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In this video, Benson will be opening toy story 4 blind boxes. Secondly, will be opening toy story 4 blind bags. At last is also to be opening toy story 4 mashems balls. It’s so much fun unboxing toy story 4 toy surprises. Let’s do it!
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talking about this "leaked" concept art for a rumored retheme of Disneyland's Paradise Pier Hotel to a Toy Story theme and why I think it's fake
There's a rumor that Disneyland's Paradise Pier Hotel is going to be rethemed to Toy Story, with the "leaked" concept arts above being used as proof. In this post, I'm going to list the reasons I think it's fake.
1. One of the reasons I think it's fake is because "friend" behind the check in desk is misspelled (or the E is just backwards and blends into the i?)
2. There's a severe lack of diversity in the "leaked" concept arts- in many of Disney's concept arts, there is a lot of diversity. This concept art has very little diversity. Here are official concept arts of Art of Animation, one of the newer DisneyWorld hotels, for comparison.
3. This one is a little bit hard to explain, and also a bit weird, but Disney doesn't typically include speedos in their concept arts (I've actually never seen a speedo in any of their concept arts, but I could've missed one). There are two speedos in the "leaked" concept art for the family pool, but in the concept art for the Riviera Resort, another one of the newer DisneyWorld hotels, there are none.
4. The piece of "leaked" concept art of the lobby that has the characters flying above with parachutes contains stock photos from a Toy Story 4 minifigures blind box series. It looks like whoever made these just copy-pasted the figures from the stock photos and then added parachutes on them. It seems unlikely to me that Disney themselves would take stock photos from a previous product and haphazardly insert it into concept art.
I'm not saying it's not going to be rethemed to Toy Story, just that I believe these concept arts are fake. I do think it's likely Paradise Pier Hotel gets rethemed, but I would imagine it gets rethemed to Pixar as a whole, not just Toy Story, like what happened to Paradise Pier itself a few years ago.
That's all I've got, but if anybody else has anything else they'd like to add on, please do!
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10 Hilarious Pixar Logic Memes Only True Disney Fans Will Understand
With nearly two decades of Toy Story touching kids over the years to breaking records with animated winter musical Frozen, it's no question that Disney Pixar has become one of the most successful and most beloved movie-making companies that the entertainment industry has ever seen. But even for the Disney lovers who adore nothing but the magical words created for them, a lot of Disney's characters and movie scenes have become only more and more relatable as life goes on.
RELATED: The 10 Best Pixar Movies of All Time, According to IMDB
Whether your favorite Pixar movie is a Disney classic or a princess film, here are 10 hilarious Pixar memes only true fans will understand.
10 WHAT IF FEELINGS HAD FEELINGS
From bugs to toys to cars, Disney Pixar has undoubtedly made it known of their brilliant talent to make inanimate objects - or otherwise, objects that we wouldn't normally think of having emotions and storylines and love interests - come to life.
However, in 2015 Disney Pixar's Inside Out was released to theaters, and it got the internet laughing at the fact that after having exhausted every object out there, the only thing to make a movie on now was a movie about FEELINGS themselves!
Inside Out saw great box office success and was popular among families in 2015, moving both children and their parents to tears.
9 "The Customer's Always Right"
In one of the last scenes of Disney Pixar's summer 2016 release Finding Dory, which follows Dory's solo journey across the ocean, seals Rudder and Fluke are seen yelling at their friend Gerald. This movie scene brings out a ton of laughs between audiences, and has also, consequently, just served the internet with a brand new meme.
Gerald's lost face and blatantly ignorant reaction to being yelled at by his friends have been equated many times to taking on discipline or receiving hard news in real life -- the joke is that the only response possible, is Gerald's cluelessness.
8 A live-action Ratatouille
In recent years, Disney has gotten the ball rolling in the playing field of the "live-action remake." By taking its old animated films like Cinderella, Beauty and the Beast, and Alice In Wonderland, and casting them with real-life actors and building imaginary worlds on studio sets and then releasing them to movie theaters, they've brought these classic stories to new generations.
With The Little Mermaid, The Lady and the Tramp, and other live-action Disney films right around the corner, However, one movie that the internet isn't sure they want to see is a live-remake of Ratatouille. We're not sure how well that would do at the box office.
7 Violet for your only four moods
Disney first released The Incredibles film in November of 2004, telling the story of a family of superheroes, long before Marvel's The Avengers ever hit theaters. Many lovers of the 2004 Pixar classic had to wait fourteen years to see the sequel.
RELATED: Pixar: The Highest-Grossing Films of All Time
By the time Incredibles 2 came out, many of the movie's previous target audience were not kids who had graduated from high school and even started college in that time. One thing that didn't change over the years though was everyone's relatability to Violet at the dinner table.
6 "Sorry, Dude"
First released in 2003, Finding Nemo told the story of sea creatures and the lives they lived in the ocean. Though all fiction, many of Disney Pixar's animated scenes underwater were actually inspired by sea life and plant life of The Great Barrier Reef.
Crush the sea turtle, who is also a huge fan favorite of the film is a laid back, hippie kind of character who echoes the typical characteristics of a surfer dude. His chill attitude and casual looks have led to a ton of funny internet jokes including this one.
5 The older I get, the more I understand Scar
When you watch Disney Pixar films as a child, naturally what you want to do is identify with the protagonist and root for them. Your childhood innocence blinds you from even trying to understand where any type of villains come from.
Scar in The Lion King is one of Disney audience's most hated villains, but as the internet points out, his remarks in the film aren't at all that far off from things adults say in their everyday lives today. Many people find themselves identifying with the cynicism of Disney's villains as they get older. Do you relate?
4 Idiots, Idiots everywhere
In November of 1995, Disney Pixar released Toy Story which shook the world of animation for good. Setting up the groundwork for the way Pixar approaches their storyboard and real-life looking animations today, Toy Story is known as one of the most influential animated movies ever made.
However, that doesn't mean the internet still can't joke about it. Applied to any situation where there's too many of one thing in a certain place that leads to an overwhelming feeling of annoyance, this meme of Buzz telling Woody, "Idiots, idiots everywhere," is one that people on Twitter love to use when a topic goes to the top of the trending list.
3 Put that thing back where it came from!
While this may have a little bit of a sad undertone to it for those who are fans of both Disney's Marvel and the Avengers films, this meme has blown up on the internet over the last few days.
RELATED: 10 Voices We Forgot Were Behind Our Favorite Animated Movies
In light of the news that Spiderman is no longer part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, many MCU and Spidey fans have taken to the internet to express their sadness at the character and universe separation. Other fans, however, turned to Disney's Monster Inc., to let Mike Wazowski let them know how they felt.
2 Talking on the phone
In the world of texting and tweeting and posting, nobody ever really wants to talk on the phone anymore, right? The popularity of this meme of Ilsa from Frozen has become one of the most relatable things on the internet.
Released back in 2013, Disney's Frozen broke records when it achieved the title for the highest-grossing animated film at the box office ever, passing up Disney's own Toy Story 3. Despite the fact that its songs, its heroine driven story, and its comedic brilliance for families and kids, its popularity did make the film a little bit of a joke on the internet, but it's relatable, so it makes sense.
1 Oh, look at that.
Despite being a small character in the film, Olaf from Disney's Frozen has won the hearts of people of all ages. Voiced by Josh Gad, Olaf serves as the comic relief in the movie and his happy-go-lucky charm has been made the basis of countless internet jokes about masking real-life problems or pain with a jaded look at his optimism.
In the movie, the scene shown in the photo above actually has Olaf saying, "Oh look! I've been impaled!" in reaction to an icicle going through his snowman body. The internet takes this and applies it things that feel threatening to comfort like unwelcome feelings and anything other than happy thoughts. At least Olaf lets us know we're not alone!
NEXT: Which Pixar Character Are You Based On Your MBTI
source https://screenrant.com/10-hilarious-pixar-logic-memes-true-disney-fans-will-understand/
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Why you don’t need design like Apple
Apple proved that beauty not only works. It sells.
By marrying design and technology, Apple evolved from a niche brand for hobbyists into one of most valuable companies ever.
After their success, many companies followed suit and leveled up on design.
If you can’t beat ‘em…
Many of the products we spend our time with — our phones, laptops, and the software that comes with them — were originally designed, or at least inspired by Apple. And with Apple creating and managing the App Store, a huge chunk of the software industry is now required to have ‘Apple-approved’ design to survive.
For design and beauty, our expectations as consumers are higher than they’ve ever been. And the future of where products will compete will hinge more and more on the emotions driven from thoughtful, pleasurable design.
As a designer, I appreciate this attention to design.
I look at my laptop screen and the icons look like candy.
I zip fluidly through my apps, getting hits of pleasure from well-designed transitions along the way. The visual beauty of technology is so much different from how it was even just 10 years ago.
A computer used to feel like you were navigating a maze in a cornfield. Uncertainty around every corner until you finally found the path to get something done.
Yet, for all the good this focus on design has done for us, this same focus on visual polish has a cost.
In our worship of the design and marketing of companies like Apple, we creators lose sight of an even more powerful way to present our ideas to the world.
Because we’ve seen the results of visual beauty in product design, we expect putting this level of focus on visual beauty in our brand’s message will have the same effect.
I’ve seen companies spend tens to hundreds of thousands of dollars perfecting a website, email, or ad’s visual design while spending the last few hours on writing the words that will make up that design.
Our intense focus on visual design can blind us from focusing on the most important part of the message: The story.
Choosing substance over style
We’ve had a taste of this ourselves.
A year ago, we sent out two versions of this email campaign.
One email closely followed the principles of how a well-designed email is supposed to look:
Not too many words
A big, attractive image
A clear call-to-action
The other version took a different direction. We wrote it as if we were telling a story to a friend. It broke every rule:
The email was long
There were 11 links before you got to the main call-to-action
The call-to-action was buried at the end
Here were the results:
Even though our ‘less-beautiful’ email broke many of the rules, the longer, story version had almost three times the click-through rate compared to the shorter version.
Though this example is limited in that it was constrained to people in our community who might prefer a more story-oriented approach (since this is our usual style), it supported our hunch that beauty isn’t always best.
And that being more authentic (i.e. telling our story just like we’d tell it to a friend) has a bigger impact than we might expect.
A lesson from Pixar: It’s not about animation, it’s about story
There are examples of this same preference for a well-told story in all creative fields.
In 1995, Pixar released Toy Story, the first computer animated feature film. And while Toy Story went on to smash box office records, Pixar had a rocky start.
Star Wars Director, George Lucas, sold his shares in Pixar before Toy Storywas made, and Pixar almost went bankrupt (if, ironically, it weren’t for Apple founder Steve Jobs stepping in to invest).
The film industry thought a mainstream audience wouldn’t care enough to see an animated feature film.
What they neglected to see was the power of story.
Even though animation was at its core, the Pixar team knew their success would ultimately fall on one simple thing: Their ability to tell a good story.
Ed Catmull, one of the co-founders of Pixar, wrote in his bestselling bookCreativity, Inc. about his company’s creative process:
“For all the care you put into artistry, visual polish frequently doesn’t matter if you aren’t getting the story right.”
Pixar has won the Academy Award for Best Animated Picture for 8 out of their 16 films. And every single Pixar film has landed on the respective year’s top ten list of most profitable films.
No other studio comes close to this hit rate.
Telling a good story, whether that’s through email, film, or any medium, creates a connection. And it’s this connection that leads to attention, which leads to trust, which leads to sales.
As Pixar realized early on, you can get away with lesser visual effects if your story is good. But the reverse is not always true.
Case in point, if we look at the ten most expensive movies ever made, the average production cost was $274 million per film.
And the average ranking across these films according to Rotten Tomatoes? 59%
(The highest rated film was Tangled at 90% which was produced by Disney/Pixar).
Meanwhile, the average Pixar film cost an average of $145 million and averages an 89% review from critics and audiences alike.
What’s even more telling is that if we take a sampling of the critic consensus from the poorly rated movies in the top ten, you’ll notice that critics rarely say the quality of the animation or special effects as the reason why they gave a bad rating.
They cite issues with the story:
“…this Pirates runs aground on a disjointed plot and a non-stop barrage of noisy action sequences.” — Review of Pirates of the Caribbean on Stranger Tides
“…mixes in too many characters with too many incomprehensible plot threads.” — Review of Pirates of the Caribbean 3
“While John Carter looks terrific and delivers its share of pulpy thrills, it also suffers from uneven pacing and occasionally incomprehensible plotting and characterization.” — Review of John Carter
“…a grim whirlwind of effects-driven action.” — Review of Batman vs. Superman
While the other producers may have had the budgets to make something as visually stunning as Pixar, where they didn’t level up was in their story.
We can make something look pretty. But if pretty doesn’t tell a good story it won’t matter.
Why beauty doesn’t always work (especially today)
Just like you can’t rely on beauty alone in the design of your product, you can’t only focus on beauty to tell your story.
A well-designed message is one that tells a good story first.
As we saw in our email campaign example, a story is powerful enough to overcome an email design that breaks all the rules.
You might not have Apple’s marketing budget ($1.2 billion this year) or design chops. But that’s okay. Sometimes Apple-level beauty isn’t the best way to present your story. And sometimes it might even make things worse.
In a recent article published by BBC, researchers from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte reviewed findings on if there was a drawback to being ‘too beautiful’.
The researchers uncovered several studies, including one in 1975 that found people tend to move away from a beautiful woman on a pathway. A similar behavior was found from a review of the profile photos from the dating website OKCupid. Men with ‘average’ looking profile photos got more messages than men with the ‘most attractive’ profile photos.
The researchers suggested this behavior could be because attractiveness conveys power. As a result, people feel they need to respect an attractive person more and keep their distance.
These examples illustrate that beauty can backfire. If something is too beautiful it can be seen as less approachable, further distancing you from the people you are trying to reach.
Similarly, clothing brands like American Eagle recently saw an increase in sales after they stopped photoshopping models.
Too much beauty can be seen as a sales tactic. Though we may be attracted to something that looks good, we also have a strong unconscious aversion to being sold to.
And this aversion is getting stronger.
First, because of the internet and the power of online networks like Facebook, we have more access to information, which means we see more instances of bad things.
For instance, of the top movie documentaries all-time listed on Rotten Tomatoes, 4 of the top 10 are stories of injustice or corruption and have been made since 2005.
Every phone has become a media device. Stories spread fast. And while there’s a lot of good happening in the world, stories of corruption and distrust tend to surface to the top because they grab our attention.
Trust is at an all-time low. As this 2013 USA Today poll suggests, two thirds of Americans polled said they were suspicious of others. This is double the rate of distrust since the survey was first done in 1972.
We’ve become hypersensitive to bullshit. We have an increasing lack of trust for everything, including beauty.
Beauty can be perceived as a layer of bullshit, making people feel like they are being sold to.
As one of the lead researchers from the study said: “If you are obsessing about attractiveness, it may alter your experience and interactions.”
This is exactly it.
If we focus too much on the visual attraction of our message, the experience people have with our stories will likely suffer.
Increase in information; Decrease in attention
Adding to our natural aversion to being sold to, we’ve become overloaded with things vying for our attention.
In the last decade, as the world moved mostly online, messages started to attack us everywhere. And these messages are smart. With billboards we could just look away. With TV/radio we could shut it off. But today’s messages are connected to all the tools we use to communicate. And brought to us by people we trust.
“If we focus too much on the visual attraction of our message, the experience people have with our stories will likely suffer.”
Facebook. Twitter. Email. Phones. Laptops. Tablets. Notifications come flying at us from all angles. Because today’s messages come in bits and pings, they are cheap, effective, and easy to spread.
With so much access to information, we only have two options:
Either we try to consume everything (which isn’t possible) or we filter (i.e. we stop paying attention to a lot of things).
Since we can’t consume everything, we’ve become experts at filtering. Filtering out crap. Filtering anything that looks remotely untrustworthy or has the tiniest hint of salesmanship.
To quote multi-platinum musician Rihanna:
“My fans can sniff the BS from very far away. I cannot trick them.”
Our brains have actually changed to adapt to the current information overload.
A recent study by Microsoft on Canadians found that our attention spans have dropped by a quarter, from 12 seconds to 8 seconds, since 2000; which is less than the attention span of a goldfish.
There’s a general fatigue that’s happening. We’ve been forced into becoming B.S. detection experts.
While ads and marketing may have gotten prettier and better with more data, we’ve gotten better at filtering. Resisting.
It’s an arms race. And it might seem like we’re doomed to lose as creators. That no will ever care what we have to say.
But we’re not. There’s an easy solution.
The solution is easy and you already know how to do it
When you see an email from a friend saying, “hey lets catchup for coffee monday. you in?” it cuts through everything.
Even though it breaks every standard of writing: no capitalization, missing punctuation. It grabs your attention. You answer it first. Why?
First, this message comes from a person you trust so that plays a huge factor. But, adding to the trust you have in the messenger, is a message you know came from a human. Not a machine.
There’s no fancy headlines, graphics, or words so you feel safe. You’re not being gamed. You can let your guard down for a second.
There’s plenty of results to back up that you don’t need visual beauty to connect with people.
Multi-platinum musician Beyonce’s most watched music video on her YouTube channel is her song, 7/11. Even though many of Beyonce’s music videos have a high production quality, 7/11 is shot with low-quality video. Yet, it outperformed every other Beyonce video.
Kelly Starrett is a physiotherapist and trainer who has some of the most consistently viewed fitness videos on YouTube. He recorded most videos with a phone in his garage with no professional gear.
Some of Kelly’s videos even show his daughter accidentally walking in and ‘mistakes’ in editing.
Kelly could have edited these things out but because they were kept in, I feel an even deeper connection with him. These ‘mistakes’ make me feel like Kelly is a human and he’s not trying to sell me. Like he’s one of my friends in his garage figuring something out and he’s sending over a video for me to check it out.
He’s a person who has kids, a dog, a somewhat messy garage. And he shoots low-resolution, unedited videos just like me. I can relate to that. His videos aren’t the highest quality or the nicest shot. But what they do have is some of the best fitness coaching I’ve ever seen. They have substance. So I trust Kelly. When I’m looking for fitness tips, I search Kelly first. When Kelly wrote a book, I bought it.
Maybe if Beyonce and Kelly used professional equipment for these videos, viewership would have increased, but the way they shot these videos in raw form is partly what makes them attractive. These videos make Beyonce and Kelly seem approachable and relatable.
Comedian Louis C.K. does a similar thing with the emails he writes.
Louis sends email newsletters that feel like he’s just writing to you. Some have spelling mistakes or improper punctuation but that’s part of them. I don’t care about those grammar mistakes. In fact, I like them. It makes me feel like Louis is simply talking to me like he would talk to a friend.
Here’s an example:
Time and again we see the substance of the story is more important than the look of it.
We don’t need beauty to connect with people. When we sense someone is being ‘real’ with us, our brain’s natural urge to resist influence is calmed.
What your message needs is authenticity. Your unique way of sharing your message with all its blemishes and imperfect sentences.
Authenticity doesn’t mean beauty.
Authenticity means substance. It means cutting the bullshit.
While visual beauty counts for something, it isn’t the only thing that connects people with your message.
If you want anyone to trust you. To pay attention to you. To maybe one day buy from you. Your best option is to remove all the barriers in your message. To sound more like how you sound when you talk to a friend. To sound like just another human. Because ‘just another human’ is much more relatable than a corporation.
Authenticity is powerful. It’s easy. And we all already know how to do it.
We just need a reminder sometimes that it’s ok to be authentic. Even when it comes to business. Actually, especially when it comes to business.
When you think of our company, picture it as a person. A brand should sound like a person, rather than a company. Whether it’s a website, an email, a tweet, or an ad, everything should feel like it’s coming from a person. Because it is.
You might think you need to use industry words because you think you need to sound like an ‘industry leader’, or you feel like you need to watch what you say so you don’t offend a partner, investor, or customer.
Or in certain cases, there might be legal or company policy reasons outside your control that require you to hold back from saying what you really want to say. But the closer you can get to what you really want to say, the better your message will connect.
That said, I know how hard it is to wipe the business off a message when we’ve been trained to think we need to sound a certain way when we operate professionally. One thing I do is start rough drafts for any of our company announcements as Facebook posts.
There’s something about the context of writing the message directly in Facebook that shifts my brain and makes me write like I’m writing to a friend.
Sometimes we can overdo a message because the tool we use to write these messages that makes us feel like the stakes are higher. Writing in professional tools subtly tells your brain, “Hey, this is going to be important cause you’re writing it in your WordPress backend so be careful.” This kills your personality.
Try lowering the stakes. Write your important business messages using a tool where you communicate with friends and family. I bet your personality will come spilling out.
The way you explain your company to a friend is how you should explain it to the world. If you’re being overly formal just because it worked for someone else, you will sound like everyone else, and you will be tuned out.
We’re all humans. Even under a suit.
—
Making something pretty is fine, just make sure this beauty is paired with substance because beauty alone won’t be enough.
And if you have to choose between making something prettier or making the message more authentic, choose the message.
Without a story you have nothing. Without a story, people will glaze over you even if you spent hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars making your story look pretty.
Showing your imperfection is better than faking perfection.
More so than ever before, direct communication is expected. Instagram, Twitter, and newer communication platforms like Snapchat are even more focused on raw, direct connection.
For all the bad the connected world shows us, this same connection is a unique opportunity to share your beliefs and connect with people on a massive scale. Never has it been easier to reach so many of the right people with your story.
You might think you need beauty to create impact but you don’t. Authenticity is more powerful. Authenticity is approachable. It creates connection.
Being authentic is the most beautiful thing you can do.
The post Why you don’t need design like Apple appeared first on Design your way.
from Web Development & Designing http://www.designyourway.net/blog/design/dont-need-design-like-apple/
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In this video will be some Disney Vinyl Figures Mystery Minis like Opening Mystery Minis Toy Story 4 Vinyl Figure, Unboxing Mystery Minis Birds of Prey, Opening Marvel Spiderman Blind Box Mystery Minis Vinyl Figure Spiderman Far from Home, Opening Avengers Infinity War Blind Box Mystery Minis, and at Lastly will be Opening Funko Blind Box Thorn Ragnarok Vinyl Figure Mystery Minis. Hopefully you will find your favorite disney vinyl figures and characters!
Funkidscollection.com is a child safe and family-friendly kid channel for people of all ages. We love unboxing and reviewing all kinds of toys. Enjoy and have a look around at our great channel and subscribe if you wish to see more. If You have Enjoyed this Video, please Like-Share our video! Thank you!
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