killuo:

thesweetpianowritingdownmylife:

itsspookybitch:

transpeter:

transpeter:

i still can’t believe that the incredibles is likely set in the 1960s

the entire film is designed with classic 50s-60s art styles, a lot of the interior design of the parr household is in 60s style, fashion is generally reminiscent of the 60s, in the beginning of the film all the photographs and video are grainy and shot in 60s style, the technology in bob’s office is very dated, when edna is going on her ā€œno capesā€ rant she cites superheroes who died from cape designs and says their deaths were in the 50s, all the cars in the film have 60s models, any advanced tech we really see is seemingly kept secret from the general public, here’s a newspaper from the film:

may 16th, 1962

Holy fuck

Jack-jack is a baby boomer

Baby Boomer? Jack-Jack? I trusted him…

flamelscross:

prokopetz:

mooncustafer:

sizvideos:

John Boyega talks about how he feels about BB-8 – Full video

People who guested on Sesame Street or The Muppet ShowĀ often mentioned this phenomenon in interviews.Ā 

I’m reminded of a possibly apocryphal story where a talk show was doing a Kermit the Frog guest spot, and the sound technicians couldn’t figure out why the audio pickup was so terrible – until they realised that they’d unthinkingly attached the wireless mic to the puppet rather than the voice actor.

When I was two or three my father worked for a radio station and was tasked with interviewing a muppeteer when an exhibition came through a local museum. As it was a children’s museum my father took me with him, and he apparently had a heck of a time trying to do the interview because I kept interrupting to move his microphone back to the muppet’s mouth.