sethallen623.bsky.social
An autistic illustrator with a passion for all things artistic - and, not to mention, a love for the world around him. Opposes NFTs, AI crimes, and crypto.
115 posts
306 followers
2,227 following
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Are you sure it would make such a difference in Paramount’s production schedule if the Sonic movies sold more tickets than their counterparts in the original Genesis trilogy sold units back in the ‘90s?
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I don't know. But I do know one thing they aren't. Not all of them are on Sonic's side.
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I know a project that you could contribute these booklets to...
vimm.net/manual
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...Ah-HA! NOW I get it!!
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These Bonus Stars are earned at the end of the game and are in addition to the player character's main Star count. So DK's real Star count here is supposed to be 5, thereby making him a valid winner.
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In actuality, the Stars counted in the screenshot are those earned in main gameplay. DK probably earned his victory from also collecting the three Bonus Stars: one for earning the most coins in minigames, one for having the highest coin count overall and one for landing on the most Happening Spaces.
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This is just an ordinary video game results screen. No way is this funny.
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Given the rate you're doing these drawings at, in no time you'll have taken on the Sonic franchise's entire cast!
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To be fair, this was Yoshi's first time on the tennis courts. I have to point this out in case anybody's forgotten that Mario and co. played tennis on the Virtual Boy before Camelot was even started.
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I think it’s already been established that she hates people mocking her over her size, and will act aggressively toward anybody who does so.
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Different OSes had different names for them, but file deletion management centers in the mid-/late 90s were all the same no matter what the computer they were on was running.
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...What?! You're telling me this isn't the real deal?!
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This quote from a 30-year-old video game still rings true to this very day...
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Seeing as how Walt once said, "It was all started by a MOUSE," any milestone anniversary of any character of the company's that came before Mickey would be ignored by mainstream audiences and most animation experts.
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I think Disney not acknowledging him is very reasonable. He was the villain in Mickey's cartoons, and acknowledging the debut of an antagonist, however big a milestone it may be, would not be welcomed by the general public.
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I’m sure that’s who this post is talking about. After all, he comes from South Africa, which is a member of the BRICS alliance, the member nations of which are all the enemies of the United States.
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When you consider these facts, you can conclude that it's safe to say Disney's animation studio did indeed learn its lesson from the troubled production and poor reception of The Black Cauldron.
To which the gross and demented artistry seen in your video proves to be a surefire testament.
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These two movies both proved themselves instrumental in building the audience for The Little Mermaid at the end of the decade, and hence, in leading the way for the general critical and commercial success of the Disney Renaissance movies throughout the 1990s.
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Thankfully, future productions' performance was nothing like that of Cauldron. The animation studio's next film, The Great Mouse Detective (in 1986), along with the live-action/toon hybrid Who Framed Roger Rabbit (from 1988), averted this disaster by succeeding among critics and at the box office.
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Every Disney fan knows how big a blunder The Black Cauldron was. It was a disgrace to the theatergoers of its day and was, and continues to be, a disgrace to animation enthusiasts everywhere. Its reception was so poor that it put the future of the Disney company in serious danger!
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There have been a number of child prodigies and junior scientists in cartoons who people can say paved the way for these two. But in all honesty, Cybs and Jenny will no doubt be the first pair of cartoon kid geniuses to be direct love interests to each other! Isn't that something to be amazed by?
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Only Musk can't be President, because...
...
He is NOT a natural-born citizen!! He was born in South Africa, and that is where his family comes from! So, he FAILS the first and foremost criterion for becoming President of the United States!
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So in short, in this alternate timeline, by 1975 the Disney company would have pretty much all its modern branding, marketing strategies, and iconography introduced and firmly established. And their so-called "Dark Era," provided they chose to make better movies then, wouldn't be so dark after all.
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He eventually appears beside the logo in certain materials, such as ones from 1978 relating to his 50th birthday! And speaking of his 50th, it is for that occasion that a "modern" logo is introduced for his franchise as well.
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As this "modern" WDP logo's tenure goes on, Mickey Mouse is reverted to his design from his early 1940s cartoons, such as "Mr. Mouse Takes a Trip" and "Lend a Paw." This permanently becomes the character's official standard appearance.
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Special variants of the logo are created with different colors for specific films, including an orange version with a black background for low-key releases (such as The Black Hole), and a green version for Tron.
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From this point, "The End" cards would no longer display the text "A Walt Disney Production," but instead crossfade to the WDP screen logo. After a few seconds, the text is replaced with a distribution tag, as seen here.
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(And on a related note, I even went as far as writing the concept for the music in MuseScore before realizing that BS doesn't accept audio files.)
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The screen logo's accompanying music cue (used at the front of films only): a lavishly orchestrated rendition of "When You Wish Upon a Star."
At the end, Tinker Bell flies toward the castle and conjures the arc around it with her wand.
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The screen version of the logo. Would be shown at the front of all WDP films from Bedknobs and Broomsticks to Trenchcoat, and at the end of all Disney TV shows from 1971 to 1983. As in its post-1985 counterpart, the castle is an abstract rendering of the Sleeping Beauty castle at Disneyland.
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Stand-alone image of the AU "modern" logo. This would be its print version.
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A week or two ago, I came out with a thought that Disney's modern corporate logo and Renaissance-era marketing should have been officially introduced in 1971, when Walt Disney World opened. I showed you my 1971-style version of the 1986 logo; now, I'll show some more imagery based around it.
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"The Loud House" isn't turning 10 for another year. In fact, I have PLENTY of time as of now to prepare an artistic tribute to the show for those social medias where people who're still passionate about the show may be present.
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I think the name "Gulf of America" for this body of water can be justified. It was probably a correct choice to make IMHO because the gulf encompasses U.S. and Cuban land as well as Mexican land, and more of its waters are supposed to be U.S. waters than Mexican ones.
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Wouldn't Nickelodeon get in legal trouble for doing that due to the use of characters from various other companies?
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Got it. Thanks.
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To keep things from being so complicated, why don't we search for "Golden Sun video game" or "Golden Sun GBA" instead of just "Golden Sun"?
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Honestly, they had no idea what television was going to become in the decades to follow. It would progress on the technical side, but regress on the creative side...
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"Being goofy" -- or should we say daffy?
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How can you not get tired of playing through a video game when said game is one of the greatest and most influential of all time? Where the first Super Mario Bros. made Mario a household name, Super Mario 64 helped him keep his status as one even after Sony had robbed Nintendo of its dominance.
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What game is this? And WHY would they have the nerve to put THAT in whatever-it-is?!
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I think it's because out of all her kids, he'd been the biggest liability to her as a pupil.
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Oh, and let's not forget... this was the first time vocals were heard in music made for a portable video game, so that justifies its "greatest achievement" moniker even more.
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Behold, Wario's greatest achievement out of all the ventures in his 30-plus year career! The game that showed us how wacky, how stupid, how idiotic a character he can be. The title to which the tightwad's modern brand of twisted humor owes everything.
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As such, it would have helped certain films among those released during that period to gain more excitement and profit. Because I'd like you to believe that, whether among critics or in the box office, too many failures will ruin a movie studio's reputation and mean disaster for its management.
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I additionally believe that alongside the modern logo, the company should also have introduced its Renaissance-era marketing strategies at that same time and applied them to its 70s and early/mid-80s releases. This would have made the "Dark Ages" of Disney history more bearable for it... and for us.
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This is why I believe the modern corporate Disney logo should have been formally introduced in 1971 and given minor redesigns when the company was renamed in 1986, rather than waiting until the latter year to be minted and made the corporate standard.
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Elmo kicked a friend out of his life for passing this inanimate object off as sentient and personifying it. What do we have to say about this?!