were supposed to talk - Major even had a song■ Voice actors doubled up:● Eleanor Audly - Lady Tremaine/Maleficent/Madame Leota● Verna Felton - Fairy godmother AND:○ Flora○ Queen Leah○ Alice in Wonderland○ Dumbo○ The Jungle Book○ Lady and the Tramp● James MacDonald :○ Jaq○ Gus○ Bruno○ Mickey○ PlutoNot Disney’s first Cinderella - Original was a Laugh-O-Gram short in 1922● Segment: This week in Disney history “Once Upon a Time”○ July 18, 1955 - Disneyland officially opened to the Public - admission was $1, and the first ticket was sold to a Dave Macpherson - 22-year-old student who waited all night to get it - he was awarded the first Golden Pass○ July 18, 1989 - Splash Mountain opens○ July 22, 1994 - Tower of Terror opened● Segment: News/Announcements “The Newsies Banner”○ Lion King!!● Segment: Top 4 Ranking “Let’s get down to business” ○ Top 4 Disney Dresses:○ 1. Tiana’s Lilly Pad Dress○ 2. Elsa’s Ice Dress○ 3. Ariel’s Sparkly Dress○ 4. Belle’s Yellow/Gold DressTease Next Week: New Lion King, Top 4 animated Movies we want a live action remake for. Contact info: Social Media: Facebook: Faith Trust and Pixie Dust - Podcast Email: 1stgeek411@gmail.com Twitter: @FTPD_PodcastPersonal Twitters: @Sparkle_Fists @SpilledXWater @deanna790Check us out on iTunes, Stitcher, Google Podcasts, and Spotify!!!
It’s May 23rd, 1922, and Walt Disney has just incorporated the Laugh-O-Gram studios. This would be both Walt’s biggest achievement, and his biggest failure, up to date. Join me this week, as we take a Walk With Walt, into the history of Laugh-O-Gram Studios.
Welcome back to the Neverland Podcast! We're back from Planet Comicon 2017 in Kansas City! Lost Boy Eric flew over from his home to join me on stage in a panel talking about Walt Disney's time here in Kansas City at the Laugh-O-Gram studios! We had some technical difficulties with running sound at our show, but with a bit of editing, I've added those sounds back in to this episode of the podast. I'll be sharing video of the presentation on our youtube channel later so you can watch the fun for yourself! Since the only piece of news I mention had to do with Pirates of the Caribbean, how about we take a little trip to the Caribbean during our Neverland Story Time? Grab your pixie and let's fly to Neverland! Visit our shop! at TeePublic Become a patron! at Patreon! Here’s YOUR chance to “Floyder” (hang out) with Disney Legend Floyd Norman! 1) Purchase "Floyd Norman: An Animated Life" on BLU-RAY. 2) Post photos of yourself "Floydering" with your BLU-RAY on social media. 3) Hashtag your photos with #FLOYDERING by 11:59pm on 5/31/17. ONE lucky person will be selected at random and brought to Los Angeles to "Floyder" with Floyd Norman over lunch (Open to US residents only). BUY BLU RAY NOW Or on iTunesFloyd Norman: An Animated Life - Erik Sharkey & Michael Fiore Be sure to listen to Neverland Radio on UCM's The Beat every weekday at 4 PM Central Time. Podcasters! Get your show out in front of new listeners with Kiss My RSS! Hire me for voice over work on Fiverr! Learn voiceover from some of the best in the industry at Global Voice Actor Academy Learn puppetry from Muppeteer, Mike Quin at Secrets of Puppetry Be sure to visit iTunes to purchase your copy of Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) - Michael Giacchino Beauty and the Beast Deluxe Edition Soundtrack! Please rate and review The Neverland Podcast! iTunes Stitcher Blubrry Twitter Facebook Facebook Group Email Us! Leave a Voicemail (816) 226-6492 We are part of the We Be Geeks Network!
10/21/16 - In this episode, Michael and Craig discuss Walt Disney's first studio - Laugh-O-Gram.
The one where we talk about our favorite comics, comics movies, Batman, and we check in on Laugh-O-Gram. Also...no clever title.....we were tired.
Making Elephants Fly | Conversations with High Octane Leaders, Dreamers, & Creatives
On this episode of Making Elephants Fly, Terry sits down with his good friend Logan Sekulow. Logan is a filmmaker, former TV show host, and entrepreneur who is now saving the funny pages. After a time working for Nickelodeon in both Orlando and New York on shows such as Slime Time Live, he launched his own national tv show at the age of 18. The show was packed with musical guests that got their start on his stage and are still impacting culture today. Over the years, he has directed and produced many award winning documentaries. In 2014, Logan released the movie As Dreamers Do -- a biopic about a young Walt Disney. Now Logan is embarking on his newest venture with Laugh-O-Gram, a weekly newspaper delivered directly to your front door featuring nothing but comic strips. Join Terry as he sits down with Logan to discover that dreamers actually do stuff.
It's Time D-Heads! This week we travel back to your childhood as we welcome ROBBIE RIST (The Brady Bunch, Doc McStuffins, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Iron Eagle, Naruto) to the show! Robbie stops in and talks about being Cousin Oliver on The Brady Bunch, what happened to Tiger, being one of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle, Music, Voice Work and currently being Stuffy on Doc McStuffins and more! In addition we welcome back the D-Team as Erin dips his hand into the virtual mailbag in I Want To Know and our Caitlin brings you the latest from the Walt Disney World Resort. Nathan is back with a look back in This Week In Disney History and Randy returns from his hiatus with Disney Multi-Media. We have news hot off the D-Wire with news on Walt Disney World, Disney Cruise Lines, Marvel, Girl Meets World, Disney Channel, Laugh O Gram, the Walt Disney Company and so much more! So it's time to Put on Your Ears, Give it a Little Bibbidi Bobbidi Boo, and get ready to Relive the Magic, Memories and Appreciation from Your Lifetime of Disney with our New Kind of Disney Show!
It's Time D-Heads! This week we travel back to your childhood as we welcome ROBBIE RIST (The Brady Bunch, Doc McStuffins, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Iron Eagle, Naruto) to the show! Robbie stops in and talks about being Cousin Oliver on The Brady Bunch, what happened to Tiger, being one of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle, Music, Voice Work and currently being Stuffy on Doc McStuffins and more! In addition we welcome back the D-Team as Erin dips his hand into the virtual mailbag in I Want To Know and our Caitlin brings you the latest from the Walt Disney World Resort. Nathan is back with a look back in This Week In Disney History and Randy returns from his hiatus with Disney Multi-Media. We have news hot off the D-Wire with news on Walt Disney World, Disney Cruise Lines, Marvel, Girl Meets World, Disney Channel, Laugh O Gram, the Walt Disney Company and so much more! So it's time to Put on Your Ears, Give it a Little Bibbidi Bobbidi Boo, and get ready to Relive the Magic, Memories and Appreciation from Your Lifetime of Disney with our New Kind of Disney Show!
Inside The Mouse Castle: Disney News, Information and Commentary
An episode full of innuendo, inappropriate comments and offensive t-shirts. Tim and Anthony talk about the "Avengers: Age of Ultron" trailer, Marvel's less-than-impressive hearing-impaired superhero, the premiere of "Baymax" (aka "Big Hero 6") in Tokyo, the return of Darkwing Duck, saving the Laugh-O-Gram building in Kansas City, overly sensitive Brits, and playing Disney Infinity at Disney Interactive Studios. www.TheMouseCastle.com