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    You WIll Need To Reset Your Password!!!

    We just moved hosts on this system, and this has caused a few updates. One is the way we encode and store the encoded passwords.

    Your old passwords will NOT work. You will need to reset your password. This is normal. Just click on reset password from the log in screen. Should be smooth as silk to do...

    Sorry for the hassle.

    Dave Koch
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    Are You Just Hanging Out?

    Just lurking? Join the club, we'd love to have you in the Big Cartoon Forum! Sign up is easy- just enter your name and password.... or join using your Facebook account!

    Membership has it's privileges... you can post and get your questions answered directly. But you can also join our community, and help other people with their questions, You can add to the discussion. And it's free! So join today!

    Dave Koch
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    Other Side Of Maleficent

    I have been looking forward to Maleficent with equal amounts of anticipation and dread. On one hand, she is easily my favorite Disney villain, so cold and so pure, and I want desperately to see more of her and her back-story. On the other hand, she is easily my favorite Disney villain, and I would hate to see her parodied, taken lightly or ultimately destroyed in a film that does not understand this great character. The good news is that this film almost gets it right; but that is also the bad news.

  4. Big Cartoon Forum

    BCDB Hits 150K Entries

    It took a while, but we are finally here! The Big Cartoon DataBase hit the milestone of 150,000 entries earlier today with the addition of the cartoon The Polish Language. This film was added to BCDB on May 9th, 2014 at 4:23 PM.

  5. Big Cartoon Forum

    Warner Brings Back Animated Stone-Age Family

    Funnyman Will Ferrell and partner Adam McKay are working on bringing back everyone’s favorite stone-age family. The duo’s production company Gary Sanchez Productions is in development on a new Flintstones animated feature.

  6. Big Cartoon Forum

    Disney To Feast In France

    The follow up to Disney’s 2013 Academy Award Winning short Paperman has been announced, and it will premiere at France’s Annecy International Animated Film Festival. Titled The Feast, the short looks to be based on the same stylized CG techniques used on last years Paperman, a more natural and hand-drawn look to computer animation.

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    Renegades of Animation: Pat Sullivan

    Pat Sullivan became famous worldwide for his creation of Felix the Cat. What most animation histories gloss over is Sullivan’s checkered past and longtime standing as a wildcat renegade. He didn’t follow the rules. And he made damn sure to fully protect his intellectual properties.

How Hello Kitty Conquered the World

Discussion in 'Other / Multiple Studios' started by Dave Koch, Oct 28, 2013.

  1. Dave Koch

    Dave Koch Cartoon Admin

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    Hello Kitty, Japan's most recognizable cartoon cat, prefers to be seen and not heard—a consequence of being drawn without a mouth. Created by Japanese merchandiser Sanrio in 1974, Hello Kitty is made up of nothing more than a few simple strokes: a black circle with ears, two button eyes, whiskers and a lopsided bow. Yet those features have been imposed on millions of products in the decades since, and millions of fans around the world use the image as a canvas for their personal expression. Hello Kitty has served as a mascot for adult women, gay men and punk enthusiasts. While most cartoon characters have a distinctive personality—Mickey Mouse, Ronald McDonald, Garfield—Hello Kitty is a cipher. <br> <br>Initially marketed towards young girls, by the 1990s Hello Kitty had tapped into a tide of tongue-in-cheek adult nostalgia. Today Hello Kitty's image and products can be seen in the hands of everyone from small children to motorcycle gangs. Hello Kitty products range from stationery to stuffed animals to miniskirts, as well as a surprisingly popular "personal massager." It's often difficult to tell when Hello Kitty fans are being ironic, or even post-ironic: A website called Hello Kitty Hell, which mocks absurd Hello Kitty paraphernalia, ended up enticing flocks of Hello Kitty fans as readers. <br> <br>In "Pink Globalization," Christine R. Yano tries to explain how all this came to be. A professor of anthropology at the University of Hawaii, she has spent a decade conducting research and interviews, and "Pink Globalization" is a text-heavy tome defined by long blocks of winding interviews and statistics, as well as much exploration of the ways that Sanrio exploits its top moneymaker. Unlike litigious American megabrands like Disney, DIS +2.62% for instance, Sanrio takes a much more laissez-faire approach: Since 2004, the company has allowed a cadre of modern artists to have their way with Hello Kitty's visage without any mediation from the corporate giant. <br> <br>Many feminists find Hello Kitty to be an example of a submissive, infantile undercurrent of Japanese culture. Other detractors see her simply as an example of manufactured corporate sweetness. Perhaps the best explanation for her popularity, however, was inadvertently provided by an overheated religious website called Hell of Kitty, which warned that the cat "invades children's vulnerable hearts exactly through the weaponry of cuteness." And who can resist that?

    MOD NOTE: Edited to remove blatant, unrelated advertising.

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