Best mash-up ever. If Disney doesn't actually make these into plush toys, I might cry.
This chart by Dan Meth suggests treatment for the undiagnosed mental illnesses of the residents of the Hundred-Acre Wood. Soon enough, Tigger will be selling his prescriptions to all of Christopher Robin's friends. (via laughingsquid.com)
Eeyore was emo before emo existed. Does that make him the original hipster, too?
Thank Raptor Jesus, Disney is finally done raping my childhood. Coming out July 15th, this new full length Winnie the Pooh movie is done completely in traditional animation.
It has everything you could possibly want. The colors are perfect; it calls out exactly the right popular sporting team; and the mascot is precisely who you would want it to be. Exquisite.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/01/18/french-girl-winn...
The way she says “hippopotamus” in French is crushingly cute.
Culture Buzz Chewbacca as various celebrity puns, because it's Wookiee Wednesday. Happy Wookiee Wednesday!
Culture Buzz Pooh and the gang help illustrate the symptoms of common kinds of crazy in this set of animated GIFs by Matthew Wilkinson.
I don't remember either of them dropping this many F-Bombs, but I find myself hard pressed to disagree with the iron clad logic of this argument.
Adorable. [Ed. note: Tons more where these came from. You should check out the artist's (James Hance) awesome site and buy some prints.]
Winnie the Pooh. Winnie the Pooh. Tubby little cubby all stuffed with fluff, he's Winnie the Pooh. Winnie the Pooh. Willy, nilly, silly old bear. Childhood ruined once again.
Mankind was always going to have to choose sides in its most epic showdowns. Here, a pair of childhood favorites turn nasty as they face off.
Culture Buzz Winnie mistakes an alien egg pod for a hunny jar. The resulting hijinks and slaughter in Hundred Acre Wood is epic! See the full storybook here.
A family photo that nobody will be happy about someday, especially not the dad. I get the feeling the photo studio has a running bet to see how many people they can trick into getting their photos taken in these costumes, and the tally is now up to three (maybe two and a half).
Ever think you’d learn a lesson in child abuse from Winnie The Pooh? And another thing: why were so many public service announcements disguised as children’s entertainment in the eighties (and were they as creepy then as they are now)?