Month: April 2016
Zootopia Box Office Totals
as provided by boxofficemojo.com
Domestic Total as of Apr. 11, 2016: $296,786,844
Total Lifetime Grosses
Domestic: $296,786,844 34.8%
+ Foreign: $556,500,000 65.2%
= Worldwide: $853,286,844
Domestic Summary
Opening Weekend: $75,063,401
(#1 rank, 3,827 theaters, $19,614 average)
% of Total Gross: 25.3%
> View All 6 Weekends
Widest Release: 3,959 theaters
In Release: 39 days / 5.6 weeks
Arctic’s Midwest FurFest 2015 Con Video – Alive
Interview with Byron Howard about early Zootopia production
Adel’s MFF 2015 Con Video (Midwest FurFest 2015)
Adel’s TFF 2016 Con Video (Texas Furry Fiesta 2016) Part 2
How to open a Zootopian DMV
Absolutely brilliant idea for a press kit, and I really hope it’s only a matter of time before they make them available either digitally (like the Gazelle page) or for physical purchase in the Disney Personalisation shop. Meanwhile, I spent about an hour putting my own version together in Keynote, mostly based on the official design but taking some liberties with it because I couldn’t exactly match the fonts online or find a full Department of Mammal Vehicles logo.Here’s my Zootopian license in all its unofficial glory:
Source: How to open a Zootopian DMV
Adel’s TFF 2016 Con Video (Texas Furry Fiesta 2016) Part 1
Furry Fiesta 2016 Fursuit Parade
The revenge of the furries
as originally posted on bostonglobe.com by By S.I. Rosenbaum
Furries — those most maligned members of the geek tribe — are finally having their moment. Last month, when a fur convention was held at a Vancouver hotel that was also serving as a temporary shelter for Syrian refugees, the world beheld Syrian children giggling in delight at adults dressed as lynxes and ocelots. And of course there’s “Zootopia’’ — the hit animated film featuring an anthropomorphic fox, which Disney cannily marketed directly to the furry contingent.
What is a furry? They are, roughly speaking, people with an abiding interest in, identification with, or yen to dress up as, animals. For some, there’s an erotic component; for others the thrill is more spiritual. Either way, furries have been bashed ever since the Internet discovered their previously underground community. Humorist Lore Sjöberg famously placed them below “Trekkies Who Get Married In Klingon Garb” and “Pokemon Fans Over the Age of Six” in his Geek Hierarchy flowchart all the way back in 2002.
But furries are unfairly scorned. An interest in other animals is nearly a defining trait of human beings — we’re far more likely than other predators to connect with nonhuman species, a trait that may have been a key part of our evolution as social beings. People have literally been dressing up like and identifying with animals for hundreds of thousands of years. The conservationist and children’s writer Thornton Burgess wrote in 1922 that “[t]his interest is instinctive,” going back to the “dawn man,” and modern science has backed him up. Vanessa LoBue, a researcher at Rutgers, found in a 2012 paper that children prefer live animals — even snakes and spiders — over inanimate toys.
In donning furry masks and creating fursonas, furries are just expressing the same urge of trans-species empathy that has powered countless iterations of human culture, from Stone-Age animism to the animal-headed gods of Egypt to the fables of Aesop and legends of kitsune and werewolves. It’s something those Syrian kids immediately recognized — inside those fursuits, the furries of Vancouver were simultaneously less, and a lot more, human.
