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Animator vs. Animation is an animated web series created by Alan Becker. [1] [2] [3] The original animation was first published on Newgrounds on June 3, 2006, [4] with a sequel following five months later. [2]
On July 24, 2006, Alan Becker started publishing his work on YouTube. In June 2007, Atom Films paid Alan Becker more than $10,000 dollars to Alan Becker to be able to post it into Atom Films’ website. [6] Atom Films persuaded and funded Becker to create a sequel after the success of his first animation, and so he created Animator vs. Animation 2.
"Simon Smith and the Amazing Dancing Bear" is a song written by Randy Newman, about a young man of modest means who entertains affluent diners with his dancing bear. The Alan Price Set released a version as a double A-side with "Tickle Me" on 24 February 1967, [ 2 ] and it reached number four on the Record Retailer chart in Britain.
Described as a "big ballad", the song pairs Ashman's lyrics about pining for life on land with Menken's "soaring melody", [59] beginning with a musical motif that resembles the sound of flowing water, [8] described by D23 as "tinkling piano keystrokes". [76] Both the song's music and vocals swell with "passion and longing". [6]
"Proud of Your Boy" is a song written by lyricist Howard Ashman and composer Alan Menken. Originally intended for Disney's animated film Aladdin (1992), the song was omitted when Aladdin's mother was written out of the story.
When my family moved to New Hampshire going into my freshman year of high school, Dr. C. Everett Koop, President Ronald Reagan’s surgeon general, became my neighbor. As an aspiring doctor, I ...
According to numerologists, angel number 1212 suggests harmony and balance are ahead. It's about trusting yourself, and accepting changes with an open mind.
"Evermore"'s melody is paired with lyrics that express loneliness, [66] accompanied by heavy orchestration that swells as the ballad progresses. [45] Simultaneously "brooding" and hopeful, [59] Jay Jason of ComicBook.com believes the song's lyrics are inspired by the popular phrase "If you love someone, let them go". [67]