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#Dale Carlson
oldschoolfrp · 10 months
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An unusual abstract dragon for the cover of Dragon 19, October 1978, seemingly made of roots and vines. I wanted to know more about the choices behind the art and its selection, whether there is a story being told, but there is no credit within the issue and not even a mention of the artist's name. The editor and several guests were preoccupied with unpacking the events of Gen Con XI.
The Art of Dragon Magazine (TSR, 1988) credits the art to Dale Carlson, who also provided a cover in the same style for issue 29, September 1979. This name is otherwise missing from most histories of D&D and the Dragon.
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nightmaretherabbit · 6 months
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Old as hell art.
But I want to show them (yes the story has a stupid ass name, I'm cringe-)
(Dale is a character that @firecurls-27 made for/gave to me)
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nofatclips · 2 years
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Whole With You by GABI from the album Empty Me - Directed by Kenna Hynes
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myhauntedsalem · 6 months
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The Witch of the Joshua Ward House
The town of Salem, Massachusetts is no stranger to macabre record and disturbing legends, but for the first time perhaps something belonging to the towns supernatural facet has been caught on camera.
The Joshua Ward House has stood in mute witness to a dark history. The Georgian/Federal style building was constructed by Joshua Ward, a wealthy merchant sea captain, in the late 1780s on the remaining foundations of former sheriff George Corwin’s house on Washington Street. Corwin was a bloody figure whose zeal added to the unfortunate events surrounding Salem in the late 1600s. Nicknamed The Strangler after his preferred torture modus operandi (which included tying his prone victims’ necks to their ankles until the blood ran from their noses), he is said to be responsible for many of the witches deaths, including that of Giles Corey, a man who stood accused of witchcraft who Corey crushed to death by placing heavy stones on his chest in order to extract a confession. Despite the horrific treatment Corey never confessed, indeed he is said to have implored his torturers to pile on more rocks and hasten his departure.
Legend states that just before he died, Corey cursed Corwin and all sheriffs that follow in his wake for his despicable acts of barbarism. It should be noted here that every sheriff since Corey uttered his curse had died while in office or had been forced out of his post as the result of a heart or blood ailment. Corwin himself died of a heart attack in 1696, only about four years after the end of the trials. By the time of his death, Corwin was so despised that his family had to bury him in the cellar of their house to avoid desecration of the corpse by the public.
In the early 1980s a real estate company named Carlson Realty had bought the house with the intention of turning it into their headquarters. After moving in, a realtor by the name of Dale Lewinski began the task of taking photographs of the staff members to add to a welcome display. Lewinski was using a Polaroid camera to snap the head-and-shoulders, passport-style pictures. Upon photographing a colleague by the name of Lorraine St. Peter a peculiar sight greeted Lewinski.
The Polaroid was developed and, instead of showing St. Peter, it appeared to depict a frightening image: a strange, black-haired, feminine figure. St. Peter was nowhere to be seen, the photograph has not been cropped at all; St. Peter has been entirely replaced by the apparition.
This reproduction was originally published in the book Haunted Happenings by Robert Ellis Cahill (himself an ex-sheriff) in which he describes St. Peter as “both genuinely frightened and embarrassed by the picture.”
A hoax is of course, always possible, but unnecessary considering the rich nature of other paranormal occurrences that are reported to take place within the Joshua Ward House: aportation (objects moving of their own accord), candles that leap from their holders and subsequently melt, candles that are found bent into S shapes, alarms that go off by themselves (one alarm was triggered over sixty times in two years), phantom strangulations and the sightings of a myriad spirits including an elderly-looking spirit sitting by a fireplace and along with the photograph in questions subject, another ghostly woman roams the upper floors.
One room in particular seems to be more haunted than the rest. An employee would lock her office door nightly only to return in the morning to find books and papers thrown across the floor, the wastebasket upside down and lamp shades askew.
Sheriff Corwin’s body was eventually moved to the Broad Street Cemetery, but it is said that his spirit too lingers in the Ward House.
It is truly a bizarre photograph, certainly containing a degree of menace and so starkly strange as to create fright in the onlooker, especially upon first viewing.
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littleperilstories · 11 months
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Robin Hood References & Easter Eggs in The Prince of Thieves
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Character Parallels (very loose/approximate)
Jamie Wardrew - Robin Hood/Robin of Loxley
Will Wardrew - Robin Hood, Will Scarlett
Bree Cooper - Marian
Const. Baden Hatchett - Sheriff of Nottingham
Jr. Const. Michaelson - Sir Guy of Gisborne
Colette Haris/Meunier (a miller's daughter) - Much the Miller's Son
Geoffrey Marks - Little John
Allan Armstrong Dale - Alan-a-Dale
Other References & Easter Eggs
literally just them wearing hooded cloaks sometimes *cracks up*
stealing from the rich and giving to the poor is IA's whole modus operandi
"I gave her Robin this time around" (Chapter 4) - I mean...
"Bree Langley. Bree Sherwood. Overton. Walsh. Carlson" (Chapter 13) - Sherwood Forest is the setting of many Robin Hood stories
the medic, Mr. Gysborne, obviously named after Guy of Gisborne
Geoff being a big guy but then having a cute little animal like a Hare as his code name. Right? Like Little John? Right? Right??
Will's code name being Fox (Robin Hood is an anthropomorphic fox in the Disney Robin Hood from 1973)
Allan Armstrong Dale abbreviates to Allan A. Dale (reference to the character Alan-a-Dale, but also: Joe Armstrong played Alan-a-Dale [and Jonas Armstrong played Robin Hood] in the 2008 BBC series Robin Hood)
"Verie" (very) ... "Much" ... ok it's a stretch but still kinda counts? I think I’m hilarious.
“Some well-known petty thief. Always gave a different name. Reynolds. Brooks. Marks" (Chapter 32). Kevin Reynolds directed 1991's Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves and Mel Brooks directed 1993's Robin Hood: Men in Tights.
Bulwell and Lenton are neighbourhoods/areas of Nottingham, UK (...as far as I could tell from Google Maps & Wikipedia, anyway).
Colette's real last name, Meunier, is a French surname meaning "miller"
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byneddiedingo · 1 year
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Dots Johnson and Alfonsino Pasca in Paisan (Roberto Rossellini, 1946)
Cast: Carmela Sazio, Robert Van Loon, Harold Wagner, Merlin Berth, Mats Carlson, Dots Johnson, Alfonsino Pasca, Maria Michi, Gar Moore, Harriet Medin, Renzo Avanzo, William Tubbs, Dale Edmonds. Screenplay: Sergio Amidei, Klaus Mann, Federico Fellini, Marcello Pagliero, Alfred Hayes, Roberto Rossellini, Rod E. Geiger. Cinematography: Otello Martelli. Film editing: Eraldo Da Roma. Music: Renzo Rossellini.
The phrase "fog of war" was coined by Carl von Clausewitz in reference to the cloud of uncertainty that surrounds combatants on the battlefield, but it seems appropriate to apply it to the miscommunication experienced by the soldiers and civilians in Roberto Rossellini's great docudrama about the Allied campaign to liberate Italy in 1943 and 1944. The six episodes in Rossellini's film illustrate various kinds of problems brought about by language, ignorance, naïveté, and lack of necessary information. A young Sicilian woman (Carmela Sazio) struggles to communicate with the G.I. (Robert Van Loon) left guarding her; a Black American soldier (Dots Johnson) tries to recover the shoes that were stolen from him by a Neapolitan street urchin (Alfonsino Pasca) after he got drunk and passed out; a Roman prostitute (Maria Michi) picks up a drunk American (Gar Moore), but when he tells her of the beautiful, innocent woman he met six months earlier in Rome she realizes that she was the woman; an American nurse (Harriet Medin) accompanies a partisan into the German-occupied section of Florence in search of an old lover; three American chaplains visit a monastery in a recently freed section of Northern Italy, but only the Catholic chaplain (William Tubbs), who speaks Italian, realizes that the monks are deeply shocked that his two companions are a Protestant and a Jew. Only the final -- and the best, most harrowing -- section deals with the traditional concept of the fog of war, as Allied soldiers try to aid Italian partisans in their fight with the retreating but still fierce Germans. As in many Italian neorealist films, the actors are either non-professionals or unknowns, and their uneasiness with scripted dialogue sometimes shows -- at least it does with the English speakers; I can't judge the ones who speak Italian or German. There is also occasional sentimental overuse of the score by the director's brother, Renzo Rossellini. But on the whole, Paisan is still an extraordinarily compelling film, an essential portrait of war and its effects, made more essential by having been filmed on location amid the ruin and rubble so soon after the war ended. Glimpses of the emptied streets of Florence, bare of tourists and trade, are startling, as are the scenes that take place in the marshlands of the Po delta in the final sequence. The screenplay earned Oscar nominations for Alfred Hayes, Federico Fellini, Sergio Amidei, Marcello Pagliero, and Roberto Rossellini, but lost to Robert Pirosh for the more conventional war movie Battleground (William A. Wellman, 1949).
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cultml · 1 year
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vtgbooks · 1 year
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DALE CARLSON The Mystery of Galaxy Games JAMES BUDD Book 4 Vintage Mystery Book
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solatgif · 1 year
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TGIF: Roundup for December 2, 2022
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Advent is here! This holiday season, join SOLA Network on Substack. I’ll send you a free daily devotion to help prepare your heart for Christmas. We shared two classics: Tim St. John’s Advent Calendar for Couples and What is a Fitting Response to the Advent Season? by Daniel K. Eng.
We have over 30 videos in our Author Interviews YouTube playlist, with more coming soon. In case you missed it, check out over 30 videos in our newest YouTube playlist on The Asian American Church.
This newsletter is one of the many ways you can keep in touch with us. Find us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. For more, check out my Asian American Worship Leaders Facebook group and TGIF Playlist on Spotify. You can reach me on Twitter and Instagram.
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Enter to win this excellent book! Read my review. Thanks to Crown & Covenant for providing this book, in partnership with my newsletters for @diveindigdeep and FCBC Walnut.
Articles From Around The Web
Isbael Ong: 3 Popular Misconceptions About Advent
Christian leaders from Brazil, Colombia, France, and the Philippines weigh in on mistaken beliefs about the season.
Soojin Chung: The Seed of Korean Christianity Grew in the Soil of Shamanism
An awareness of the spirit world was a crucial component in missionary efforts to spread the gospel.
Geoff Chang: Lectures to My Students: A Reader’s Guide to a Christian Classic
“Spurgeon presents to us a vision of the pastorate that is sober, self-controlled, and centered on Christ.”
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Advent is here! This holiday season, join SOLA Network on Substack. I’ll send you a free daily devotion to help prepare your heart for Christmas.
Books, Podcasts, Music, And More
TGC: Leviticus: A Commentary by Peter Lee
Peter Lee: “I’m excited to share that my commentary on Leviticus is now available at TGC’s Concise Commentary series. This was a labor of love and look forward to more projects like it in the future.”
FCBC Walnut: Self-Control, Godly Zeal, and Gen Z
I talk with my friend Leslie about the connection between self-control and self-care, what we were zealous for in our youth, and how we are encouraged by the younger generations.
Aaron Lee: Related Works
Book Reviews (Reformation Heritage Books): A Puritan Theology by Joel R. Beeke and Mark Jones, The Lives of the Puritans by Benjamin Brook, Ore from the Puritans’ Mine by Dale Smith, Commentary on the Old and New Testaments by John Trapp, Meet the Puritans by Joel R. Beeke and Randall J. Pederson. Listen to our TGIF playlist on Spotify. Join my Asian American Worship Leaders Facebook group.
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Subscribe to our podcast for our interviews, messages, and article reads! Available for free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.
Featured This Week On SOLA Network
Andrew H. Kim: Is My Culture a Product of Sin?: Reexamining the Tower of Babel
“Instead of having one common language, a diversity of languages, cultures, ethnicities, and nations ultimately resulted from the Babel narrative. So, is it true that different ethnicities and cultures are a result of sin? I will explain how they are not only a result of God’s intended plan but will also continue into eternity.”
Ben Khong: Alzheimer’s: Help and Hope for Caregivers & the Church
“Alzheimer’s is a tragic disease, one that allows us to witness the brokenness of the curse. It progressively destroys a person’s mind until that person dies. And, where the world’s solutions end with the grief and loss that comes with the experience of this disease, the believer’s experience roots them in eternal life.”
Ken Carlson: Observing Advent as a Family
So much of the Christmas season in our culture has nothing to do with Jesus. Family Advent provides one way to remind ourselves of the true meaning of Christmas and to pass our faith on to the next generation.
TGIF: Roundup for November 25, 2022
God or Money / Redeeming Babel / The Embattled Pastor: How to Navigate Conflict and Criticism / The Church Behind Barbed Wire / Ekstasis Autumn Collection
General disclaimer: Our link roundups are not endorsements of the positions or lives of the authors.
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hrkerlon · 2 years
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Killing floor 2 imdb
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#KILLING FLOOR 2 IMDB SERIES#
Nicholas Lea as Dale Daniel Shannon, a death row inmate (season 3).
Aaron Douglas as Evan Henderson, a death row prison guard (season 3).
Ben Cotton as Pastor Mike, director of Beacon House, the youth homeless shelter (season 3).
Brian Markinson as Gil Sloane, Holder's NA sponsor (season 2).
Erik Carlson, Linden's new boss at the police department (season 2)
Don Thompson as Janek Kovarsky, a figure from Stan Larsen's shady past (season 1–2).
Claudia Ferri as Nicole Jackson, the manager of the Wapi Eagle Casino (season 1–2).
Barclay Hope as Michael Ames, Jasper's father (seasons 1–2).
Richard Harmon as Jasper Ames, Rosie's ex-boyfriend (season 1–2).
Alan Dale as Senator Eaton, Gwen's father (season 1–2).
Kacey Rohl as Sterling Fitch, Rosie's best friend (season 1–2).
Callum Keith Rennie as Rick Felder, Sarah's fiancé (season 1–2).
Ashley Johnson as Amber Ahmed, Bennet Ahmed's wife (season 1–2).
Brandon Jay McLaren as Bennet Ahmed, a teacher at Rosie's high school (season 1–2).
Katie Findlay as Rosie Larsen, the teenage girl who was found dead (season 1–2).
Michael Oakes, the detectives' boss (season 1–2)
Tom Butler as Lesley Adams, the mayor (season 1–2).
Seth Isaac Johnson as Denny Larsen, Rosie's brother (season 1–2).
Evan Bird as Tom Larsen, Rosie's brother (season 1–2).
See also: List of The Killing characters Main Actor The complete fourth season was released on Netflix on August 1, 2014. The Killing was again cancelled by AMC in September 2013, but Netflix announced in November 2013 that it had ordered a fourth season consisting of six episodes to conclude the series.
#KILLING FLOOR 2 IMDB SERIES#
Set in Seattle, Washington, the series follows the various murder investigations by homicide detectives Sarah Linden ( Mireille Enos) and Stephen Holder ( Joel Kinnaman).ĪMC announced the series's cancellation in July 2012, but picked it up for a third season after a renegotiation with Fox Television Studios and Netflix. The American version was developed by Veena Sud and produced by Fox Television Studios and Fuse Entertainment. The Killing is an American crime drama television series that premiered on April 3, 2011, on AMC, based on the Danish television series Forbrydelsen ('The Crime').
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oldschoolfrp · 9 months
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Dragon 29, September 1979, features another abstract organic cover painting by Dale Carlson, this one resembling a humanoid rooted to the floor with arms branching upwards like -- an ent in a deep forest with a full moon in the distance? A cave column coming to life? Carlson's only other Dragon cover was a similar rooty dragon on issue 19 the previous year, receiving no credit in either issue. Here the mood is broken by the imp from Wormy popping up in the corner.
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thequeereview · 3 years
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Exclusive Interview: Zackary Drucker on co-directing HBO's Elizabeth Carmichael docu-series The Lady and the Dale "I identify as a gay heretic & a freak, I've never wanted to pander to respectable society & Liz embodies that too"
Exclusive Interview: Zackary Drucker on co-directing HBO’s Elizabeth Carmichael docu-series The Lady and the Dale “I identify as a gay heretic & a freak, I’ve never wanted to pander to respectable society & Liz embodies that too”
Multimedia artist Zackary Drucker has performed and exhibited her work internationally at museums, galleries, and film festivals including the Whitney Biennial 2014, MoMA PS1, Hammer Museum, Art Gallery of Ontario, MCA San Diego, and SF MoMA. She is the Emmy-nominated producer of the docu-series This Is Me, which explores personal stories of trans experience, and was a producer on the Golden…
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nofatclips · 3 years
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Sleep by Gabi from the Double Double Whammy 2018 Fall Sampler
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Christmas with the Andersons (2016)
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This is another one that I expected to be worse than it was. That being said, I wouldn’t call it good. Just not bad.
Michael Anderson (George Stults) and his wife Caroline (Christy Carlson Romano) came from nothing in Georgia with their twins Julia (Savannah Judy) and Brendan (Luke Judy). But now, Michael is a successful partner at a firm in LA with his dad (Barry Livingston). But the money has made Michael kind of an idiot. Nobody seems to like him, including his closest friend and colleague, Ray (Dale Godboldo). Ray’s wife Pattie (Ion Overman) seems to be frenemies with Caroline, but it’s weird. I don’t think I understand frenemies because they are also legitimately each other’s closest friend. There’s also Ashton (Kannon Kurowski), one of Brendan’s friends that seems to just live there no matter how many times they tell him to go home, which to me feels like a callback to Beans on Even Stevens- the show where Christy Carlson Romano got her start. My personal favorite character in this movie is Michael’s zany Aunt Katie (Julie Brown) because they may not want her there, but she is the voice of reason and the true hero of this film.
The conflict in this occurs when Michael loses his job because his dad thinks that he doesn’t have the right attitude for the image the firm wants. Basically, Michael is greedy and using the law to help the bad guys get away with stuff because it means that he gets more money. Caroline has her own store selling scented soaps, lotions, etc., and it’s not making any money. I kind of expected their financial struggles to be more pronounced, but they did kind of discuss it. I’m sure the mortgage on their house isn’t cheap. But it’s a little anticlimactic.
This was the kind of movie you would put on to have as background noise or because it’s just in tv and easier than finding something else because you’re not really watching. Michael’s character arc is super weird and not believable. Caroline seems smart but doesn’t act like it consistently. The kids seem bratty but then they’re fine with not having a Christmas tree. It’s all very weird. Overall, I think 2 stars for this one.
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vintagerpg · 2 years
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The Dragon 29 (September, 1979). Another weird rooty cover by Dale Carlson, titled “Earth Elemental.”
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disneydude94 · 3 years
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Amphibia: Calamity War - Fancast
Here are some lists I made for each characters for fancast when you hear some voices inside of your head.
Brenda Song - Anne Boonchuy
Justin Felbinger - Sprig Plantar
Amanda Leighton - Polly Plantar
Bill Farmer - Hopadiah Plantar, Goofy, Pluto, Horace Horsecollar, and Sleepy
Anna Akana - Sasha Waybright
Haley Tju - Marcy Wu
Troy Baker - Captain Grime, Hawkeye/Clint Barton, Loki Laufyson, and Whiplash
Bret Irwin - Mickey Mouse
Kaitlyn Robrock - Minnie Mouse, Webby, Clara Cluck, Fauna, and Felicia Sundew
Tony Anselmo - Donald Duck, Huey, Dewey, and Louie
Tress MacNeille - Daisy Duck, Chip, Gadget Hackwrench, Kanga, Merryweather, Princess Tatiana (TLK), Cannonball, Felix, and Doris
Corey Burton - Dale, Yen Sid, Ludwig Von Drake, Magic Mirror, Grumpy, Mad Hatter, Captain Hook, Frollo, and Chernabog
Matt Braly - Frobo and Chuck
On Braly - Mrs. Boonchuy
Brian Sounalath - Mr. Boonchuy
Keith David - King Andrias and Dr. Facilier
Michelle Dockery - Lady Olivia
Zehra Fazal - General Yunan
Susanne Blakeslee - Maleficent, Evil Queen, Cruella De Vil, and Valeriana
Jim Cummings - Pete, Darkwing Duck, Monterey Jack, Winnie the Pooh, Tigger, King Louie, Kaa, Cheshire Cat, Ed, Don Karnage, Negaduck, Big Bad Wolf, Hondo Ohnaka, the Shocker
Dee Bradley Baker - Bessie, Perry the Platypus, Pinky the Chihuahua, Diogee, Waddles the Pig, and Tick Tock the Crocodile.
April Winchell - Clarabelle Cow, Queen of Heart, Braddock, Fens, Tuti, and Sylvia (Wander Over Yander)
Katie Michelle Crown - Ivy Sundew
Jill Bartlett - Maddie Flour
James Patrick Stuart - One-Eyed Wally and Evil Emperor Zurg
Stephen Root - Mayor Toadstool
Laila Berzins - Sadie Croaker
Brian Maillard - Leopold Loggle
Marlow Barkley - Rosemary Flour
Mia Allan - Lavender Flour
Ella Allan - Ginger Flour
Mona Marshall - Sylvia Sundew
Matt Jones - Percy
Darin De Paul - Bog
Nicole Byer - Gertie
RuPaul Charles - Head of FBI Agent
Jason Marsden - Max Goof
Bernardo De Paula - Jose Carioca
Jaime Camil - Panchito Pistoles
Enn Reitel - Scrooge McDuck
Breck Bennett - Launchpad McQuack
Paget Brewster - Della Duck
Michael Bell - Quacker Jack
Maurice LaMarche - Mortimer Mouse
Rod Roddy - Microphone Mike
Daveigh Chase - Lilo Pelekai
Chris Sanders - Stitch
Tara Strong - Angel and Mary Jane Watson
Kevin Hamilton McDonald - Pleakley and Albus Duckweed
Kevin Michael Richardson - Gantu, Groot, and Mr. Flour
Rob Paulsen - Reuben, Steelbeak, and Gladstone Gander
Christy Carlson Romano - Kim Possible
Will Friedle - Ron Stoppable
John William DiMaggio - Dr. Drakken and Stumpy
Nicole Julianne Sullivan - Shego
Vincent Martella - Phineas Flynn
David Errigo Jr. - Ferb Fletcher
Ashely Tisdale - Candace Flynn
Alyson Stone - Isabella Garcia-Shapiro
Maulik Pancholy - Baljeet Tjinder
Bobby Gaylor - Buford Van Stomm
Dan Povenmire - Heinz Doofesnhmirtz
Jeff "Swampy" Marsh - Major Monogram
Mitchell Musso - Jeremy Johnson
Kelly Hu - Stacy Hirano
Michaela Zee - Ginger Hirano
Ariel Winter - Gretchen
Madison Pettis - Adyson Sweetwater
Diamond White - Holly
Isabella Acres - Katie
Isabella Murad - Milly
Olivia Olson - Vanessa Doofenshmritz
Tyler Alexander Mann - Carl Karl
Jason Ritter - Dipper Pines
Kristen Joy Schaal - Mabel Pines, Trixie, and Bella the Bellhop
Alex Hirsch - Stanley Pines, Soos, Bill Cipher, King Clawthorne, and Hooty
J.K. Simmons - Stanford Pines
Linda Edna Cardellini - Wendy Corduroy
Eden Sher - Star Butterfly
Adam McArthur - Marco Diaz
"Weird Al" Yankovic - Milo Murphy
Sabrina Carpenter - Melissa Chase
Mekai Curtis - Zack Underwood
Chris Houghton - Cricket Green
Marieve Herington - Tilly Green
Bob Joles - Bill Greens and Sneezy
Wendi McLendon-Covey - Nancy Green
Artemis Pebdani - Alice Green
Jeff Bennett - Merlin, Lumiere, White Rabbit, March Hare, Bashful, Mr. Smee, Zazu, and Hamsterviel
Frank Welker - Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, Figaro, Abu, Rajah, Pegasus, Cri-kee, Sparky, Kixx, Spooky, Yin, Yang, Splodyhead, and Slushy
Audrey Wasilewski - Ortensia the Cat
Cary Elwes - Gus the Gremlin
Brad Garret - Eeyore
Travis Oates - Piglet
Tom Kenny - Rabbit
Aidan McGraw - Roo
Pamela Ribon - Snow White
André Sogliuzzo - Doc
Joseph Ricci - Pinocchio
Joe Ochman - Jiminy Cricket
Rosalyn Landor - Blue Fairy
Jennifer Hale - Cinderella
Grey Griffin - Fairy Godmother, Captain Marvel/Carol Danvers and Roxanne
Blayne Weaver - Peter Pan
Kate Higgins - Princess Aurora
Barbara Dirickson - Flora
Charles Fleischer - Roger Rabbit and Benny the Cab
Jodi Benson - Princess Ariel
Philip Lawrence - Sébastien
Pat Carrol - Ursula
Paige O'Hara - Belle
Robby Benson - Beast
Richard White - Gaston
Scott Weinger - Aladdin
Linda Larkin - Princess Jasmine
Dan Castellaneta - Genie and Megavolt
Johnathan Freeman - Jafar
Gilbert Gottfried - Iago
Cam Clarke - Simba
Kevin Schon - Timon and Happy
Ernie Sabella - Pumbaa
Khary Payton - Rafiki
David Oyelowo - Scar
Whoopi Goldberg - Shenzi
Cheech Marin - Banzai
Irene Bedard - Pocahontas
Tom Hanks - Woody
Tim Allen - Buzz Lightyear
Joan Cusack - Jessie
Annie Potts - Bo Peep
John Ratzenberger - Hamm and Yeti
Wallace Shawn - Rex
Pat Fraley - Mr. Potato Head
Estelle Harris - Mrs. Potato Head
Blake Clark - Slinky Dog
Jeff Pidgeon - Little Green Men
Tony Hale - Forky
Madeleine McGraw - Bonnie Anderson
Tate Donavan - Hercules
Susan Egan - Megera
James Woods - Hades
Bobcat Goldthwait - Pain and Nosey
Matt Frewer - Panic
Ming-Na Wen - Fa Mulan
Mark Mosely - Mushu
Billy Crystal - Mike Wazowski
John Goodman - James P. Sullivan and Baloo
Hayden Rolence - Nemo
Albert Brookes - Marlin
Ellen DeGeneres - Dory
Craig T. Nelson - Mr. Incredible
Holly Hunter - Elastigirl
Sarah Vowell - Violet Parr
Huck Milner - Dash Parr
Owen Wilson - Lightning McQueen
Larry the Cable Guy - Tow Mater
Anika Noni Rose - Princess Tiana and Dr. Jan
Bruno Campos - Prince Naveen
Michael-Leon Wooley - Louis
Mandy Moore - Rapunzel
Zachery Levi - Flynn Ryder
Kelly Macdonald - Merida
John C. Reilly - Wreck-It Ralph
Sarah Silverman - Vanellope VonSchweetz
Jack McBrayer - Fix-It Felix Jr., Toadie, Irving Du Bois, and Wander
Jane Lynch - Sergeant Calhoun
Idina Menzel - Elsa
Kristen Bell - Anna
Johnathan Groff - Kristoff
Josh Gad - Olaf
Scott Adsit - Baymax
Ryan Potter - Hiro Hamada
Jamie Chung - GoGo Tomago
Khary Payton - Wasabi
Genesis Rodriguez - Honey Lemon
TJ Miller - Fred Fredrickson
Kaitlyn Dias - Riley Anderson
Amy Poehlher - Joy
Phyllis Smith - Sadness
Mindy Kaling - Disgust
Lewis Black - Anger
Bill Hader - Fear
Ginnifer Goodwin - Judy Hopps
Jason Bateman - Nick Wilde
Auli'i Cravalho - Moana
Dwayne Johnson - Maui
Drake Bell - Spider-Man/Peter Parker
Dove Cameron - Spider-Gwen/Gwen Stacy
Ogie Banks - Kid Arachnid/Mile Morales/Spider-Man
Roger Craig Smith - Captain America/Steve Rogers and Sonic the Hedgehog
Mick Wingert - Iron Man /Tony Stark
Travis Willingham - Thor Odinson
Frederick Owen Tatasciore - Hulk and Soggy Joe
Laura Bailey - Black Widow/Natasha Romanoff
James C. Mathis III - Black Panther/T'Challa
Kathreen Khavari - Ms. Marvel/Kamala Khan
Jack Coleman - Doctor Strange
A.J. LoCasio - Star Lord/Peter Quill
Vanessa Marshall - Gamora
David Sobolov - Drax the Destroyer
Nolan North - Rocket Raccoon and Deadpool/Wade Wilson
Samuel L. Jackson - Nick Fury and Frozone
Clark Gregg - Phil Coulson
Matt Lanter - Venom
Liam O'Brian - Red Skull
Charlie Adler - M.O.D.O.K.
Clancy Brown - Taskmaster and Red Hulk
Anthony Daniels - C-3PO
Daisy Ridley - Rey
John Boyega - Finn
Oscar Isaac - Poe Dameron
James Arnold Taylor - Lieutenant Bek
Adam Drivers - Kylo Ren
Domhall Gleeson - General Hux
Michael Giacchino - FN-3181
Daniel Craig - First Order Stormtrooper
Jeff Leech - First Order Stormtrooper
Matt Vogel - Kermit the Frog, Floyd Pepper, Sweetums, Uncle Deadly, Camilla the Chicken, and Crumpet the Frog
Eric Jacobson - Miss Piggy, Fozzie Bear, Animal, and Sam the Eagle
Dave Goelz - Gonzo, Dr. Bunsen Honeydew, Zoot, Waldorf, and Figment
David Rudman - Scooter, Beaker, and Janice
Bill Barretta - Pepe the King Prawn, Swedish Chef, Dr. Teeth, Rowlf the Dog, and Big Mean Carl
Peter Linz - Walter and Statler
Ikue Otani - Pikachu
Sarah-Nicole Robles - Luz Noceda
Wendie Malick - Eda Clawthorne
Mae Whitman - Amity Blight
Tati Gabrielle - Willow Park
Isaac Ryan Brown - Gus Willow
Zeno Robinson - Hunter
Matthew Rhys - Emperor Belos
14 notes · View notes