A history of Disney- the 1950s

“People don’t associate movies like Consenting Adults with Disney, or The Corpse Had a Familiar Face with Disney. In fact as previously mentioned, when Disney wanted to put out more ‘adult’ films, they did a slight of hand and created the label Touchstone films so that people wouldn’t associate movies like Splash (which showed what looked like bare breasts) with Disney Productions.

Another label, Hollywood Pictures, was created by Disney to help distribute Touchstone films. At first the personnel of these companies was simply Disney’s staff, but as time went on, they got their own production personnel.

On Oct. 27, 1954, Walt Disney’s Wonderful World of Colour debuted on television. The TV show celebrated Disney’s movie triumphs. The words Wonderful World of Colour are not ill chosen. According to an Illuminati mind-control programmer, when Disney worked on his cartoons, and amusement parks, colours, special colours and colour combinations, were specifically chosen for mind-control programming purposes. Wonderful World of Colour under various names such as Disneyland aired for 22 years over the television networks.

In 1955, Walt Disney made his cartoon character Mickey Mouse real by creating a fan club-the Mickey Mouse Club, which aired five days a week usually just as children came home from school. Twenty-four children called mouseketeers would help Mickey, and they would dance and sing and do skits. The Mickey Mouse Club adored the unique, cute little beanie Mickey Mouse caps with their big ears mounted to each side of the beanie.

In the 1950s, most kid viewers of the show wanted their own ‘Mouse Ears’ and to become a Mouseketeer, especially children who were receiving Mickey Mouse scripts in their total mind-control programming. Disney used his Mouseketeers to play all the roles in an Oz movie Rainbow Road to Oz, which was never shown to the public. Adults today (both men and women) who received Mickey Mouse programming during the 50s through 70s can still be seen with Mickey Mouse clocks, watches, lampshades, knick-knacks, tee-shirts etc. Years later the kids who watched can still remember Spin and Marty and the Mickey Mouse theme song. The image that everything was perfect including Mickey was portrayed by the Club’s T.V. program. Still somehow the American people began to use the word ‘Mickey Mouse’ as a synonym for a silly, pretend way of doing things.

It became common for people to say, ‘He mickey-moused it together’ to mean he did a poor job putting it together. On Jan. 30, 1957, Walt Disney had a television show aired entitled ‘All About Magic’ where a Magic Mirror explains about magic. The Magic Mirror also contains a ‘Bibbidi-bibbidi-boo’ sequence.

In 1959, Disney bought 8 small submarines from Todd Shipyards for $2, 150.000.”

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