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Disneyland by Christopher Anderson

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Title: Disneyland by Christopher Anderson


1
Disneyland by Christopher Anderson
2
Introduction
  • Walt Disney was one of Hollywoods most important
    independent producers
  • Television was crucial to Disneys plan to create
    a media and merchandizing empire
  • ABC and Disney targeted a middle-class family
    audience with young children
  • Disney offered the blueprint for the future
    development of media industries (31)

3
Topics of Discussion
  • ABC and Disney
  • Total Merchandizing
  • Buena Vista Studios
  • Audience Demographics
  • Programming
  • Reflexivity
  • The Disney Canon
  • Conclusions

4
ABC and Disney
  • Along with David O. Selznick, Disney was the
    first to link film and TV
  • TVs signal scope gave it entry into the American
    home
  • ABC buys the series Disneyland in 1954 for
    500,000 to obtain a 1/3 share in the Park
  • Coca-Cola and Johnson and Johnson were previous
    sponsors
  • In 1996 Disney Company buys ABC for 19 billion
    in cash and stocks

5
Total Merchandizing
  • products are aimed at baby-boom families and
    stamped with the Disney imprint (18)
  • one product sells another movies, amusement
    park rides, books, comic books, clothing, toys,
    TV programs . . . (18)
  • each Disney product . . . promoted all Disney
    products

6
Buena Vista
  • Diversification became necessary in 1953 for
    Disney to create a leisure and entertainment
    corporation (20)
  • In order to break from the restrictive studio
    system (18), Disney created Buena Vista (20)
  • Cartoon shorts were unprofitable (20)
  • Buena Vista made nature documentaries and
    live-action films (20)

7
Audience Demographics
  • ABC cultivated ties with Hollywood to define
    the network as different (20)
  • TV viewing is a habit, just like going to the
    show was a habit (20)
  • Demographics refers to audience analysis the
    young housewife youthful families (20)
  • ABC alignswith small-ticket advertisers
  • Leonard Goldenson refers to the Disney deal as
    ABCs turning point

8
Programming
  • One third of each program was devoted to
    promotion but blurred publicity with
    entertainment (23)
  • behind-the-scenes footage from the Disney
    studio (23) ie., building the Park making
    cartoons making films (23-4)
  • Never exposed issues of labour relations in these
    episodes
  • Uncle Walt educated viewers (24)

9
Reflexivity
  • Refers to making films about filmmaking
  • Disney, like Barnum (Greatest Show on Earth
    circus owner), allowed viewers the thrill of
    seeing how an illusion is created

10
The Disney Canon
  • Mickey Mouse obtains canonical status (25)
    meaning that studio products are not disposable
    commodities of pop culture, but artifacts worthy
    of remembrance (25)
  • Footage from Disney films are recontextualized
    (placed in a new context) making them more
    important edifying and specialized (26),
  • eg. Pinocchio in the whale is associated with
    20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and an undersea
    documentaryall part of the total merchandizing
    effect

11
Conclusion
  • Disneyland the program created phenomenal
    interest in Disneyland the park
  • a suburban amusement, a bourgeois park (27)not
    designed to offer cheap thrills for the urban
    masses (or lower class) (27)
  • Disney is compared to Edison and Henry Ford
  • Disneyland becomes part of the culture of the
    automobile and the superhighway (28)

12
Broader Conclusions
  • Disney exploited the quest for authentic
    experience which exists somewhere outside the
    realm of daily experience (29)
  • Contrary to Walter Benjamins belief, TV and
    mass media intensifies the desire for
    authenticity by invoking a sublime ever
    out-of-reach experience (30)
  • Disneys texts draw the viewer outward toward
    greater consumption of further Disney texts
    and products (30)
  • The new Hollywood will do the sameby fusing
    all texts into one (ref to Wagner)
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