My mom was married to a Jewish man for over forty years, but she still just told her brother that bread products aren't eaten during Hanukkah. I had to tell her that she was confusing Hanukkah with Passover.
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My mom was married to a Jewish man for over forty years, but she still just told her brother that bread products aren't eaten during Hanukkah. I had to tell her that she was confusing Hanukkah with Passover.

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I don't think I realized until now how valuable the colorblind casting of 1997 version of Rodgers and Hammerstein's Cinderella really was. Because I'm white, I didn't appreciate it when I was little, but now I most certainly can!
First of all, it presents a world where interracial marriages and families with more than one skin color are perfectly normal. As much as we might joke about a white king and black queen having a Filipino son and no one noticing, or a white stepmother having one white daughter and one black daughter, isn't it a good thing that it normalizes non-monochrome families? Mixed marriages obviously exist in real life, and so do children who have different skin colors than their parents and siblings, whether because they're adopted or because their mixed-race genes manifest strangely. There are sets of mixed-race twins in the real world where one twin has dark skin and the other is white-passing. Who says the stepsisters in this version of Cinderella can't be one of those rare sets of twins, or that the Prince in this fairy-tale land can't be adopted?
Furthermore, the central romantic couple – Cinderella and her Prince, possibly the most famous pair of lovers in the whole genre of fairy tales – is not only interracial, but both partners are people of color. How often does pop culture show us an interracial couple where neither partner is white, let alone a black woman and an Asian man paired together? How many children in those ethnic groups are ever taught that this can be a romantic option for them?
For that matter, let's talk about Cinderella and the Prince as individuals, starting with Paolo Montalbán as the Prince. Too often Asian men are stereotyped as effeminate and unattractive, but here we have a handsome young Asian man as the story's Prince Charming, "as charming as a prince will ever be," whom every girl in the kingdom wants to marry.
And then there's Brandy as Cinderella herself.
First of all, a black Cinderella. The most iconic of all fairy-tale heroines, most often depicted in pop culture as blonde-haired, blue-eyed and white. For the first time, little black girls got to see her look like them for a change. And The Princess and the Frog didn't exist in 1997, so as a black princess she would have stood out all the more.
And just like the white Cinderella, she's clearly considered beautiful by everyone around her. The other characters repeatedly describe her as beautiful; not just beautiful, but "exquisite" and "stunning." Her beauty can't be denied. And not only is she celebrated as beautiful, but beautiful in a delicate, princess-like way, not in a sensual way or a powerful goddess-like way. Her dark skin is described by her stepsisters as "delicate and soft." She's described as "dainty as a daisy" and "graceful as a bird." How often are black girls described in such terms, even when it's obviously true? How often is their beauty described in terms of softness, purity and femininity?
Speaking of which, she's also allowed to be soft, pure and feminine in character. Goodness knows, over the years I've learned that while it might be a privilege for white girls to be allowed to be tough rather than forced to be gentle and sweet, for black girls it's often more of a privilege to be allowed to be gentle and sweet rather than forced to be tough and sassy. And I know that in the realm of fairy-tale princesses, Disney's Tiana has occasionally been criticized for being too much of a Strong Black Woman™ and too grounded in the realistic world of hard work, money and business goals. But even though the '97 Cinderella has a bit more subtle backbone than some previous versions, and even though she has an arc of learning to make her own wishes come true instead of dreaming her life away, she's still a gentle, soft-spoken girl and very much a romantic dreamer.
Not long ago, I was browsing the comments on the YouTube video of this version's rendition of "Do I Love You Because You're Beautiful?" One comment from a young woman stood out as especially poignant and I think it sums up the beauty of this version:
"This movie made me feel like I belong somewhere"
It varies between adaptations of Cinderella whether Cinderella herself has a character arc, and her experiences with the Fairy Godmother and the Prince inspire an inner transformation in her that corresponds to her outer transformation, or whether she's portrayed as a basically perfect role model from the beginning who needs only to be rewarded.
It's worthwhile to realize which route an adaptation is taking before you criticize her characterization.
I was just reading a mixed review of the 1997 Rodgers and Hammerstein Cinderella. While it did make some valid points – e.g. arguing that Brandy's Cinderella isn't peak representation for black girls because she's just a black girl foisted into a white girl's role, with nothing added to the character to reflect black culture or the real experiences of black womanhood – it also seemed to miss some of the points the movie meant to make. Namely by criticizing Cinderella for being too meek and passive (not that there's anything new in that), for not placing her own wellbeing above her promise to her dying father that she wouldn't leave her stepmother, and for only dreaming of "being whatever she wants to be" without actually trying to escape from her oppressive life.
Did this person stop watching the movie 2/3rds of the way through? Did they completely forget the script's repeated, emphatic message that wishing and dreaming count for little unless you do something about it? Did they not notice the Fairy Godmother repeatedly urging Cinderella to have faith in herself, or how her night at the ball teaches her new courage and helps her realize that she deserves better than the life she's led? Did they forget that she finally resolves to leave her stepfamily and that it's just as – and because – she's running away that the Prince discovers her outside in the penultimate scene?
The 1997 Cinderella is one with a character arc. She's different in that way from Disney's animated Cinderella, who's obviously more of a "flawless role model" version of the character. It's nonsense to claim that her self-professed meekness at the beginning is the way the film "encourages girls to behave."
Would you care to elaborate a little more on why you think Disney's "Hunchback" had "too many cooks in the kitchen"? Because I've felt the same way about "Wicked," and even Disney's "Beauty and the Beast" (though I love it), and I've heard the same argument about "Brave" too. I know in "Hunchback" there's the disconnect between the dark, mature drama and the goofy gargoyles and slapstick action scenes, but are there any other aspects or themes that you think seem disconnected?
the movie has six credited screenwriters and changed substantially with every rewrite, plus there were numerous contributions from the animators, story team, and musical talent. I love the movie, but you can tell that certain ideas are present in the film that do not make much sense. Many viewers have no idea how the Romani work in the film's logic. Are they misunderstood? Are they criminals? Are they actually magic? Are they beggars and robbers like in the book? There are storyboards of Phoebus being trained to be a thief, for instance.
I think, of all things, the old Nostalgia Critic Disneycember video gives a good sense of what a "normie" take on this movie was when it came out.
Of course I haven't studied the different drafts and different writers' contributions very much, but I think you're right: there are aspects of the Romani's portrayal that don't feel fully consistent with each other.
I've heard the complaint before – repeatedly – that we're set up to see the Romani as an unjustly persecuted people, wrongly stereotyped as criminals, but then in the song "The Court of Miracles" we see that some of them are con artists who masquerade as crippled or blind beggars to trick unsuspecting people out of their money.
Now, personally, I was never confused by this. Even as a child, I understood that because the Romani were victims of racism and persecution, some of them had to turn to theft or deceit just to survive. But if it's true that some of the writers wanted to portray the Romani as genuine thieves (albeit sympathetic ones) while others wanted to emphasize that they're not thieves, but are stereotyped as such, that would make sense. Different scenes in the movie do seem to say different things in that regard.
Then there's the fact that the Romani are established early on as victims of systemic racism and as having been persecuted for decades by the genocidal Frollo, to the point that they have to live in a secret underground hideaway. Yet Clopin, the Romani leader himself, seems to be the official "master of ceremonies" at the Festival of Fools, with Esmeralda as his assistant, and not only does the general public seem to like them and show no prejudice against them, but even Frollo reluctantly tolerates them until Esmeralda stands up to him. Maybe this is left over from the fact that in Tab Murphy's original outline, Frollo didn't start actively persecuting the Romani until after the festival.
And then, yes, there's the question of whether the Romani in the film actually practice magic or are only stereotyped as using witchcraft. About 99% of the movie points to the latter, but then we have Esmeralda using magic tricks to escape from the soldiers at the festival – something she never does in any other scene. Maybe it can be justified if we assume those tricks were waiting to be performed as part of the festival entertainment and she just takes advantage of them to escape, but that fact should probably have been made clearer.
I had never fully considered all these inconsistencies until now, or thought they could be the result of different writers with different ideas for the plot and characterizations.
But this is far from the only movie with inconsistencies in its tone and themes that probably stem from having multiple writers. As I said, even Beauty and the Beast – the beloved, Best Picture-nominated Beauty and the Beast – is one that to me feels slightly inconsistent, possibly because the different people working on it had different ideas of what it was about. Is the Beast a spoiled and powerful brute who needs to be humbled and tamed, or is he a tragic misunderstood "other" who needs to be understood and accepted? Does Belle defy society by learning to love him, or does she reclaim him for society? Besides a fairy tale, is this story more of a Gothic romance, a la Jane Eyre, or more of a romantic comedy of manners, a la Pride and Prejudice? Sometimes when different people in the creative team have different ideas about what the story should be, or when the writing process takes a long time and a single author's ideas drastically evolve from what they were at the beginning, it really does show.
"I want my media to be historically accurate"
Cool, so you want natural fiber costumes with no/nuanced corset slander, people wearing colors, historical hairstyles, people wearing hats or headcoverings and long sleeves outside during the day, no potatoes or pumpkins in pre-columbian Europe, actors with textured skin and wrinkles, minimal makeup, consulting HEMA groups and weapons scholars for all the weapons and fight scenes, a good soundtrack that includes traditional instruments?
Oh, you mean you want 100% white people. Even in crowd scenes in port cities. There's a different word for that.

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Do you think "Toy Story 4" and "Toy Story 5" destroy the world-building of the first three movies?
Yes they go against the core concept that toys exist for children to play with
No, they just explore new ideas without contradicting anything
This is a complaint I've read several different times now, worded in different ways.
The gist of it is that in the first three Toy Story films, toys exist for children to play with. That's their purpose and it's what they love. In the first film, Buzz comes out of his depression over realizing he's a toy when Woody helps him realize his purpose of making Andy happy. In the second movie, Woody realizes that it's better to stay with Andy and be played with, but eventually outgrown, then to live a cold, empty life as a museum piece. And in the third film, after having insisted that the toys need to stay with Andy even though he's grown up and doesn't play with them anymore, Woody finally realizes that it's better for them all to move on to Bonnie and be played with again.
But then comes Toy Story 4, which introduces the concept that some toys can live happy, fulfilling lives without a child, as well as the concept that toys can secretly help children outside of play, as when Woody sneaks along with Bonnie to school to help her adjust. In the end, Woody embodies both of these concepts by joining Bo Peep and the other "lost toys" and by dedicating his life to helping other toys find new owners. And then in Toy Story 5, the toys focus on helping Bonnie make friends.
There's a subset of fans who can't stand how far beyond playtime the two most recent movies go. They claim that the films have lost the sense of "toys as toys" and just been treating them as little people instead, or else as good fairies whose job is to secretly help you. That's a fair argument. But I suppose it's also fair to say that the toys are just responding differently to Bonnie than they did to Andy. In the fourth movie, Woody takes on the role of Bonnie's secret helper, and ultimately leaves her to make other children happy by helping them find abandoned toys, because Bonnie has lost interest in playing with him – he has to find another way to fulfill his purpose of making a child happy. And the fact that Bonnie is shy and socially awkward in a way that Andy wasn't explains why the toys try to help her in her social life.
So, do you think the newest movies go in believable different directions than the first three? Or do you think this is a real problem, where the writers have gone against the world-building of the first three films?
just casually leaving this here for no particular reason
You know what? Fuck it I'm adding more context. Sesame Street has talked about the topic of death more than once and it's done with such gentle carefulness without watering down or censoring the heaviness of the situations. It treats heavy subject matter with respect and dignity and has been for DECADES. From the early 1980s:
To 2025:
Hell, they even cover the devastating heaviness of MASS SHOOTINGS without censoring or watering anything down.
They've been doing this for YEARS, and it's ALWAYS handled with dignity, respect, seriousness, understanding, and love.
Whenever I see people censoring words because it "might offend" someone or the big ad companies that are currently trying to run everything? I just want to say to them: "What? Is Sesame Street too mature for you?" Because really...what the hell are we doing.
Mister Roger's Neighborhood also covered difficult topics with respect, age-appropriately, and without pulling a single punch. It's crazy that we've worked ourselves up so much that we're self-censoring like it's always been the norm.
This clip is from 1968 and discussed assassination after Bobby Kennedy died.
I'm not sure when this clip originally aired, but it was likely sometime in the 1980s. They talk about murder and, incredibly by today's standards, what sort of emotions (anger, fear, loneliness) might drive someone to hurt or kill other people + how we can manage our own difficult or painful feelings.
The ability to talk about hard and awful things
is the ability to process these things.
taking away the words for bad things
means when they HAPPEN- and bad things will still happen around us-
WE CAN'T TALK ABOUT THEM without the WORDS.
When the word is accurate, USE THE WORD. Say Death. Say Murder. Say Rape. Say Prison, say Riots, say War, Say Famines and Disease. Say Bigotry. Say Hate crime. Say Racism. Say Fascism. Say Abuse. Say Hurt. Say Pain. Say Grief. Say Fear.
We must not lose the Truth of what a word means.
All of these things need to be talked about. Do Not GIVE UP YOUR WORDS.
Has anybody read the novelization of the Disney film and if so are there any differences from the movie?
Novelizations are notorious for being based on not finalized versions of films, and often contain deleted material.
I assume it is unlikely that there were many changes. A document containing a list of sequences that was dated from 1994 is relatively in line with the final film (with the exception of the scene with frollo and Esmeralda in the dungeon). And this book surely was written in a short span of time before the film was released.
Still, I would love to know.
I did a quick reread and the book is basically word for word the movie version. No major differences other than the parts of the movie with songs are skimmed over. I found one mistake in a caption about who's horse Phoebus was riding when he escaped Frollo, but it was the same in the book text as the movie. I also found a couple of newspaper clippings I apparently stashed in the book when the movie first came out.
Thank you so much for the research
Also that clipping is neat!
I used to own a copy of the novelization. In fact I read it before I saw the movie, so when I did finally see the movie, the differences surprised me.
In general, it is very faithful to the film, however, except for a few small differences in dialogue, and of course the song lyrics being rewritten into dialogue and abridged.
These are the main differences I remember:
*The opening chapter, titled “The Puppeteer’s Prologue,” frames the whole story as having happened in the past and being told by Clopin in his puppet show - unlike in the film, where Clopin’s puppet show takes place before the main plot begins and only tells Quasimodo’s backstory. Clopin explains that he knows the story because he saw much of it with his own eyes and heard of it with his own ears, and before he starts to tell it, after saying that it’s a tale of a man and a monster, he says that maybe when it's finished, the children will be able to tell him who is the monster and who is the man.
*Frollo doesn’t kick Quasimodo’s mother onto the cathedral steps. Instead she just loses her footing while struggling with Frollo over the baby and accidentally falls.
*There's no drawn-out chase scene between Esmeralda and the guards after she stands up to Frollo. Esmeralda just makes herself "disappear" in a puff of powder-smoke and then slips away through the crowd. She doesn't pretend to cry and then activate the powder-smoke with a fake nose-blow either – she just tosses the powder into the air.
*Esmeralda and Phoebus don’t fight in the cathedral: she wields the candelabra and warns him “Don’t come any closer!” but doesn’t actually try to hit him with it, or grab his sword and threaten him with it for that matter, and then he goes straight to introducing himself.
*At the end of the scene corresponding to "God Help the Outcasts," there's no man who yells at Quasimodo to go away. Esmeralda just spots Quasi watching her, and when their eyes meet, he runs away out of shyness.
*Esmeralda explicitly tells Quasimodo that the woven necklace will show him the way to the Court of Miracles, rather than just saying a cryptic rhyme about it that he figures out later.
*During the scene corresponding to “Hellfire,” Frollo thinks to himself that maybe God has destined him to lead Esmeralda to righteousness. I might have liked some dialogue like this in the finished film, because it would more clearly explain Frollo’s motives: to either change his “sinful” lust into something pure and holy, by making Esmeralda his wife and converting her to his form of Christianity, or else to get rid of the temptation by killing her.
*When Frollo says to Phoebus "But you were trained to follow orders," Phoebus retorts "Not the orders of a madman!" Obviously, the filmmakers decided that less was more by having him just silently douse the torch.
*When Esmeralda brings the wounded Phoebus into the bell tower, Quasimodo brings water for her to clean his wound, rather than her cleaning it with wine.
*Quasimodo’s reluctance to go with Phoebus to find Esmeralda and warn her about Frollo’s plans comes across as slightly more spiteful than it does in the finished film, per se. “Esmeralda didn’t love him after all. She he loved Phoebus. Why should he help her?” Likewise, when Esmeralda is about to be executed, and Laverne tells him “These chains aren’t what’s holding you back,” she also adds “I think you’re still jealous.” Personally, I don’t like this – while I admit, we can interpret the finished film’s Quasi as almost wanting to turn his back on Esmeralda because he’s bitter that she doesn’t love him, I’d rather think his initial refusals to act are based in fear and self-doubt, with just an undertone in the first case of “She doesn’t need me when she has Phoebus."
*When Quasimodo and Phoebus arrive at the cemetery, Quasi is described as supporting Phoebus, who is still weak from his wound. I might have liked to see that instead of his improbably quick healing in the finished film.
*In the Court of Miracles, Quasimodo is the one who announces that Frollo is attacking at dawn with a thousand men, rather than Phoebus. Then when Phoebus tells Esmeralda "Don't thank me, thank Quasimodo," he then adds "He's the real hero." Esmeralda responds by hugging Quasi and saying "I think I know that better than anyone." Then Phoebus announces to all the Romani, not just Esmeralda, that without Quasi, he never would have found his way there.
*Esmeralda doesn’t spit in Frollo’s face when he says “Choose me or the fire”: she just says nothing. Frollo's speech afterwards is also different: there's no line about sending "this unholy demon back where she belongs."
*During the climactic battle, there’s some dialogue between Quasimodo and the gargoyles that explains the vat of molten lead in the bell tower and what it’s used for (to repair cracked bells), as Quasimodo realizes that they can rain it down on the soldiers. Obviously this dialogue would have slowed down the action in the movie, but it might have been nice to provide an explanation – maybe people would stop calling the lead “lava” then.
*Quasimodo doesn’t sob over Esmeralda’s body when he thinks she’s dead, or have any dialogue with Frollo before the latter tries to stab him - he just exclaims “Oh no!” when he can’t wake Esmeralda, then suddenly notices the shadow of Frollo raising the dagger behind him.
*Phoebus has some dialogue with Quasimodo after he saves him from falling to his death, first joking a little and then expressing sincere gratitude that he was in the right place at the right time.
*The little girl in the final scene doesn’t hug Quasimodo, but just gently touches his face, then leads him down into the crowd. This is also true in other movie storybooks, so I suspect the hug was a later addition to the script, to ensure that the audience would realize that the girl was showing Quasi warmth and gratitude.
Fascinated by everyone's but especially American's desire to give medieval keeps, especially in colder regions, central heating (and I think Winterfell is to blame for this trope, where, to it's defence, the hot springs were not a matter of comfort but survival wrt the deadly fantasy Winter that's not real irl), because I'm always like. okay I know they told you in middle grade that castles were all cold and drafty but like ... no also what
There's generally going to be rooms dedicated to and build for warmth, the living quarters, both for nobles and their servants. This will be the central living tower, or parts of it called a Kemenate (literally 'room with a stove'), the great hall and work spaces around the kitchen. You can put the Kemenate on top of the hall to catch the big fires' and daily living's heat through the wooden floor, but you often can't put wooden stuff on top of the kitchens (that's a fire risk). If you have the money and space, you build a whole separate comfy place for living because you don't have to stay in the most defensible part of the castle all the time. These separate living buildings are also called Kemenate and are often build from wood, cob, brick etc.
People used to wear much more clothes indoors, including while sleeping, and those clothes were much thicker and sturdier than what we largely wear today. Every time you think of how cold those stone walls are, think about everyone wearing a linen shift + two-ish layers of wool on all body parts except hands and head + stockings and shoes + some kind of head-covering. In Ye Old Middle Ages, women are probably wearing a wimple, which is kind of like a modern Hijab in terms of coverage. People wear shifts, socks, and a head-covering to bed.
I think people used to radiators also really underestimate how much a large open fire/tiled stove heats up a room. Also, middle and northern Europe (as well as parts of Northern China) had and to this day have beds and benches build into tiled and cob stoves. Those fuck.
Beds are enclosed so you stay warm in them, either by curtains, in wall niches or with wood. There's also a type of bed that's inside a chest (like a coffin) so you can stuff your stuff inside during the day and put down the lid to use it as a bench. That's also another reason for people to always sleep in groups. Depending on the era, one of the jobs of a lady's maid or a retainer might literally be warming their master's bed. In early times and among servants, people also sleep in large groups in rooms together in general even outside a farming context, often with animals like pet dogs, too, which further warms everything up.
Walls are not bare, cold stone, but covered with a layer of plaster or cob, tiles or wooden panels, sometimes layered, and believe me, this makes such a difference. Source: I lived in a Ye Olde German Farmhouse with 70 cm thick stone walls and flag stone floor and all that converted to modern flats for a while.
On top of that you hang tapestries on the wall, which are not like modern printed cloth but basically wall rugs, sometimes several inches thick, and rugs or rushes (like a light cover of hay) on the floor on top of stone, tile, wooden panelling or a cob floor cover that goes over the heave flag stone. Pillows and blankets on all sitting surfaces, often on top of panelling (in the case of benches build into the stone). The roof of a room is also tiled, panelled or plastered. Upper stories will generally have wooden floors. Stories in a tower heat each other upwards, so the nicer rooms are further up.
The inner stone walls of a castle, even if stone and very thick, will heat up a few degrees in comparison to the outside walls if the castle is continually heated/lived in, and also trap heat inside, and this will make a difference. Inner walls might also be thinner and made of wood, cob or brick. You're defending against the outside, after all.
You put stuff in the windows. Holy shit. Screens of wood, horn, cloth or leather/hide, often treated for extra insulation. Why are these fantasy castles all so drafty.
Like, idk, I know Americans especially can't pop down to their nearby castle museum to have a look around, but even with people who can and do: The castles you'll see, even the ones who aren't 'ruined' are ruins. They're stripped down. I remember touring Norman towers in England, and those places do look dire and are cold because even if they're still standing, they're ruins. It makes such a difference to get to look at a castle that is still lived in, has been inhabited until recently, or has been historically restored where these amenities are preserved. The exact amenities will depend on the era, of course, but they'll be there. The publicly accessible parts of Burg Eltz are a great example to google, especially since I promise you, you have seen this specific castle before. They have pictures on their English language website here, and the German National Geographic has a few further inside pictures here. Seeing a place like that that isn't a ruin with bare, stripped walls, nothing in the windows, no decorations and furniture etc. makes you realise that yeah actually. My characters are probably just gonna go grab a pillow if their ass is cold on the window's stone bench. Blankets are a pretty old technology, humans (elves, dwarves, whatever) can figure that one out.
Oh these links are a FANTASTIC reference!
Remember the painting of Ivan the Terrible cradling his dying son?
Yes, yes, unequalled representation of unspeakable grief and guilt and horror, that's not important right now. Look at how heavily carpeted everything is -- multiple layers of carpets! -- and how heavily dressed they are.
Also in that painting, the object in the background looks like a ceramic/tile stove or heater. They were found all over Europe and are still used in some places (having experienced one in Hungary in -16c weather, they are amazing). They're like a descendant of hypocausts, where hot air was directed to warm specific areas of building.
The fuel was burned slowly and brick and tile structure acted like a giant radiator, staying warm for extended periods.
Any movie, book, TV show, musical, or franchise where there are two main characters of the same gender who are friends: Exists.
What it's about according to Tumblr, no matter what happens in the actual plot: Those two characters being in love with each other.

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the best part of the princess bride is how it says that love is the number one motivation in life but! a close number two is spite.
Wuthering Heights
I see Scar taking more elements of Richard the Third than Claudius, opinion?
It's been a long time since I last read Richard III, but I think I can agree. Shakespeare's Richard III is more unabashedly evil and scheming than Claudius, and he has his innocent child nephews murdered to clear his way to the throne, just like Scar tries to do to Simba: Hamlet obviously isn't a child, and Claudius only tries to have him killed when it becomes clear that Hamlet is a direct threat to him.
I know there are many reasons to respect Jeffrey Katzenberg – there would probably have been no Disney Renaissance and there would be no Dreamworks if not for him – but the more I've heard about his time at Disney, the more ignorant he sounds.
It's well-known at this point that he wanted to cut "Part of Your World" from The Little Mermaid because he thought it slowed down the movie and would bore children.
He obviously had this feeling about ballads in general, because for the same reason, he succeeded in cutting "When Love is Gone" from The Muppet Christmas Carol – Brian Henson has always regretted that he let Katzenberg talk him into cutting it, but he was a young, insecure first-time director, so he didn't stand his ground the way The Little Mermaid's creative team did – though at least the song was preserved in the VHS release and in the "Full Length Version" now on Disney+.
And I just learned today, from the YouTube interview with Gary Trousdale for The Hunchback of Notre Dame's 30th Anniversary, that during the making of that movie, it was Katzenberg who pushed for Quasimodo to have long, beautiful hair that partly hid his face, because he didn't want Quasi's deformity to make the audience uncomfortable. I already know that design was considered for him, and I've seen the concept art for it, but I didn't know Katzenberg was behind it. Fortunately, they eventually decided against it.
That man's legacy is a complicated one.
About your response to my poll about Marianne: do you think that in Austen's era, the sicknesses that they referred to as "colds" were actually influenza some of the time? I see a lot of people saying that they think Marianne's illness, which starts out as an apparent cold, is probably an especially bad flu, and in "Pride and Prejudice," I've sometimes felt that Jane's "cold" might really be a mild flu, because of her fever and headache (more commonly flu symptoms) and because of just how sick she gets (i.e. Elizabeth having to sit up all night with her) before she finally starts to recover.
Lay people use "cold" and "flu" to describe a bunch of different viruses (mostly, sometimes bacteria) even today, so I don't find it odd that Jane Austen would use them interchangeably. Even beyond respiratory symptoms, a lot of people use "flu" to describe illnesses that make you throw up, which is not influenza, that's usually norovirus or something.
I think a lot of people use "cold" for "mild illness with mucus, coughing, sore throat, and possibly headache" and "flu" for the same but with fever. These illnesses tend not to be dangerous today, so very few people are getting tested and finding out what actual virus/illness they have. Our "colds" include a range of like 200 different viruses.
So anyway, yes, cold and flu aren't scientific words even today, Jane Austen wouldn't be using them scientifically either.
(reference)
About the "Toy Story" timeline...
It's consistent: Movie #1 took place in 1995, Movie #5 takes place circa 2010
It's a floating timeline: #1 took place in 1995, #5 takes place in the present
I've read some debate about this.
The original Toy Story presumably takes place in the same year it was released, 1995. Andy is six years old, but about to turn seven (and receives Buzz Lightyear for his birthday a week early).
In Toy Story 3, Andy is going away to college, so it must take place eleven years later, in 2006. Bonnie is four years old when Andy gives her the toys. Now, in Toy Story 5, she's eight, so it must take place four years later, in 2010.
Yet some people are complaining that 2010 is too early for the technology of LilyPad and the new Buzz Lightyears and for the theme of tech replacing toys.
Other people are arguing that it makes perfect sense: tech for kids was already on the rise in the early 2010s. And if it's a little more advanced in the Toy Story world than it was in real life at the time... well, this is an alternate universe where toys are secretly alive, so why not?
But other would rather think the movies have a "floating timeline," like The Simpsons has, where every new installment takes place in the year of its release, with no concern for consistency. So in their view, Toy Story 5 takes place in 2026, even though realistically, Bonnie should be a young adult by now.
Which idea do you ascribe to?

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Favorite "guy spends the whole movie wanting to propose marriage to his girlfriend and finally does in the end" subplot from a Disney animated sequel?
Bernard – "The Rescuers Down Under"
Kristoff – "Frozen II"
Buzz Lightyear – "Toy Story 5"
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Because it’s funny that they’ve done this same subplot three times now. Who did it best?
If a "Toy Story 6" is ever made...
... I have some ideas for it.
This isn't very original, plenty of other people have suggested it, but I think it should have a teenage Bonnie meet Andy again (now in his 30s) and pass the toys on to Andy's children.
I think it would be best if Andy had twins: a girl for the female toys and a boy for the males.
When Woody finds out, I can imagine him having a dilemma: being tempted to rejoin his friends and belong to Andy's kids.
This would lead to some reveals about things the fans and even the writers have speculated about for many years.
It turns out that Andy wasn't Woody's first owner: the first was the boy who grew up to be Andy's dad. This explains why Andy's mom calls Woody "an old family toy" in the second film. Andy's dad loved Woody all his life – even when he grew up, he always kept him close as a memento of his childhood, just like Andy was originally going to keep Woody in the third film. (This explains why in the second film, Woody has never fully considered that Andy won't need him anymore when he grows up until Jessie tells him about Emily.) But then, when Andy was about four or five and his mom was pregnant with Molly, his dad got sick, and before he died he gave Woody to Andy.
None of the other toys knew about this until now, because they're all newer toys and never knew Andy's dad. Woody never mentioned it, because he was too devastated by the death of his first "kid": he could only cope with the loss by focusing on Andy. The flashbacks at this point could become some of Pixar's biggest tearjerkers despite the very stiff competition.
So naturally, he would be tempted by the prospect of belonging not only to Andy's children, but to his first owner's grandchildren. Yet how could he possibly leave Bo Peep, or the great life they've been living for years of helping toys and kids find each other?
Meanwhile, on the human side of things, I can imagine teenage Bonnie having to admit to Andy that she lost Woody when she was five. Andy would understand, of course, little kids lose toys all the time, but he would still be sad, and I imagine Bonnie would feel sad too: if she had only been more mature back then, she would have taken better care of Woody for Andy's sake. Andy's son might even be a big fan of cowboys and the Wild West already, so they know that Woody would have been the perfect toy for him.
I think the most satisfying ending would be for both Woody and Bo Peep to decide that after all these years, they're ready to be played with again, and let Andy and Bonnie find them so they can rejoin Buzz, Jessie, and co. The other "lost toys" can continue their mission and stay in touch with them through the walkie-talkies, and it wouldn't make the ending of Toy Story 4 irrelevant because such a long time has passed in-universe since then.
This would bring the entire series full circle.
If anyone at Pixar sees these ideas, please keep them in mind!