Difference between revisions of "Binzy the Polka-Dot Dinosaur"

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(Production Background)
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[[Image:Binzy_Unequivocal_Success.png|thumb|360px|Binzy the Polka-Dot Dinosaur float popping]]
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[[Image:Binzy_Unequivocal_Success.png|thumb|360px|🎼 Binzy is a Dinosaur from our imagination, and when he pops he’s what we call a dinosaur deflation]]
 
'''''Binzy the Polka-Dot Dinosaur''''' is, presumably, a television character. In 1997, a float modeled on him popped during the [[Thanksgiving Day Parade]].
 
'''''Binzy the Polka-Dot Dinosaur''''' is, presumably, a television character. In 1997, a float modeled on him popped during the [[Thanksgiving Day Parade]].
  

Revision as of 16:35, 6 November 2024

🎼 Binzy is a Dinosaur from our imagination, and when he pops he’s what we call a dinosaur deflation

Binzy the Polka-Dot Dinosaur is, presumably, a television character. In 1997, a float modeled on him popped during the Thanksgiving Day Parade.

Gnash lamented that there was no giant gargoyle float, strongly believing that gargoyles are better than Binzy. ("Unequivocal Success")

Production Background

"Barney & Friends" was an American children's television series targeted at children aged two to five. The series first aired on PBS on April 6, 1992, and features Barney, a purple anthropomorphic Tyrannosaurus rex who conveys educational messages through songs and small dance routines with a friendly, huggable and optimistic attitude. It also garnered disapproval by most older children, teenagers, young adults, television producers at Walt Disney Television Animation, and entertainment journalists who criticized it for being "saccharine", "sunshine-and-rainbows", and "one-dimensional".

In 1994, during a press conference held at the Universal Sheraton in the Hollywood Hills, "Gargoyles" was unveiled to the press. Reporters were stunned to pin-drop silence by the trailer and the first question asked to the show's representatives (Greg Weisman, Ed Asner, Jonathan Frakes, Gary Krisel, and Bill Fagerbakke) was if they would let their children watch it. Fagerbakke responded "Well, it's better than Barney!" to the laughter and applause of the reporters attending. From that point onward, "Gargoyles" always had a good relationship with the press.