![]() The crew also did a great job modernizing the puppets and making them look cuddly. The set design is extremely stylized and absolutely gorgeous, you can tell that they put a lot of love into it. The show is definitely not for everyone, and as long as you have good criticisms of the show and not bad ones like "wah, muh nostalgia" or "wah, this show is a ripoff and the characters are brats" (which is not true, looking at you Paw Print on Google.) The puppets and set design are by far my favorite aspect of the show. This means that not everyone will immediately like it at first, but as you watch more and more episodes, you might just like it. ![]() As I said, this show is a bit of an acquired taste. The show does use music to convey its messages, in typical Mister Rogers fashion, but with bigger words like "frustrated" and "compromise", a mix of old and new songs, and a 60s pop feel. Spiffy Pictures is renowned for their clever comedy on Nature Cat, which also works to Donkey Hodie's advantage to distinguish it from DTN. Donkey Hodie is actually a reference to Don Quixote, who also knew a thing or two about windmills. The series is aimed at an older audience than Daniel Tiger, featuring more character-driven stories, more conflict, and less hamfisted messages, as well as more comedy and pop culture references. The original Donkey Hodie is now a loving grandfather known as Grampy Hodie, and the new Donkey Hodie is a bright yellow donkey girl with a striking magenta mane. Yes, it's actually called that, because King Friday made the original Donkey Hodie build his windmill "someplace else". Unlike Daniel Tiger, which is set in the Neighborhood of Make Believe, Donkey Hodie is set in Someplace Else. Please access the original source images and abide by the appropriate license and attribution requirements.The second series based on Mister Rogers Neighborhood. The images used are used from other public domain, Creative Commons and other sources. This license does not apply to any images on. This work by DonkeyHotey is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. It is fun working as part of an editorial team commenting on the issues of the day and the people in the news. I am not really interested in doing caricatures of random individuals. I enjoy doing political caricatures and political cartoons. My goal is not to do a lot of commission work unless it is in my wheelhouse. O'Rourke, Your Country Is Just Not That Into Youby Jimmy Dore (eight caricatures inside), , Eclectablog, Kiko's House, Utne Reader, and Ayn Rand Hates Tuscaloosa, And You Too Joplin! I did some work with a 3D real-time animation shop, CHOPS. People have used DonkeyHotey caricatures for books, magazines and websites including How the Hell Did This Happen?: The Election of 2016 by P. Now I simply track uses of my work with Delicious bookmarks. The work has been featured in articles on Life of the Law by Stephanie Schroeder, The Daily Dot by Fernando Alfonso III, and on Bloomberg by Dave Weigel. DonkeyHotey caricatures and cartoons have been published over 2,900 times on sites including: Alternet, Boing Boing, BuzzFeed, Campaign for America’s Future, CBS MoneyWatch, Common Dreams, Crooks and Liars, The Daily Dot, Daily Kos, Eclectablog, Forbes, The Good Men Project, The Guardian, The Huffington Post, In These Times, IPS, The Jimmy Dore Show, Kiko's House, Like the Dew, Mother Jones, The Motley Fool, Neon Tommy, New Civil Rights Movement, NewsHounds, Other Words, patheos, The Progressive, Truthdig, Truth-out, Vice, WhoWhatWhy, Wired and many more. For a few years I documented use of my work in simple form on my WordPress site. The DonkeyHotey Flickr photostream has had over 17 million views. Since 2010, I have been posting caricatures on Flickr under Creative Commons License.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |