Walt Disney World In Florida
Last edited 25 August 2008
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Walt Disney World In Florida!


Walt Disney World In Florida















































































Walt Disney World In Florida Walt Disney World In Florida
Walt Disney began the move into features in 1934, pulling selected Walt Disney World In Florida animators away from the short subjects division that had previously been the whole of Walt Disney Productions. Walt Disney World In Florida The result was Walt Disney World In Florida the first Walt Disney World In Florida animated feature in English and Technicolor, Walt Disney World In Florida Snow White Walt Disney World In Florida and Walt Disney World In Florida the Seven Dwarfs. Snow White became an Walt Disney World In Florida unprecedented success when it was released Walt Disney World In Florida to theatres in February 1938, and it and many of the subsequent feature productions became film classics. These first features Walt Disney World In Florida were presented as being made in "multiplane technicolor", since both the multiplane camera and technicolor were still something new in the area Walt Disney World In Florida of animation. Following the successes of these features, Walt Disney World In Florida Disney expanded his company's operations, moving into live-action features, television, and theme Walt Disney World In Florida parks. Beside successes like Snow White, Dumbo, and Cinderella, Disney Walt Disney World In Florida also directed Walt Disney World In Florida the Feature Animation staff create experimental and stylized films such as Fantasia and Sleeping Beauty which sustained losses and did not recoup their costs until decades after their original releases. In 1962, Walt Disney shut down the

Walt Disney World In Florida

corporation's short subject department, focusing its attention mainly on television and feature film production (the next short Walt Disney World In Florida subject was the widescreen Mickey Walt Disney World In Florida Mouse cartoon Runaway Brain in the mid 1990s). After Walt Disney's death in 1966, the animation department found itself without Walt Disney World In Florida direction. The animators struggled to regain their footing but created

Walt Disney World In Florida

films which were technically polished but told lackluster stories, even

Walt Disney World In Florida

though

Walt Disney World In Florida

most of them were successful. In 1973, lead animator Eric Larson began an experimental recruitment program to see if Walt Disney World In Florida new young talent could be found to bring new blood to the industry. This began the training of a whole new generation of animators that would bring animation to new Walt Disney World In Florida heights and greatly influence the world's popular culture. After honing their craft on a series of fairly modest pictures, these new Walt Disney World In Florida artists finally found Walt Disney World In Florida true Walt Disney World In Florida success again with The Little Mermaid in 1989. A string Walt Disney World In Florida of successful films, such as Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, and The Lion King followed suit, and Disney expanded Walt Disney World In Florida WDFA to a total Walt Disney World In Florida staff of Walt Disney World In Florida over 2,400 by 1999, including employees located at satellite studios in Orlando and Paris. However, the expansion coincided Walt Disney World In Florida with

Walt Disney World In Florida

a decline in both revenue and quality of the department's output. Competition from other Walt Disney World In Florida studios drove animator salaries to a high level, making 2D animated features a costly proposition, and beginning in 2000, massive layoffs were done to bring the staff back down to 600. Deciding that the reason for its failing box office draw was the fact that they still used traditional animation methods in a time when Pixar's/DreamWorks were producing highly successful Walt Disney World In Florida computer-animated features, Disney converted WDFA into an all-CGI studio, performing more layoffs and selling Walt Disney World In Florida off its traditional animation equipment. The Paris studio was shut Walt Disney World In Florida down in 2003, and Walt Disney World In Florida the Orlando studio followed Walt Disney World In Florida suit in 2004. The Orlando studio was turned into Walt Disney World In Florida an attraction at a Disney theme park.
Disney also holds substantial interest in Walt Disney World In Florida Lifetime recently sold to Comcast, Walt Disney World In Florida and Jetix Europe N.V. Disney also Walt Disney World In Florida owns 25% of the GMTV company that operates the Walt Disney World In Florida Breakfast Programmes on ITV, in the UK and 50% Walt Disney World In Florida of Super Walt Disney World In Florida RTL in Germany. Through ABC, Disney also owns 10 local television stations, 2 local radio stations, and ESPN Radio, Walt Disney World In Florida and Radio Disney. Although the ABC Radio

Walt Disney World In Florida

Network was sold Walt Disney World In Florida with other properties Walt Disney World In Florida to Citadel Broadcasting, (which carries such radio personalities as

Walt Disney World In Florida

Sean Hannity and Paul Harvey and distributes news bulletins Walt Disney World In Florida by ABC News), Disney shareholders now own 57% of Citadel. Disney-ABC Domestic Television, which also is a part of the Walt Disney World In Florida Media Networks unit, produces such syndicated television programs as Who Walt Disney World In Florida Wants to Be a Millionaire, Live with Regis and Kelly, and At the Movies with Ebert & Roeper. Disney also operates its own publishing company, Hyperion, and Walt Disney World In Florida Walt Disney Internet Group (WDIG) through Media Networks. Hyperion has recently published books Walt Disney World In Florida by comedian-author Steve Martin and bestselling author Walt Disney World In Florida Mitch Albom. WDIG includes Walt Disney World In Florida the Go.com web portal, Infoseek search engine which it purchased Walt Disney World In Florida in 1998, and leading websites such as Disney.com, ESPN.com, ABCNews.com and Movies.com. In March 2007, it was reported that Walt Disney World In Florida Disney is launching Walt Disney World In Florida a new Web site, which is a one-stop site for parents. Disney has on several occasions prompted action from religious groups such as the Catholic League, Walt Disney World In Florida due to insensitive broadcasting, and the release of films which the league and others found very insulting to certain religions. Disney has in the past faced boycotts from baptist groups, "Assemblies of God", and Catholic groups. The worldwide commercial success Walt Disney World In Florida of the Disney brand is viewed by some as detrimental to cultural diversity (see Disneyfication). Disney is one among several American companies lobbying for harsher enforcement of intellectual property around the world and continued copyright term extensions, posing a perceived threat to the existence of the public domain; see Copyright Term Extension Act. Disney has been accused Walt Disney World In Florida of human rights violations regarding the working conditions in factories that produce their merchandise. Disney has been criticized by animal welfare Walt Disney World In Florida groups for its import, use and frequent deaths of Walt Disney World In Florida wild animals at Walt Disney World In Florida its Animal Kingdom theme park as well as for using purebred dogs in movies such as 101 Walt Disney World In Florida Dalmatians, which these groups claim Walt Disney World In Florida leads to creating an artificial demand for these purebred dogs many Walt Disney World In Florida of whom are later abandoned or surrendered to shelters or rescue groups


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