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Wesley is a horse with a big personality. Recently Amanda Enloe had a film crew at her farm filming a commercial, and they wanted to use some of her horses, including Wesley, in the scene.
The title character of The Pizza Head Show commercial skits. Mr. Peanut: Planters snacks: 1916–present: Popsicle Pete: Popsicle ice pops: 1940s–1995: Honeycomb Kid: Post Cereals' Honeycomb cereal: 1960s (Cowboy) 1980s (Kid) The Crazy Craving: debuted 1990s: Bernard, the Bee Boy 2010 Sugar Bear: Post Cereals' Golden Crisp cereal: 1949–present
Litters were used to carry passengers between two horses, or on the back of a pack horse or mule (or camel; see Light horse field ambulance). (*) Note: The “litter” in the picture is not really a litter, designed to protect the patient and to be moved by horses, but a carriage used in hippotherapy ; the patient, often multiple disabled, is ...
Blaze was featured prominently during children's television advertising (Mattel was the first toymaker to advertise year around with television commercials). Unlike other rocking-horses of the time, Blaze was mounted on a stand that was said to be "untippable" and had no springs. The apparatus prevented pinched fingers, and was fitted out with ...
Prolific commercial and music video director Joe Pytka, who directed the original Pepsi spot, tells Yahoo Entertainment that many people have reached out to him about the reimagining. "Some people ...
Elliott Gould was the original voice of the horse. After a poor test screening of the film, the horse's half of the script was rewritten by future Monk creator and executive producer Andy Breckman in an effort to make the film funnier. John Candy was hired to re record the horse's voice; he ignored the new script and improvised the dialogue ...
Lujan Grisham described her initiative as a "refresh" of the Toss no Más anti-litter campaign rolled out in New Mexico in the 1990s by her old boss, former Gov. Gary Johnson.
The play, a farce, has been produced on Broadway four times. The original Broadway production was a qualified smash hit, and opened at the Playhouse Theatre on January 30, 1935, and remained there until November 1936, when it transferred to the Fulton Theatre, for the last three months of its two-year Broadway long-run, closing January 9, 1937, after 835 performances, the longest Broadway ...