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HERE it is The Actual BB8 House INSIDE!!!! * New pictures Added*
puddin:
I don't see any HG's pictures canta?
Anyway so Alice in Wonderland it is :lol:
canta:
I wonder why they picked that theme? Is that a Disney Cup in the back yard? One more thing...Didin't see a A/c'd weightroom...only saw weights outside yikes!!
puddin:
I was thinking about the theme as well as the "fractured fairy tales" ...well when I was a kid we had a cartoon called fractured fairy tales ..heres the story and might be the twist?
You may not recognize the names of June Foray or Daws Butler, but there is a good chance that you would recognize their voices, or at least some of their voices. These were two of the talented actors who provided voices for the characters who inhabited the different segments of "Rocky and His Friends" and the later "The Bullwinkle Show." One part of those shows which made a lasting impression on anyone who saw them were the "Fractured Fairy Tales," narrated by the soothing voice of Edward Everett Horton and performed by the above named artists and Bill Scott (with occasional help from Paul Frees and Julie Bennett). These shorts form such an impression that the original voices come to life when reading the transcripts collected by A.J. Jacobs in Fractured Fairy Tales.
The standard formula used throughout the Fractured Fairy Tales, twenty-five of which are collected in this book, was to take a standard fairy tale and put a twist on it, frequently involving bad puns. The stories were written in a folksy style, as if they were being told by a favorite uncle who was aware of any misunderstandings his story might cause and be ready to take advantage of those misunderstandings in telling the story. This tone comes across exceedingly well throughout Fractured Fairy Tales.
Ward Productions, who produced the original shows, created 91 Fractured Fairy Tales, frequently revisiting stories when they came up with a new slant. While this book has just under a third of those stories, Jacobs elected to include some of those revisitations by providing the reader with both "Beauty and the Beast" and "Cutie and the Beast" as well as multiple tales based on Rumpelstiltskin and King Midas.
Although the tales were meant to be topical when they were first aired in the 1960s, they remain topical today, although with references to "Faraway Hamlet 90210" at the end of "Pinocchio," it seems that Jacobs did take the liberty to update some of the references to make them more understandable to today's readers who may not have been alive when the cartoons first aired.
http://www.sfsite.com/~silverag/jacobs.html
puddin:
maybe we can ask alice?
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canta:
I dont see anyone??? am I blind?
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