I know two
grown women in their twenties who are infatuated with the Disney Princesses. And I mean totally inspired with foolish love
and admiration for them.
One of the
women now works for Disney, the other is newlywed. They both dress up as
princesses one for fun and the other as her dream job.
It is funny
to see normally strong young women fall under the spell of the "princes
mystique" . For a six year old girl
it's cute but for a mature adult it is almost strange. Some parents of young daughters look at the
Disney Princesses on par with the dreaded Barbie Doll as an unrealistic
depiction of hyper femininity and a reinforcement of stereotypical gender roles. That might be a little over the top.
Oddly that
much purity attracts the cynical idea it's all a front and behind facade is a
world of sadness and depravity. As one
Disney worker once said it does take a lot of pain and effort to make everyone
else happy.
In the past
I posted thoughts about the Empire of the Mouse. It's kind of a complex relationship because I
did grow up with Mickey Mouse Club, Davy Crocket and all the other Disney TV
productions one hour at a time every Sunday night. It really made the idea of
having to go to school on Monday bearable. And I have to admit I was looking at
Annette Funicello when I had that first inkling that girls could be pretty
cool.
The dark
side of Disney is the fact it's a huge corporation and like all huge corporations
they have a natural tendency to move towards monopoly and total world market
domination.
A few weeks
back with a group of movie enthusiasts, we had this discussion over the film
John Carter of Mars. Was it or was it not a good movie? The film did poorly in
the box office and Disney was prepared to cancel pre-production work on two
more John Carter movies. The initial plan was to turn Edgar Rice Burroughs's
classic series of books into a blockbuster franchise. The word is a sequel is being made, The Gods
Of Mars and it should be released summer of 2015.
Disney did
animation, westerns, adventure and mysteries. Science fiction was always a weak
spot with only a couple of titles like 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea and The
Black Hole. So John Carter was meant to
Disney's flagship move into the genre.
It was also another attempt by Disney to expand out from classic family
entertainment but still use the Disney name. In the past Disney used MiraMax
studios to front more adult titles.
The big question
behind was John Carter of Mars a good movie? -Is the question what will Disney
do with the Star Wars franchise now that they own LucasArts? Disney was only one of a few players who buy
out George Lucas. Disney, which was huge is now only bigger.
In short if you do not see it you might not know.
Another bone
of contention that I have with Disney is their continuous aggressive legal
action to make copyright protection last practically into perpetuity. This is the spear point of a movement to keep
all intellectual property from going into public domain. It somehow seems
unfair that the managers of media still
collect and will keep on collecting royalties on the creative work of long dead
people. There very soon can come a day where every time see an image or hear a
song -or even say a certain word or phrase, you will be charged a fee for
that. The National Football League is
already working on the legal frame work where they can charge every sports bar
for the right to just turn on a TV.
One computer
engine was telling me how software can be written to not only prevent copying
any material but also charge use rent based on overall usage of the
program. It's only a matter of time when
all the world heritage of art and cultural will be available -but all of it
will be a billable commodity. And any free expression a taxable commodity,
that is if it does get you arrested first for a thought crime. That too is coming, law enforcement is
working on an algorithm that predicts if you're capable of committing a crime and what kind of crime you're most likely to
commit based on your internet activity.
People will tolerate this because for now no one wants to be away from
their social media.
April 5th
2013 in Reuter News
By
Ronald Grover
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Walt
Disney Co expects to begin layoffs at its studio and consumer product divisions
within the next two weeks, according to two people with knowledge of the
matter, in the latest cost-reduction step to emerge from a company-wide review.
The studio job cuts will
center on the marketing and home video units and include a small number from
the animation wing, said the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity
because the plans had not been made public.
It is unknown how many jobs
will be lost at either division.
Staff reductions at the
consumer products unit will largely result from attrition, another person said.
On Wednesday, Disney began
layoffs at the 30-year-old LucasArts games studio it inherited with the
acquisition of George Lucas' film company last year, as it focuses on licensing
its "Star Wars" brand externally.
A Disney spokeswoman had no
comment.
Disney, headquartered in
Burbank, California, started an internal cost-cutting review late last year to
identify cutbacks in jobs it no longer needs because of improvements in
technology, one of the people said.
It is also looking at
redundant operations that could be eliminated following a string of major
acquisitions over the past few years, said the person.
Disney cut about 200 people
at its Disney Interactive video game last year, as the company moved away from
console games to focus on online and mobile entertainment. An additional 100
staffers have been laid off in two cuts since.
The company also made cuts at
the publishing unit last year when Disney moved its operations to Burbank from
New York as part of a restructuring of its consumer products unit.
(Reporting by Ronald Grover;
Editing by Edwin Chan, Ryan Woo and Peter Cooney)
What if Christopher Nolan quits INTERSTELLAR and decides to do one more film on BATMAN.
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