...Walt Disney was born on December 5th 1901 in Hermosa, Illinois. Disney was one of 5 children, 4 boys and a girl. He grew up in Marceline, Missouri, where he started art work; painting and drawing. He was always surrounded by friends and family. He sold this art to neighbors and friends. At age 10 he moved, and was introduced to his love for trains and mechanics. Disney went to McKinley High School; he took many classes including drawing and photography classes. He was also a main cartoonist for the school paper. He also took courses at the Chicago Art Institute. Later in life he perused a cartoon artist career for a newspaper, but instead he got a job at a film company that made animated commercials, where he made animations out of cutouts. Walt Disney has contributed a lot to America. He made many inspirational Disney movies, and even made a theme park, and not just in America! He’s made thousands and thousands of jobs that helps society, but he’s also made society more fun. Dreaming is believing and believing is doing, he thought that to the world. Like I said believing is doing, he inspired me to follow my dreams, not just dream it but do it. He’s shown that anything is possible. H-Harness-He wanted to go into the Army, but declined because of his age, he decided to be an artist. U-Underestimate- He dropped out of high school, but after he wasn’t permitted to the Army he went to an Art School. N-Network- His first real job his brother set up, he animated for commercials...
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...Week 8 Financial Analysis of The Walt Disney Company Executive Summary The following report provides an analysis of the current and prospective profitability, and financial stability of The Walt Disney Company (Dis). The Walt Disney Company, together with its subsidiaries, “is a diversified worldwide entertainment company with operations in five business segments: Media Networks, Parks and Resorts, Studio Entertainment, Consumer Products and Interactive” (The Walt Disney Company Annual Report, 2013). The report will additionally examine three areas of financial strength; liquidity, leverage debt to equity ratio, and sustainable growth as well as summary descriptions of each business segment in order to fully understand the company’s profitability in the short and long run. Organizational Overview The Walt Disney Company was founded in 1922, and has become a world leader in family entertainment. Disney is operating on a multinational level under the direction of CEO, Robert A. Iger. The Company and its affiliated companies have remained faithful to their commitment to produce unparalleled entertainment experiences based on the rich legacy of quality creative content and exceptional storytelling. Each division under The Walt Disney Company’s umbrella provides distinct products and services and caters to diverse market segments. All divisions, however, are united in their creative and imaginative efforts to “reach hundreds of millions of people worldwide and...
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...is active in emerging sectors like road projects, is in talks with World’s biggest theme-park operator is likely to partner in the project. | BSE | | | NSE | | Price | | | | | | | | | Also Read | | | | Related Stories | | | | News Now | | | | | - | OZ bets on Indians to triple tourism revenue | - | Plan panel, tourism ministry want 4-fold rise in sector outlay | - | F1 may turbo-charge tourism | - | Abu Dhabi tourism body eyes India after 7-city Europe tour | - | Incredible India attracts over 400,000 foreigners in June | - | ITDC posts 32% rise in sales in Q4 at Rs 105 cr | | | | | "We are in talks with the likes of Wonderland in Canada, Sentossa of Singapore, Disney and Malaysia's Genting for strategic partnership. However, we will finalise on a partner once we get the necessary approvals. We may also allow private equity players to participate," saidRajhoo Bbarot , managing director, Atlanta Ltd.The project will be spread across 3200 acres, all of which the company will buy from the Gujarat government at market price. The site identified at Suvali Beach, which has a 3.3 km stretch along the Arabian Sea coast, is located...
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...Question #1 – Why has Disney been successful for so long? The primary reason for Disney’s success is their understanding of a corporate strategy. Since its inception, Disney has successfully utilized its corporate strategy to diversify. This has enabled them to look forward into the future, as well as developing complimenting and cross-promoting business products. They are able to look into the future and foresee upcoming market trends. By expanding their line from movies to theme parks and even cruise ships, Disney has successfully diversified its corporate strategy over and over again. Their corporate strategy is also geared to people across a broad demographic. However, it is the genius of marketing toward children that helps to engrain the culture of Disney into young minds. Those youngsters grow older and pass their love of Disney onto their young children and Disney remains strong. Question #2 – Is Disney diversified along geographic and product lines? Disney is definitely diversified along both geographic and product lines. Disney has created value through various diversification strategies, primarily vertical integration and more specifically forward integration. They have diversified over geographic lines when they built hotels around the world, theme parks, not only in California and Florida, but also in Asia and Europe. Their cruise ships travel all around the world as well and they have over 200 retail stores in North America, over 100 in Europe and 50...
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...Walter Elias "Walt" Disney was born on December 5, 1901, in Hermosa, Illinois. He and his brother Roy co-founded Walt Disney Productions, which became one of the best-known motion-picture production companies in the world. Disney was an innovative animator and created the cartoon character Mickey Mouse. He won 22 Academy Awards during his lifetime, and was the founder of theme parks Disneyland and Walt Disney World. Early Life Walter Elias "Walt" Disney was born on December 5, 1901, in the Hermosa section of Chicago, Illinois. His father was Elias Disney, an Irish-Canadian, and his mother, Flora Call Disney, was German-American. Disney was one of five children, four boys and a girl. He lived most of his childhood in Marceline, Missouri, where he began drawing, painting and selling pictures to neighbors and family friends. In 1911, his family moved to Kansas City, where Disney developed a love for trains. His uncle, Mike Martin, was a train engineer who worked the route between Fort Madison, Iowa, and Marceline. Later, Disney would work a summer job with the railroad, selling snacks and newspapers to travelers. Disney attended McKinley High School in Chicago, where he took drawing and photography classes and was a contributing cartoonist for the school paper. At night, he took courses at the Chicago Art Institute. When Disney was 16, he dropped out of school to join the army but was rejected for being underage. Instead, he joined the Red Cross and was sent to France for...
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...Trial Assignment Name Institution Date Trial Assignment PART 1 Disney organization is the world’s best entertainment organization owing to several factors. This organization affects the lives of most Americans and people around the world through their films, theme parks and resorts. The company has been a key player in the film industry through its animations and other children’s films, this level of growth and identity comes with great wealth and financial strength to an organization like Walt Disney (Silverman, 2008). The financial security at Disney originates from several factors that the management considers as the pillars of driving the organization to higher levels of competition. Walt Disney uses several business standards that cover ethics and compliance to maintain a competitive spirit within the growing business of entertainment. This essay will explore the role of ethics and compliance in Disney’s financial environment. Ethics and compliance at Disney has helped in improving the general outlook of the business in three main areas. The firs area is employee appreciation. Most workers at the organization work with passion and enthusiasm because of the level of transparency and trust within the organization. The company incorporates trust by availing to each staff member a copy of the Standards of Business Conducts handbook to enable their role and relationship within the organization. They stress on this by taking online training and learning on ways of...
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...integrating art ideas into his works could be a probably factor that has made him experiment with paint to produced the ‘unfinished’ buildings. Basically, building is a form of art and from any artistic architecture, it can be confirmed that the building’s structure tends to be more poetic than a complete building. This may be the reason why Gehry created the ‘unfinished’ buildings such as his house; it was simply an appreciation of the more profound art. As Joyce elaborates, Ghery’s work has always been a portrayal of art. This is because Gehry has been able to follow his vision for art from the 1960’s via a ‘formal experimentation’ in LA houses to the eminent artistic expression phase that is currently characterized by buildings such as the Walt Disney Concert Hall as shown in the picture below and Bilbao. We cannot forget that we are in a techno-world where people want their emotions and imagination aroused, try new things, take up more tasking challenges and explore the world in a more...
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...Introduction: Monkeys, Mickey Mouse and Margaritas, are favorite words from my childhood one I have loved since childhood, and the other I enjoy as an adult. Body: I. My first word is Monkey. A. As a kid I had a fascination with monkeys 1. Wanted a spider monkey a. Got plenty of stuffed monkey instead. B. Monkeys are very social animals 1. However they are unpredictable 2. Destructive, expensive 3. Need a lot of attention C. Spider monkeys 2. Live in tropical rain forest 3. Have long lanky arms and gripping tails a. tails are up to 35 inches long 3. weigh 21 to 24 pounds II. My second work is Mickey Mouse A. Another childhood favorite of mine was, and still is, Mickey Mouse 1. Red shorts white gloves and big yellow shoes 2. Round mouse ears 3. Gets into mischief 4. Extremely imaginative B. First appearance in 1928 1. Steamboat Willie 2. Appeared in over 130 films 3. 9 of his cartoons were nominated for academy awards a. Lend a paw won in 1942 4. Became the first cartoon character to have a star on Hollywood Blvd. III. My last word is one I enjoy as an adult, Margarita. A. Good drink on a hot summer night 1. Applies to both sour and sweet taste buds. B. Margaritas can be made several ways 1. Most common tequila 2. Flavored liqueur 3. Lime or lemon juice C. Margaritas can be serve many ways 1. On the rocks 2. With a salted rim 3. Frozen 4. Straight up D. Have been around since 1950’s 1. Not sure who actually created...
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...location for Disney. Already, the company has been successful in Tokyo. While its park in Hong Kong has been less profitable, the company believes that further expansion into the region is worthwhile. However, the company faces a number of cultural challenges that must be overcome. Certainly language poses a problem for the company. At Hong Kong Disneyland, the company has chosen to be trilingual for example. In addition to dealing with language differences, Disney must also tailor other components to meet the local needs. The Hong Kong location includes more covered space to allow people to enjoy the park without dealing with the region’s rainy weather, special gardens for picture taking that appeal to the preferences of tourists visiting the park have been created, and the menu has been adapted to local preferences. Plans for the Shanghai location will incorporate Chinese cultural features as well as more traditional Disney themes. 2. How do cultural variables influence the location choice of theme parks around the world? Answer: Disney’s parks first and foremost promote Disney characters and themes. Visitors to the parks want to experience the Magical Kingdom. In Asia, Disney has encouraged acceptance and desire for all things Disney by exposing the population to its characters, films, and other products over time. This type of strategy facilitates the company’s efforts to then market its theme parks and reduces the need to customize its products and services. Disney does adapt...
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...Disney Heroines and America: Yesterday and Today Haley Hayes English 311c Section 02 Movies reflect current American values. Symbols and signs of these shifting values creep into every aspect of the American people’s lives. The entertainment industry provides an example by depicting the powerful influence animated heroines have on cultural trends. In animation, the heroine archetype has come to mean the “ideal person”: a symbol of the qualities, attitudes, popular trends, and those socially acceptable norms which are the most desirable. Has the public brought this upon themselves by buying into the movie-madness scheme, which dictates how one should think, feel, and, in part, be? This introduces another interesting question: Does the shift in societal values affect the nature and content of animation, or do the values portrayed in animation and public’s willingness to be overpowered create these changes in American beliefs? Regardless of which comes first, analyzing a character is synonymous with analyzing the culture from which the character is spawned. These symbols in animation, unfortunately, don’t always depict America’s best values and more often than not are targeted at children. Truly, the influential impact of animation on children is most perfectly depicted in the famed Walt Disney Heroines. These Disney girls have come to reflect America’s ever-changing values and the evolution of its popular culture. Despite the public’s initial skepticism...
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...Today I want to tell you something about 'Walt Disney'. First, I will tell you who Walter Disney was, than I will talk about his career and explain why I choose this topic. I think most of you have seen one or several of Disney's movies. First, who was 'Walt Disney’? Walter Elias Disney was the inventor of the company Walt Disney. He was born in 1901 and he grew up with his parents and his five siblings on a farm in Missouri. Every child had to help on the farm but Walt Disney was interested in drawing and at the age of 14, he started taking art classes. After the First World War, he made promotional films and he mixed actors with animated cartoons. After his first success, Walt Disney went to Los Angeles. He stopped drawing!. His friend Ub Iwerks became the Art Director at this moment and invented Ub Iwerks Micky Mouse? Disney's next plan was to create sound and music effects for his pictures. Therefore, in November 1928, he presented the premiere of Steamboat Willie in New York and Minnie Mouse had her first performance. More of Disney's fantastic characters are Donald Duck, Goofy, Pluto, Daisy Duck and the three little Pigs. The great classics of Disney movies are Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Pinocchio, Fantasia, Dumbo and Bambi. In 1964 the most-successful Disney-Movie appeared – Marry Poppins. It was honoured with five Oscars. Some interesting facts concerning Disney are: - his favourite movie was 'Bambi' - he was a chain smoker but he never smoked...
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...What You Teach Your Kids Parents in modern day society love to scream about what people can and can't teach their children. After all, children are highly impressionable, and monitoring what one's kids see and hear is a crucial part of being a parent. It is this concern that causes numerous angry parents to show up at every school PTA meeting and yell at that the schools complain that they shouldn't be teaching their children subjects such as sexual education and evolution. While some may find these parents reactions ridiculous and bizarre, it is well with in their parental rights to protest. Although, what many of these parents fail to realize is they are teaching their children many of the the same things they are protesting using fairy tales. Nobody ever stops to think about the true meaning behind fairy tales, after all what harm can come from reading a bed time story, but the truth is that many of these stories have subliminal messages. Cinderella, for example, seems like it's just about a hard working girl who perseveres, though suffering, is payed off by her living happily ever after with a prince, right? One could not be more wrong, Cinderella contains messages which teach kids a sense of entitlement, vanity, and to not stand up for ones self. Children are constantly asking their parents for toys, junk food, and money. Parents should just be able tell their children yes or no when they make such requests, but sadly thats not the case. When a parent tells their kid...
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...People have been captivated by the “Disney magic” since 1937 when the first franchise movie, Snow White, was released. Over time Disney has continued to grow its audience as well as influence the lives of all ages. Often people ignore the negative effects that these movies can have on the self esteem of those who grew up watching them, especially females. The movies can mold the perceptions females have toward how they should look, act, and the people with whom they are interact. My group researched: To what extent do female high school social norms portrayed by Disney Channel movies from 2006-2010 impact their self esteem? Throughout our research, high school social norms were defined as the average daily experiences that high school students are believed...
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...I didn’t want to be Cinderella or Belle or Snow White waiting for prince charming. I wanted to be witty, brave, and free-spirited - I wanted to be Megara from Disney’s heroic feature film, Hercules. This always led to my friends waving their hands in my face and insisting that she is “not a princess.” So what? Not all of us need to be damsels in distress; or, as Meg puts it, “I'm a damsel, I'm in distress, I can handle this. Have a nice day.” She is Disney’s token “strong, independent woman who don’t need no man.” It just seems as if Disney spent a little extra time on Megara. She has a developed past, one that isn’t all cupcakes and rainbows, and that in itself is a lot more than most of the leading ladies can say. Her attitude packs a punch...
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...In any amusement park, the roller coaster is usually the most popular ride. It was first built in Russia during the 16th century, ever since then, the roller coaster has been a hit. With the car slowly moving up the everlasting height of the hill, high enough to touch the clouds, and then rushing downwards through many loops and twists, is enough to keep one’s adrenaline pumping. But what is the secret of the roller coaster? How is it possible for it to work this way? The answer is science. Many may not know, but science, specifically physics, has a lot to do with roller coasters. The roller coaster is actually powered by many types of energy: mechanical, potential, and kinetic. Mechanical energy is ‘the energy acquired by the objects upon which work is done.’ (Definition of Mechanical Energy). Potential energy is ‘energy possessed by an object because of its height above the ground’ (Definition of Potential Energy). Kinetic energy is ‘the energy of motion’ (Definition of Kinetic Energy). The marble is powered by mechanical energy, which enables it to move up the hill. When the car is at the top of the hill, it has the greatest potential energy since the marble is at its highest peak. When the marble starts to travel down, it starts to accelerate (speed up) which causes the potential to change into kinetic energy. The kinetic energy pushes up the marble up the second hill, which builds up the potential energy level. As the marble goes through the loop, it loses potential energy...
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