Episode 110 Blue/Yellow Gear Bear

Ep. 110 Blue/Yellow Gear Bear

This week we have a ton of news to cover including Animation 3, Jr. 8, Tokyo 30th and much more. We also run down Chuck’s list of proposed WDW Resort vinyls and talk about the reorganization of D-Street Orlando. And of course, we give you the complete release and events calendar. Stay tuned at the end of the show for the special 2013 Custom VinylMadness Selection Show!

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WDWNT: The Magazine – “Escape from Casey Jr.” by Daniel Butcher

Escape from Casey Jr.

By Daniel Butcher

You will probably find me strange.  It has been my dream to experience a significant evacuation from a Disney attraction.  I am convinced that it would be exciting and a cherished memory!  Seriously, how cool would it be to be walked off from Space Mountain with the lights on?  Would it not be great to see the Haunted Mansion from outside a Doom Buggy?  My daughter and I have both held our breaths as ours came to a halt in the graveyard scene.  Some may believe these sorts of incidents would lessen the magic, but for me it would only increase it!

Sure I have had my near misses but nothing significant.  Several years and a kid ago my family was stuck on Peter Pan’s Flight.  We dangled in our ship above the scene, staring at Captain Hook as the crocodile attempted to swallow him.  After about ten minutes of hanging, the ride resumed and we returned from Neverland.  In 2011, we were actually walked off, Monster Inc. Mike and Sully to the Rescue.  Yes we were guided past the immobile show scenes and led to the exit.  We were not even given a Fastpass for our troubles.  Of course, when I say walked off, we walked out from the very last scene and the only real difference in our tour of Monstropolis was Roz failed to speak to my family and we had to walk a little further.  These near misses just made me even more anxious for a significant ride evacuation.

All the signs for our August 2012 vacation pointed to the fact that a serious evacuation was going to happen!  Every day the entire family began to note the large number of attractions going 101, the Disneyland radio code for a closed attraction.  When the children begin to notice the number of closed rides, Disneyland you may have a problem.

Then the near misses began and my heart broke as I thought I missed my chance.  First, as we were standing waiting to enter our hanger at Soarin’ Over California, Patrick quit talking but we were still standing.  But we did not realize anything was atypical.  A cast member exited from the hanger and informed us that the ride was not working.  We were all given a special Fastpass, which we could use to speed our wait through the other hanger, or in the case of my family speeding up our wait for Toy Story Midway Mania later in the day since it could be used on most rides within Disney California Adventure.  Yes, Radiator Springs Racers was excluded!   In this near miss we did not even get to enter the ride and there was nothing backstage for us to witness.

A larger tragedy was to come.  The family had reentered Disney California Adventure after an afternoon nap.  Our direction was clear; the taller members of the family were set with our journey straight back to Paradise Pier to ride California Screamin’.  Then we made what to me was a critical error.  We stopped and took advantage of the short wait for Grizzly River Run since the whole family could enjoy the attraction together.  After getting soaked, we exited and headed back towards our desired roller coaster, hoping it would dry us off.  As we crested the path next to The Little Mermaid: Ariel’s Undersea Adventure, I saw the unthinkable.  Guests were standing on California Sreamin’s tallest lift hill, and I was not one of them.  I looked on with envy as the guests dismounted the train and stood staring out into what had to have been a fantastic view of the park and the sprawl around the park.  I imagined myself standing at the top of the lift hill with my cell phone out snapping photos that I would enjoy for a lifetime.  My wife awoke me from my daydream with, “we are so lucky we stopped, that could have been us.  I would have hated it.”  Dear, I would have been in heaven.  With a tear in my eye, I still did not know my day was coming as I decided to go undersea in a poor alternative to getting stuck on one of my favorite coasters.  My moment was awaiting me in Disneyland Park with an attraction that opened in the inaugural year of 1955.

 The Train

It was a hot August morning at Disneyland.  The family had just exited from it’s a small world walking back into the heart of Fantasyland.  The youngest member of the family made his pitch to ride the Casey Jr. Circus Train, a ride we had yet to enjoy on this visit.  For the adults in the family we do not enjoy Casey Jr. since it is more of a kid sized ride.  And I for one am a full sized adult.  But knowing that he had been dragged to all the rides and shows the older members of the family wanted, I could not tell him no.  We walked up to the queue and were shocked to find the switchbacks not full of families.  I looked at my wife and said, “We have to do it.”  She looked back and gave me a look that said, “Enjoy!”  With my wife deciding to take a break from rides after our busy morning, the smart choice, I marched my kids up the ramp towards destiny.

As we moved through the queue the cast members were loading the train which was preparing to chug out the station.  I thought that we would likely be waiting until the next trip.  Except the cast members failed to shut the gate and my son in the lead proudly marched through and declared, “cages please.”  I had to admit, I liked the fact he knew what he wanted!  The cast member told me we would probably be waiting for the next train.  I reassured her it was fine.  Then the other loading cast member found a space for us in a monkey cage.  And as my son led me to my fate, he smiled from ear to ear knowing he was getting his desired seat.

I wedged myself into the corner of a monkey cage and noticed my riding companions.  Two young mothers and their daughters had already staked claim to most of the cage.  I nodded, knowing that our interactions would only be lasting the three minutes of our journey since their children clearly had not yet passed the blessed 42 inch barrier which had opened up a whole new world for my son.  I settled down to what I hoped would be a few moments of sitting and resting my feet, and a quick check of my email.

Everything was running as normal as we left the station.  The soundtrack was putting me in a good mood and Casey Jr. was reassuring us that he could.  But he couldn’t.  As we climbed up the hill behind the Storybook Land Canal Boats, Casey Jr. stopped!  Having been on rides which had stopped before for a variety of reasons I expected the train to restart at any moment, instead the engineer pulled on the whistle as a distress call.  That caught my attention.  After the whistle nothing happened yet again.  A few minutes later the silence was broken by the engineer informing us that Casey Jr. was not operating and she was awaiting assistance so we could be evacuated.  My dream had happened, on what could only be called a kiddy ride!

The cast member announcement was followed by sitting.  This is when I realized how different I was from my riding companions.  Yes, we may all have been parents but these young mothers began to alternate between gossiping about their daycare situations and giving me questioning looks.  Was this strange man in a baseball cap, t-shirt and shorts a threat?  If the train was forced to cannibalism how much of a threat was he, and if eaten first how many days could he feed their kids?  I attempted to avert my eyes and risk conversation with my companions.  Instead I texted my wife and let her know I would be on the train FOR-EV-ER! 

The sitting was fully on.  The next seven to ten minutes had none of the romance I dreamed of when daydreaming of a ride evacuation.  Instead it was a lot of sweating.  My son’s desired ride vehicle, the monkey cage, was quickly becoming the sweat box of prison movies and television shows.  We were in the hole!  And with the car stopped next to a high hedge, there was little air flow through the cage.  I moved my body to avoid the gaze of the moms, and so I could look out at what would have to be a unique view.  What could I see?  There were some bushes, a small part of the Story Book Canal, and some cage bar in my sights.  Then I remembered I could have been stuck at the top of California Screamin’ instead!  I stuck my phone through the bars and took some of the most boring pictures ever of the Story Book Canal, without boats, which suddenly quit passing by.  Perhaps Disney wished to avoid witnesses to the anarchy that was sure to break as the train passengers established new lives upon the hill!

The Evacuation

As I sat with my kids, reassuring them that someday we would leave the train, I wondered how we would escape.  And being locked in a hot cage, unlike those in the open cars, I did mean escape!  A second cast member arrived and began leading us to freedom.  Being locked in a monkey cage I could not see the exit route those in the cars in front of us were taking.  When we had been evacuated from Monster’s Inc. Mike and Sully to the Rescue, cast members walked guests out of the attraction.  They collected those in each vehicle one at a time and added to a group walking from the heart of the ride.  Here it appeared they were releasing guests one car at a time.  So hopes of walking the track back to the entrance seemed unlikely.

Finally, escape was provided for my family.  The car to the monkey cage was opened by a cast member who scooted between the hedge and the cage.  Then I saw problem one with our evacuation.  The closeness of the hedge meant there was only one path for escape.  The open door combined with the hedge created a gate which meant we could not exit to the rear of the car.  We would only be able to move to the front, and any attempts to walk back meant we would have to walk up to the engine and then walk back from the Story Book Canal Boats facing side of the train.

The second problem occurred as I attempted to leave the hot car first.  As I stepped out I saw next to the hedge was a small concrete lip, then a drop off and finally the monkey cage.  Therefore a misstep would result in fall for the escapees.  I moved my foot to the ledge and squeezed my frame up past the front of the monkey cage.  Then I saw the head of a cast member awaiting me, poking out from the hedge!  I paused and entered what turned out to the most anxious moments of my escape, my son on a ledge.  As the youngest member of the family he was also the least agile.  He reached out cautiously with his foot and very gingerly moved forward on the ledge with no stumbles and no fear in his eyes.  He understood the value of adventure.  Finally, my daughter followed, also serving as a safety net for her brother.  The two youngsters with their smaller masses proved to handle the small ledge with more confidence than I had!

I waited for my party of two to catch up to me.  Then we shimmed past two empty cars to the smiling cast member.  She led us to a hole that now existed in the hedge.  A hidden door was now evident with it open to the concrete areas of backstage behind the hedge that previously had appeared to be part of the landscape.  Then the smiling cast member gave me my first real direction, “Sir, please put away your cell phone, we are about to go backstage?”  I had kept my phone in my hand while I worked the ledge, acting as if I was texting my wife about our escape.  Instead, I was capturing precious memories of my children walking the ledge.  Yes, my camera was the open application.  And yes, I had intended to take pictures wherever we were lead.  Begrudgingly I turned off my phone and placed it in my pocket!  Disney had successfully kept me from preserving a hidden secret in pictures.

My traveling companion moms were still in the cage as I escaped with my family.  I guess they had spent enough time with the man bold enough to ride the Casey Jr. Circus Train unaccompanied by an adult female companion.

Warning, if you desire to keep magic preserved.  Stop reading now!

What we found backstage was an island of concrete.  The area we had dropped into was paved and clearly a service area.  From my left there was a concrete path that came from what I would assume were dressing rooms, more on that later.  What dominated my view were large metal trash bins.  I had found where the trash from Fantasyland came together.  Standing next to the bins and unconcerned with our comings and goings was a custodial cast member searching through the trash to reclaim recyclables, proving one should be kind to these hard working cast members by putting trash in trash bins and recyclables in recycling.  Because those things mishandled have to be manually separated by a person.

We walked down some stairs past the trash and were met by a third cast member.  She issued a Fastpass good for any ride, except the Matterhorn Bobsleds, for my entire party including my very lucky wife.  Yes, she benefited for our inconvenience!  The cast member then pointed us to exit to the right.  As my view moved I noticed a break table where two cast members in Fantasyland costumes were smoking and conversing.  They seemed to not notice the invasion of small groups of guests moving from the hedge.  We were clearly in their area, where they could relax and the inclusion of outsiders was not going to ruin their break before returning to the heat.  On the other side of the path was a storage area for the canal boats.  At least 16 unused boats were lined up side by side in a packed in area under a low ceiling.  The holding area appeared to be behind King Triton’s underwater castle from the boat ride.  This is the entry point where one can witness new boats being added to the attraction as additional capacity is needed.

But the real royal treat was yet to come!  As we made our turn we stepped behind a trio that was strolling from the path on the left.  We were suddenly in a party of Ariel, Belle and their royal attendant.  This grouping, I believe, noticed our presence and the fact I was accompanied by children.  For from the moment we spotted them they were regal!  The princesses walked side by side at a purposeful pace.  Their heads were both held high with their shoulders tall and straight.  Their hands were held high clasped together.  They had smiles on their face as they conversed, like two close friends sharing their tales of being princesses, not paid actresses.  They were perfect!  The attendant walked behind at a respectful pace.  With their presence and demeanor I could sense the magic was about to resume.  And I was correct, they slipped past a wooden partition ahead and we followed.  We spilled out into Fantasyland once more, directly facing the Disney princess meet and great area, being held on the walkway area opposite it’s a small world after the closing of the Princess Fantasy Faire.  My dream adventure was over!

As my wife returned to us she just giggled.  She knew I had finally been evacuated and had my adventure.  It was even on an attraction that Walt Disney would have been familiar with from his days personally overseeing Disneyland.  But in the end it was nothing like what I imagined or hoped for.  I will still continue to cross my fingers, for something to safely break!

 

Daniel Butcher is a husband and father who looks forward to spending time with
his family in Disney Parks. Daniel can be reached at dbutcher23@betweendisney.com.

 

Artist Brian Shapiro Supports Urban Film Kickstarter

Brian Shapiro has begun a new series he titles “Incognito.” The first in the series is called “Put on a Happy Face” and features Donald with a Mickey mask on.

This is a brilliant and very well executed idea. It is very smart because Brian found a way to make a Donald custom and not have to try to paint that annoying beak! (I know from experience that duck beaks are a little tricky) The other exciting thing about this custom, is it is up for auction at the Vinylmation Bid Wars Facebook page and all proceeds will go to the Kickstarter for the Urban Vinyl film that is trying to get made.

WDWNT: The Magazine – The LucasFilm Acquisition’s Impact to the Parks

LucasFilm Acquisition– The Impact to the Parks

by Nathan Bradley

Hello Humans! Wow have we hit the jackpot…It’s a match made in heaven: Disney and Star Wars…errr I mean LucasFilm (but mostly Star Wars).  Bob Iger, who is responsible for the acquisitions of Pixar, The Muppets, Marvel, and now Lucasfilm, is going to go down as one of the greatest company leaders.  Looking back at what WDI has done with Pixar in the parks and The Muppets to an extent, having Star Wars in WDI’s lineup almost becomes too much to imagine…but I’m going to try.

The Star Wars franchise right now is a bit of a mixed bag.  On one hand, fans have a sour taste in their mouth because the prequels simply didn’t meet expectations.  On the other hand is money, which is where Disney comes in.  They rightly consider Star Wars to be an “evergreen” franchise, a clever play on words meaning that the franchise never looses its luster like an evergreen tree and also that it is always green in terms of money.  The toy, video game, television, and movie (Episodes 7,8, and 9!) markets are all very successful for Star Wars; always have been, always will be.  This was clearly one of the main selling points to the Disney board of executives.  We already know that Disney believes in the franchise though.  As we all know Star Wars Weekends, Star Tours (both versions), Tatooine Traders, and The Jedi Training Academy are all favorites of Disney’s Hollywood Studios.  While we’re in the Studios, I’d like to mention that the Lucasfilm acquisition does not include the rights to Indiana Jones.  So although Disney has the theme park rights to Indy, they will likely not be adding as many new theme park experiences as they will with Star Wars because they won’t benefit from the perpetual success of the brand as a whole.

Many Star Wars fanboys have called for Disney to base an entire park around the franchise.  As theme park aficionados, we know that basing an entire park around a single franchise, even Star Wars, is ludicrous because the success of the park hangs on the popularity of a single property.  Nonetheless, tantalizing fan artwork has surfaced, such as the Magic Kingdom-style rendering pictured.  Do I wish this would become a reality?  Absolutely.  Do I think this will become a reality? Absolutely not.  The best we can hope for is a Star Wars land at DHS in my opinion.

If such a land were to come to fruition under the WDI roof, at least we know it wouldn’t be placed out west first.  Their Star Tours is located in Tomorrowland; if they want a Star Wars land, they will need to either devote an entire section of Disneyland to one franchise (not happening) or move the attraction between parks (unheard of).  Resting on that, let’s consider the realistic best-case scenario in Florida.  Will there be another Star Wars E-Ticket?  Doubt it.  I would wager on some type of interactive experience since that seems to be a growing trend at WDI.  As fans of the parks we should rejoice if we get an interactive Star Wars experience.  The prospect of a Yoda AA is exciting to say the least.  What if during the show he used the force and things flew around the room?  Turtle Talk, Laugh Floor, and recently Enchanted Tales have been universally well liked.  Also included in this best-case scenario is the conversion of The Backlot Express into the famed Mos Eisley Cantina from Episode IV.  What better way to immerse guests in the universe of the films?  I have always wondered why WDI doesn’t theme more restaurants around specific franchises.  With the general praise of Be Our Guest, I don’t see why they wouldn’t be ready to try their luck again.  Another interesting component could be meet-and-greets with the characters from the films.  Who doesn’t want a hug from Chewbacca or an Ewok?  I think an opportunity for kids to be outfitted like their favorite Star Wars character, along the lines of the Bibbidi Bobbidi Boutique, would also be a solid addition.  Finally, an improved merchandise location is in order if Star Wars land is built.  The carbon-freezing experience from the last Star Wars Weekend would make a fantastic addition.

All sounds pretty reasonable, right? Let’s look at a more adventurous possibility…

 

           Star Wars takes over Tomorrowland.  Please, don’t shoot!  I know I just said that it wouldn’t be okay in Disneyland, but that’s because they don’t have enough space to be devoting a whole land to a single franchise.  In Florida, however, we have plenty.  Let’s look at current Tomorrowland.  Stitch’s Great Escape: “What a piece of junk!” Laugh Floor is a quality attraction but it isn’t so beloved that Star Wars couldn’t easily take its place.  Space Mountain is about as iconic as any ride on the planet, but the façade wouldn’t necessarily clash with a Star Wars land.  As for the content of the ride, you really wouldn’t have to change anything except for some queue elements to make it a Star Wars attraction; that is an awful queue anyway.  Then there’s The Tomorrowland Indy Speedway.  Never has any attraction had such a low ratio of quality to square footage.  I don’t think there is a person on this Earth who would object to a Star Wars themed attraction on that plot of land.  Two main problems now arise (besides the fact of it never happening of course).  #1: The current Star Wars elements at DHS are too well beloved to be simply discarded.  They would have to be moved to the Magic Kingdom by some miraculous act.  #2: The Carousel of Progress isn’t going anywhere.  Nonetheless, I think this option is plausible at best.  “I find your lack of faith disturbing…”

Could Star Wars go in Future World?  I say no way.  No science-fiction franchise should be the basis of an attraction in Epcot.  We may have strayed from the original Epcot creed, but not enough to include a film series, albeit a great one, that isn’t rooted in reality.  The aesthetics might coincide and the possibility of replacing Mission: Space with Star Wars is pretty appealing, but the message just wouldn’t be right.

Even thinking without limits of practicality, I can’t imagine even one decent way of incorporating Star Wars characters into DAK. So that’s that.

I would say that in general, as self-proclaimed scrutinizers of WDW, we should expect Star Wars additions to DHS in the near future.  I don’t think it’s really too much to hope for.  A cohesive land would be significantly more exciting than just new experiences because the locations of Star Wars are so rich.  A Star Wars land as a unit would lend itself to being filled with all kinds of hidden Star Wars references too.  There are almost too many possibilities for us as fans to speculate about.  One thing is for sure: Disney acquiring Lucasfilm can only be good for Walt Disney World.

 

Nathan Bradley is a high school student from the Philadelphia suburbs. He enjoys physics, mechanics, storytelling, and WDW (biannual trips and an avid disney geek). He plans on becoming an Imagineer when he’s older.

 

Enchanted Tiki Room 50th Anniversary Event

I love the Enchanted Tiki Room. More for it’s style and place in Disney theme park history than for the actual entertainment value of that show in the year 2013. But none the less, I enjoy some good Tiki Room merchandise. Well, Disneyland is celebrating the 50th anniversary of this historic attraction this year and is holding a special ticketed event for guests. We recently had a look at the details and a sneak peek at just some of the merchandise that will be available. Still no Vinylmation mentioned, but we are still holding out hope. We think there is a high probability for at least a few one-of-a-kind customs for the event.

The event will be similar to the WDW annual trading event where you pay a price for a ticket and then get to select the merchandise you want to purchase through a “Random Selection Process.” At the event itself, you will be treated to a themed experience, most likely with characters, sounds and sights related to the Tiki Room. There will be trading tables for guests and games where you can trade with Cast Members. Right now, the trading with Cast Members seems to be pins only.

Enchanted Tiki Room 50th Anniversary Event

June 28-29

  • Disneyland Hotel – Exhibit Hall
  • Ticket Sales begin Tuesday, April 2, 2013, at 11 a.m. (Pacific Time) via www.ArtofDisneyParks.com
  • “JOSE” Package is $85
  • Registered event guests will have the opportunity to purchase Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room 50th Anniversary Event-themed merchandise via the Random Selection Process.

June 28, 2013 (5-9 p.m.)

  • Early Registration
  • Event Store & Random Selection Process Merchandise Pick-up
  • Trading Area

June 29, 2013 (8 a.m. – 5 p.m.)

  • Event Store & Random Selection Process Merchandise Pick-up
  • Artist Signings
  • Silent Auction
  • Trading Area and Activities
  • Commemorative Gifts

Special Experience Add-On:

  • Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room 50th Anniversary – SHAG Cocktail Reception – $185
  • In order to register for the SHAG Cocktail Reception, Guests must also be registered for Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room 50th Anniversary Event ‘JOSE’ Package.
  • June 29, 2013 (7–10 p.m.)
  • Cocktail Reception
  • Light Hors d’oeuvres
  • Meet and Greet with SHAG
  • Commemorative Photo
  • Commemorative Gifts
  • Shag is known in the Vinylmation world for creating the 40th Anniversary DLR Haunted Mansion 9″/3″ Figure that is hard to get at an LE of only 150.

A Closer Look at Silly Symphony

The Silly Symphonies were a series of animated shorts produced by Walt Disney Productions. There was a total of 75 made between 1929 and 1939. Each short was unique, in that, with few exceptions, they did not contain reoccurring characters. The Silly Syphonies are a very important part of Disney’s animation history, because they were a testing ground for techniques that Disney would later use to revolutionize animation. They also launched the career of my favorite character, Donald Duck.

So it is wonderful that the Disney Design Group is celebrating the Silly Symphonies with a blind box Vinylmation set that is due out this fall. With all those shorts, there is quite a catalog of characters to choose from. Let’s take a look at the three characters we know about and speculate who else may be in the set.

The first figure is Old King Cole from the 1931 short “Mother Goose Melodies.” In this short, Old King Cole summons various Mother Goose characters for his entertainment, including the Three Blind Mice as his “fiddlers three”, Miss Muffet, Jack and Jill (who meet Simple Simon atop the hill), Humpty Dumpty, Jack Horner (his Christmas pie also containing the four and twenty blackbirds), Bo Peep (Boy Blue brings the sheep home, one of which falls in mud to become Baa Baa Black Sheep) and the Cat, Cow and Little Dog.

The next figure is Abner the mouse from the 1936 short “The Country Cousin.” The film’s story was based on one of Aesop’s Fables, The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse and won the 1936 Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film.

The figure on the box is from “The Ugly Duckling” which was released in 1939 as the last Silly Symphony. It was also the only story made twice in the series… the first was in black and white and contains less story elements. This short took home the 1939 Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film.

What else might be in this set? It is likely the artist have given a nod to “Flowers and Trees.” That was the first cartoon produced in full-color three-strip Technicolor. It also won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film in 1932 and was Disney’s first overall cartoon in color.

Another likely candidate is “Skeleton Dance.” This was the first, and still well known Silly Symphony.

I would like to see “The Old Mill” represented. In 1937, this was Disney’s first use of the multiplane camera. A revolutionary technique that can be seen demonstrated inside One Man’s Dream at Disney’s Hollywood Studios.

The Three Little Pigs were popular Silly Symphony characters, but we have seen them in Animation 2. Will they be represented here again? What shorts or characters would you like to see?

Jared Flores Previews Upcoming Custom Bug’s Life Series

Here is a message from custom Vinylmation artist Jared Flores:

Hello all,
I am currently working a custom series I’d like to let you know about. The blind box series is to be a 13 figure series (containing 1 mystery Chaser) featuring beloved characters from Pixar’s A Bug’s Life. The series will include a range of villains and heroes from Pixar’s 2nd movie. All of the figures are painted to a higher standard than I have ever done before. The level of detail in both the painting and modeling (for some in the set) added many extra hours of work that my normal designs don’t require. I have always had a soft spot for A Bug’s Life and wanted to do it justice, so I made sure to get each character just right.

Currently the series is halfway complete,  but I consistently post updates on my page at jaredcirusbear.tumblr.com, as well as on http://www.facebook.com/groups/VECustoms/ More information about pricing as well as detailed photos will follow as soon as the series is complete in full. I’m having a lot of fun with these characters, and hope you will enjoy the final results.

Thanks- Jared Circusbear
jared_circusbear@yahoo.com

Artist Roman Rodriguez’s Custom Vinyl Giveaway!

FREE GIVE AWAY… ENTER NOW!!!!

(above image is NOT the giveaway piece)

For a chance to win a 3” Roman Rodriguez Art Custom One of a kind.

SO HOW DO I WIN???:

1. Visit the Roman Rodriguez Art Facebook Page at www.facebook.com/romanrodriguezart

2. “Like” the page by clicking the Like button at the top right.

3. Comment on this posting that is pinned at the top of the page and saying that you want to enter and win the giveaway. Leave a comment saying what character you would like to win.

4. If you share the post on your wall by clicking the share option below this picture, you will get one additional entry. Please mark the share as PUBLIC at the top of the share popup window so I could see it and count it.

5. People that have bought Vinylmation from me in the past or before March 8th will get one additional entry.

6. On Friday March 15, 2013 at 7PM Eastern Standard Time (EST) I will gather all the comments and shares and using a random number generator I will pick the winner. If I get to 300 likes I will give two Vinylmation away.

Good Luck!!!!!!