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disneytva · 6 months
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Nico Colaleo Reveals Scrapped Plans For A Roger Rabbit Animated TV Series At Disney TVA On Mid-2010s
Today on Disney Television Animation shows that never where is a Roger Rabbit animated series.
Nico Colaleo ("Randy Cunningham 9th Grade Ninja","Pickle and Peanut","Star Vs The Forces of Evil","Mickey Mouse Roadster Racers", "NDA Disney TVA Series" Nickelodeon Animation Studios "Pig Goat Banana Cricket","Santiago of The Seas" ,SpindleHorse Toons "Helluva Boss". Netflix Animation "Kid Cosmic") pitched some ideas to a Disney Branded Television exc for shows based on legacy characters and IPs, one of them was a Roger Rabbit animated series likely for Disney XD on 2015-2017 The idea was quickly shutdown due the IP and Roger himself being on a copyright ownership spaghetti with Disney, Amblin Entertaiment and Roger Rabbit's author Gary K. Wolf
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chaifootsteps · 5 months
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“Who’s Nico and what happened with him?”
Nico Colaleo is the creator of Ollie & Scoops and TOO LOUD which viv did some animating on and voices/voiced a character on.
if you go to google images and search “vivziepop nico colaleo” you’ll see *lots* of social photos of them together.
he seems to be on good terms with viv and iirc has defended her in the past in the vein of those saying “she’s super nice y’all!!”
there’s also a screenshot of nico DMing an artist to check if they were working on viv’s stuff where he explains that he’s checking bc viv didn’t want people hiring her artists. (i’m paraphrasing of course and also pretty sure i have this screenshot somewhere but not currently on-hand, will toss it in your ask box if/when i find it.)
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Thanks for the info. Someone also said something about Vivzie going behind his back to tell people not to support his project?
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dynamotoon · 1 year
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Episode 10 of Ollie and Scoops is out! Here’s a reel of all the shots I got to do!
Full Episode Here!
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historyhermann · 1 year
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Beauty, dress codes, and fashion: Examining twenty fictional White female librarians [Part 3]
Continued from part 2
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Screenshots taken from fandom gallery of "Through the Looking Glass Ruins" episode of The Owl House; a Dutch nun in 1992 and a Hungarian priest in 1935
Even more simplified is Amity Blight in The Owl House, who is directly shown as a librarian in the episode "Through the Looking Glass Ruins". As she travels into a dangerous/forbidden section of the library to help her friend Luz Noceda, she wears a library employee card in a lanyard around her neck, a black short sleeve dress, black point shoes, and orchid leggings. In the episode, she ties up her hair in a typical librarian style, as shown in the image above. She looks similar to those working in religious libraries, especially a nun or even a priest.
Reprinted from my Pop Culture Library Review WordPress, where this post was published on Nov. 29, 2022.
When I saw what she was wearing, it immediately make of something religious. Wearing the color black can express self-confidence, sensitivity, an attempt to impress someone, could indicate someone has a rebellious nature that doesn't accept authority, exudes a person's feelings of power and influence, and building walls to protect themselves. It doesn't necessarily make you "part of a suspicious sect" or anything like that. Rather, wearing black-colored clothes can be classy, mysterious, or distinguished. More specifically, some have argued that wearing black can be slimming, elegant, sexy, chic, or even overbearing and evil. Most of the positive qualities are the reasons that Amity is watching it, as the wearing black-colored clothes can signal "a desire to reclaim one’s power." [13]
Inter-related with this is the fact that librarian and library perform a specific role "in the language of fashion," employed in phrases like librarian chic, conjuring imperatives and fantasies on librarians, their labor, and recognition. This centers "class-privileged white women" as the stewards of librarianship and space of the library itself. Furthermore, cuteness can compel viewers to place value on what is cute, worthy to be desired, protected, and cared for. As such, if Whiteness is seen as cute, it is devoid of its "power to inflict violence" and is not threatening. The latter is the case with Amity, as often seen by fans, as she is clearly attractive, delightful, appealing, or even clever and mentally keen, and is White. [14] In that sense, the styles of Amity and Kaisa are somewhat similar.
Amity is also a lesbian, something which I mentioned back in October. Like everyone else, lesbians internalize societal standards of appearance and weight, even though they were more critical of "traditional social norms" when it came to roles and rights of women. A large number saw physical attractiveness as "important in a partner," even though such attractiveness was functional rather than a concern for looks like straight women. Not surprisingly, there is even a fashion style known as "lesbian chic." [15]
Shawn(ta) Smith-Cruz, archivist at the Lesbian Herstory Archives, argued that librarians are marginal due to enduring values just as lesbians are marginal, noted that lesbian is a sexual orientation and a "constructed political identity." She also said that all lesbians may not be "equipped to be librarians" with a lesbian "subject specialty." [16] Amity may not have that specialty, nor may she know nothing about lesbian herstory, lesbian separatism, or lesbian feminism, but she would provide service of a high caliber to patrons and fight lesbian erasure at the same time.
Like Amity, other librarians also have their own style. This includes Mo Testa in Dykes to Watch Out For, public librarian Myra in The Public, Sabine in Sabine: an asexual coming-of-age story, Desiree, Sara, and Sarah, her two work colleagues. The latter three characters are in Too Loud, an animated web series. Starting with Mo, a lesbian feminist and reference librarian, is described as a "worrier and kvetch extraordinaire" on the comic's official website, she has a "penchant for striped clothing" just like the comic's author, Alison Bechdel. This means that Mo is falling into the style of being "overly conventional," and not as colorful as, let's say, drag queens. [17] The same can be said about what Desiree, Sara and Sarah wear while working at the library. Their clothes falls into typical wear like cardigans, dresses, brown pants, and sensible shoes. However, when Desiree finally dresses up in more girly clothes during the episode "Slumber Party," it makes clear what the now defunct Misfit Librarian's Style Catalog blog tried to prove: that librarians are stylish people despite some a perception of the opposite. [18]
Myra and Sabine also wear simple clothes, but nothing that could be called "dated" or "conservative". Sabine, even more than Myra, exudes a level of coolness as she is also a student as well as a part-time librarian at the college library. This is something that even the New York Times recognized years ago, noting that emergence of hip and cool librarians in a profession described as "nerdy" and a haven for "left-wing social engagement." More than any of the other librarians in this post, Sabine is more trendy and fashionable, although not as dedicated to fashion trends as those like Sam, Alex, and Clover in Totally Spies! to give three examples. Very few of the librarians I've described in this post are those are either wear hair in a bun, wear glasses, or a cardigan, with librarians getting a bad rap for the latter. [19] Rather they tend toward being more stylish, especially in terms of Amity, who dyes her hair green (her original hair color is brown) and later lilac, and Kaisa, who has put purple streaks in her black hair.
Continued in part 4
© 2022 Burkely Hermann. All rights reserved.
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[13] Maria Hakki, "Here is What Wearing Black Says About You (and the 5 most common personality traits of these people)," iheartintelligence, May 28, 2020; Cassandra Sethi, "How to Wear Black," ehow, Feb. 21, 2022; Ada Polla, "5 Rules for Wearing All Black Clothing," HuffPost, Dec. 6, 2017; "What does black clothing symbolize?," Colorbux, access date March 22, 2022; Cameron Wolf, "Study Confirms That Wearing Black Clothing Makes You Appear More Attractive, Intelligent, and Confident," Complex, Aug. 28, 2015; bethany, "In Defense of Wearing All-Black," College Fashion, Jan. 31, 2019; Ellie Krupnick, "14 Reasons Black Is The Only Color Worth Wearing," HuffPost, Dec. 6, 2017; Brianna West, "The Psychological Reason Some Women Love Wearing All Black," Thought Catalog, Jan. 30, 2022.
[14] Vani Natarajan, "Nostalgia, Cuteness, and Geek Chic: Whiteness in Orla Kiely's Library" in Topographies of Whiteness: Mapping Whiteness in Library and Information Science (ed. Gina Schlesselman-Tarango, Library Juice Press: Sacramento, CA: 2017), p. 122, 132; "Cute," Dictionary.com, accessed March 22, 2022.
[15] Karen Heffernan, "Lesbians and the Internalization of Societal Standards of Weight and Appearance" [Abstract], Journal of Lesbian Studies, Vol. 3, No. 4, Oct. 12, 2008; "How to Dress Lesbian Chic," Wikihow, Jan. 31, 2022.
[16]  Shawn(ta) Smith-Cruz, "Lesbian Librarianship for All: A Manifesto" in Reference Librarianship & Justice: History, Practice & Praxis (ed. Kate Adler, Ian Beilin, & Eamon Tewell, Library Juice Press: Sacramento, CA: 2018), p. 298-299, 301, 304. I'm not even getting into the somewhat problematic and strange idea that all librarians can be "lesbian librarians" even those who aren't lesbian. I think she just chose the wrong term for it. Maybe "social justice librarian" or something like that would have been better.
[17] "Cast Biographies," Dykes to Watch Out For Official Website, accessed March 22, 2022; Janine Utell, "The Comics of Alison Bechdel: From the Outside In," University Press Scholarship Online, Sept. 2020; Michael Rhode, "Alison Bechdel at Politics and Prose bookstore," May 4, 2012, Wikimedia Commons; Elizabeth Fernandez, "It's just a drag, darling, but this is a big election," F.M.I.: Female Mimics International, Vol. 20, No. 1, #57, 1990, p. 41. My favorite part of this quote was this: "Other critics offer a more unusual complaint: The contest has become overly conventional. Candidates nowadays resemble librarians more than drag queens, some say." It made me laugh a lot as it says a lot about what people see as librarians.
[18] Molly Wetta, "What makes a work wardrobe?," Librarian Style, Jun. 1, 2021.
[19] "Bookworms' backs up," Sunday Star Times, Jan. 31, 2009; Kara Jesella, "A Hipper Crowd of Shushers," New York Times, Jul. 8, 2007; Brytani, "A Study of Librarian Fashion," The Intrepid Nerd, Oct. 6, 2011; Heather Slania, "Welcome to the Librarian Fashion blog!," Librarian Fashion, Mar. 22, 2011. Slania is now the Director of the Decker Library at MICA and was formerly the Director of the Library at the National Museum of Women in the Arts.
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neverendingsatam · 8 months
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Waiting is the hardest part.
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orbmanson7 · 1 year
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For anyone who loves horror and wonderful animation, this episode of Ollie & Scoops features the voice talents of Mara Wilson (Matilda) and Barbara Crampton and Jeffrey Combs (Re-Animator)! It's full of lots of classic horror movie references and is delightfully funny, so please check it out!
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toonrandy · 6 months
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With inspiration by Nico Colaleo’s ’s tweet below showing Desirée’s design, here’s my new drawing featuring her!
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redsnerdden · 8 months
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Lackadaisy and Iron Circus Animation Meets Their Crowdfunding Goal
A Victory for Indie Animation! Lackadaisy and Iron Circus Animation Meets Their Crowdfunding Goal #lackadaisy #animation #IndieAnimation
With mainstream animation hitting a bit of a snag at the Box Office and on the television screen, people were craving better animation. Creators such as Vivienne Medrano, Ashley Nichols, Nico Colaleo, Anna Lencioni, and other talented animators have answered the call to help create something that audiences are craving. Our main focus is the success of Iron Circus Animation’s Crowdfunding campaign…
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hmvw2015 · 4 years
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Over the summer, I got into “Ollie & Scoops.”
Look it up!!!
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phuiscribbles · 5 years
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TOO LOUD SEASON 2 Teaser Trailer is here!!!
I helped animating the whole 10 episodes for this little cartoon created by Nico Colaleo. Trust me, it’s gonna be a whole lot of fun!! :D COMING SOON GUYS!
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chaifootsteps · 5 months
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I agree with the anon on Nico. I've actually met him in real life and he's actually not a bad person, but rather an insecure adult who want to maintain friendship with others as much as possible (basically a lonely guy who desperate for friends). It's sad that he still hasn't realize he was being manipulated, especially after I learned that Vivz went behind his back to tell others not to help/support his project.
Holy shit, did she really?
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historyhermann · 1 year
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The Promise of Rad Sechrist’s “Project City” [Part 2]
Continued from part 2
Reprinted from Pop Culture Maniacs, my History Hermann WordPress blog on Jan. 23, 2023, and Wayback Machine. This was the tenth article I wrote for Pop Culture Maniacs. This post was originally published on February 6, 2022.
© 2022-2023 Burkely Hermann. All rights reserved.
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[1] There is also an extensive terms of service agreement, privacy policy, feed and search sections.
[2] In one of the comments, Sechrist revealed that “Netflix told me to never pitch them anything like that ever again” and that’s why they “went independent.” That is unfortunate to hear about Kipo, but not surprising. He also noted in September 2021 that he wrote a movie about Wolf, but Netflix “made them remove any stories from Benson Wolf or Jamack from seasons 2 and 3.” So, that sadly will probably not happen. He has been relatively active on the Kipo subreddit. Earlier, he confirmed Asher as a non-binary character and noted Asher was non-binary because some on the crew were non-binary. Sechrist also said they had 30 episodes from Netflix “from the very beginning” and wouldn’t let them do any after that saying that is “sort of the way Netflix wanted to operate.”
[3] See Sugarwaltz, Thomas Crane and the Mind Machine, Last Knight, Starbound, Biopunks, Laundry Monsters, Knightlights, Lumeon Lands, Magicless, Wandered Here, The Chippy and Loopus Show, Kix and Gigglz, Atlantica, Tall Tales of Magic and Mages, Mag-Tech Noire, Soggy Bills, Power Up!, Immortal Age, Galactic Homerun, The Great Run, Almost Hero, The Culling, Bhoodham, The Space Stragglers, Book of Worlds, Unresolved, Seer, Project N.e.w.m.o.o.m.e., The Ball, Cation Princess, Weirdogs, Seldom Manifest, Westwoods, Plot Armor Academy, Black Liquid, Deadboy, Epic Temple Quest, Ad Lunam, and Juvenile Delinquests. There’s also a train simulated web series named San Juan Branch Line, animated films Jupiter and Europa, Lyrics for the End of the World, and Dinonauts, collection of short films named Conquer, a game named Yasuke: A Lost Descendant, a streaming channel on YouTube named Blutoonztv, and a music video named Daylight.
[4] Of note is the webzine, Erika the Typewriter, the horror comic Be Right With You, the steampunkish webcomic World Post Evil, and a later-to-be graphic novel named The Enchanteds, along with the graphic novels Wildertale, Departure, Hearth in Space, and a manga series entitled Project Rogon Zero.
[5] This is different from the approach of Nico Colaleo who said in a February 2021 podcast that he hopes to make Ollie & Scoops bigger and bigger until the series can get studio funding, his ultimately goal, although he is content with keeping it independent, wanting to pitch it to studios in person.
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neverendingsatam · 1 year
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Creepy. Kooky. Mysterious. Spooky.
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jeremyfuscaldo · 5 years
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Illustrating an Ape Named Ape.
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In case you didn’t hate Dan Schneider enough already, here’s what Nico Colaleo (former Nickelodeon artist, storyboard artist on Star Vs. The Forces of Evil, and creator of Too Loud!) had to say about the guy.
(source)
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