WDW News Today: The Radio Show Moves to Thursday Nights Beginning 5/29!

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WDW NEWS TODAY: THE RADIO SHOW MOVES TO PRIMETIME THURSDAYS

ORLANDO, FL – WDW News Today: The Radio Show is on the move to Thursday nights. The world’s only weekly radio show about Walt Disney World will now broadcast live from 8-10pm EST on 1520 WBZW in Orlando, FL. The show will retain its previous Saturday 7-9pm EST time slot for repeat broadcasts and original content on select weeks.

Hosted by radio veterans and life-long Disney fans Tom Corless and Nick LoCicero, the live radio talk show focuses on the latest news and current trending topics at the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Florida. WDW News Today: The Radio Show can also be streamed live at www.1520wbzw.com. WDW News Today the Radio Show debuted in August of 2013 as a 1hour broadcast on Saturday evenings and has grown into a 2-hour program by popular demand.

Listeners from across the country call in weekly to talk about Walt Disney World and take part in on-air contests for prizes from sponsor Theme Park Connection (www.ThemeParkConnection.com). Popular segments on the show include:

  • “2, 5, and 7” Seconds – Each host asks the other a question and they have 2, 5, or 7 seconds to respond.
  • Flashback to the Future – Tom Corless must give the entire history of a Walt Disney World attraction in 2 minutes, a shortened version of the popular segment from the WDW News Today Podcast.
  • WDWNT: The Price is Right – Contestants play various games using actual prices of merchandise and food found at Disney Parks.

To interact with the hosts during the show, listeners can call in at (407) 774-8255, tweet @WDWNT using #WDWNTRadio, or use the new LIVE chat that will be available at Radio.WDWNT.com. Past episodes of the show will also be available via iTunes and at Radio.WDWNT.com starting this week.

Tom Corless is the founder of WDWNT.com. He has hosted and produced the WDWNT Podcast for over 7 years. Nick LoCicero has over a decade experience in the Orlando radio market. He has hosted and produced numerous Disney related podcasts and radio segments.

About WDW News Today
WDW News Today (WDWNT) is a daily-updated resource for news and information on the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Florida and the Disneyland Resort in Anaheim, California. Through pictures, video, and articles no other fan site brings you closer to the U.S. Disney Parks.

WDWNT – The Magazine: The History of Hollywood Studios Parades

Disney’s Hollywood Studios has been home to several memorable daytime parades.  The themes of these parades include: Aladdin, Hercules, Mulan, Pixar, and more.

The first parade began in September 1991 and was titled Dinosaurs Live.  It starred the Sinclair Family from the hit ABC television sitcom Dinosaurs; this parade ran around the area that now encompasses the Sorcerer’s Hat.  After about two and a half minutes of its seven minute production, the main floats stopped in front of The Great Movie Ride for a short, live show.  This parade ended in August 1992.

In December 1992, a parade titled Aladdin’s Royal Caravan followed in the footsteps of Dinosaurs Live.  A duplicate version also ran in Disneyland beginning in 1992.  Three floats of Aladdin’s Royal Caravan showcased the very amicable Genie; this included the headlining float of the parade which depicted him as 32-feet tall.  This float was later re-used in The Magic Kingdom’s Remember the Magic parade.  Aladdin’s Royal Caravan was seen on an episode of the ABC television sitcom Full House.  This parade was the first home of the water-spitting camels that now inhabit The Magic Carpets of Aladdin in the Magic Kingdom.  Before they were permanently relocated to this attraction, the two camels were used as decorations in the Soundstage Restaurant in Hollywood Studios.  Aladdin’s Royal Caravan closed in August 1995 to make way for a new parade oriented around the first feature-length Pixar film: Toy Story.

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Toy Story – The Parade first delighted guests of Hollywood Studios in November 1995.  This parade consisted of the major Toy Story characters, including Woody and Buzz who were walking freely, and others who were built onto the float structures such as Mr. Potato Head and Hamm.  After this parade ended, the floats were later used in the small show “Operation Toy Story.”  This was a focal point of the brief “Toy Story Weekends” that allowed for Buzz and Woody to hold meet-and-greets before they were given a set location in Hollywood Studios.  Toy Story – The Parade’s first float was themed for the Green Army Men and was later refurbished to be transformed into the Giraffe float in the Animal Kingdom’s Festival of the Lion King show.  The parade was cancelled in June, 1997.

Also in June 1997, the Hercules Zero to Hero Victory Parade debuted.  Running twice a day, this parade allowed for a random family inside Hollywood Studios to be chosen for each performance, dressed in Hercules-inspired Greek attire, and be members of the “Theban Family of the Day.”  As of May 1998, the Hercules cast of characters no longer marched down Hollywood Boulevard.

The successor of Hercules Zero to Hero Victory Parade was the Mulan Parade.  The opening day of Mulan, the film, was also the first day of the accompanying parade in Hollywood Studios.  The parade utilized fifty-three performers, and its primary theme was an instrumental version of Honor to Us All.  As of March 2001, the Mulan Parade ended its tenure.

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May 2001 marked the beginning of the longest running parade in Hollywood Studios–Disney Stars and Motor Cars Parade.  This parade was brought to Walt Disney World as a part of the 100 Years of Magic Celebration and ran from around the Backlot Tour to the side of what used to be Sid Cahuenga’s One-of-a-Kind shop.  Disney characters either rode in or walked alongside an intricately themed car.  These characters frequently interacted with those in the crowd which gave the parade a unique element.  There was a Toy Story car that was designed to resemble Andy’s bed.  The parade had a Mary Poppins car that had two carousel horses.  The car themed for Jim Henson’s The Muppets was topped by an attached blimp.  Star Wars was represented in its own car that had Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia riding inside.  Mulan’s car featured a Chinese umbrella hanging over her.  Pixar’s Monsters, Inc. characters Sully and Mike Wazowski sat inside a red convertible that resembled the car in the Disney/Pixar’s short film Mike’s New Car.  The car that held Aladdin and Jasmine was the Genie transformed into the shape of an automobile.  Serving as the finale of the parade, Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck, and Goofy rode in a 1929 Cadillac.  Other movies and characters who appeared in the parade include: Hercules, Disney Villains, Lilo & Stitch, The Little Mermaid, Power Rangers, Playhouse Disney characters, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Cars, Alice in Wonderland, and Pinocchio.  Disney Stars and Motor Cars ran until March 2008.

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Block Party Bash began in Disney’s Hollywood Studios in March 2008.  This stage show/parade first debuted in Disney California Adventure and was then transported to Walt Disney World.  Block Party Bash touched upon unprecedented elements within Walt Disney World parades because of its heavy emphasis on dance music.  The floats and characters of this parade were representative of most Pixar movies released at that point: Toy Story, A Bug’s Life, Toy Story 2, Monsters, Inc., and The Incredibles.  It was replaced in January 2011 by a very similar production, Pixar Pals Countdown to Fun!

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Pixar movies that were released after what was encompassed in Block Party Bash became a part of Pixar Pals Countdown to Fun!; these movies include Ratatouille, UP, and Toy Story 3.  Many of the floats from Block Party Bash were recycled for this parade.  Pixar Pals Countdown to Fun! was the latest parade to run in Hollywood Studios, and it ended on April 6, 2013.

Until a new parade surfaces the streets of Hollywood Studios, guests will need to settle for already existing forms of entertainment within the park.  The rock band, “Mulch, Sweat n’ Shears,” still performs on a regular basis, as well as the other live stage shows: Beauty and the Beast Live on Stage, The Voyage of the Little Mermaid, Disney Junior Live on Stage, and Fantasmic.

WDWNT – The Magazine: The History of Echo Lake

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Since Disney’s Hollywood Studios’s opening on May 1, 1989, Echo Lake has gained has a deep history of extinct shows andattractions.

Monster Sound Show, sponsored by Sony, was an opening day attraction.  The film, featuring David Letterman, was played on several monitors while guests were waiting in the queue, and the show aimed to display the value of sound effects in a cinema.  In what is currently the vacant ABC Sound Studio, the Monster Sound Show asked four volunteers to be involved in the production as Foley sound artists.  Foley is a reference to Universal Studios’ sound pioneer who specialized in synchronized sounds in the 1950s: Jack Foley.  The show began by showing a short, comedic film clip starring Chevy Chase and Martin Short with studio developed audio effects.  Next, the short film played and the Foley sound artists had to use props to re-create the sound effects.  Lastly, the film clip played with the sound effects that the Foley sound artists created.  The attraction’s duration was about 15 minutes.  After the show ended, there was an area called Soundworks that taught guests how to create sound effects on a more in-depth level.  The Monster Sound Show ended its tenure in Hollywood Studios in July 1997.

After July 1997, the show was re-imagined to become the ABC Sound Studio.  It featured the cartoon lineup from “Disney’s 1 Saturday Morning” that included the shows: 101 Dalmations: The Series, Doug, Recess, and Pepper Ann.  “Disney’s 1 Saturday Morning” ran on ABC from 1997 until 2002.  The ABC Sound Studio served a similar purpose to the Monster Sound Show, but it showed a much shorter cartoon film clip that lasted 45 seconds.  This show asked for seven volunteers to create sound effects for a cartoon clip.  The ABC Sound Studio closed on February 20, 1999.

Superstar Television, sponsored by Sony, was also an opening day attraction.  This show took place in what is now The American Idol Experience.  Guests were given the opportunity to be part of the live studio audience or participate in acting out individual scenes from well-known television shows, including: General Hospital, Cheers, Bonanza, Gilligan’s Island, and I Love Lucy.  After the volunteers acted out their scenes, the finished product was played for the audience to watch.  This attraction closed in September 1998.

In March 1999, the space that was used for Superstar Television was transformed into ABC TV Theater, the home of a musical based on the hit children’s show, Doug.  The show “Doug: Live!” debuted just days before the release of Doug’s First Movie.  May 2001 marked the end of the run of Doug: Live!.

The ABC Sound Studio was transformed into the attraction Sounds Dangerous starring Drew Carey in April 1999.  This show lasted for around 12 minutes.  The audience was told that they were attending an ABC test pilot television episode of a reality show called Undercover, Live.  The theater turned fully dark for the show to begin, and binaural sound was used through provided headphones for intensified audio effects.  In 2009, Disney announced that Sounds Dangerous would operate seasonally.  In May 2012, Sounds Dangerous officially closed.  For the 2012 Star Wars Weekends, the ABC Sound Studio was inhabited by the Carbon Freeze Me experience.  This gave guests the opportunity to pay for a miniature eight-inch tall figurine of themselves frozen in carbonite, just as Captain Han Solo was in Star Wars: Episode V The Empire Strikes Back.

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Star Tours opened in Disney’s Hollywood Studios in December 1989.  The first version of this attraction was built in Disneyland just a few years earlier, and it was initially planned to be an interactive motion simulator based on the 1979 movie The Black Hole.  The lack of success of this movie, combined with the estimated $50 million cost of the imagined attraction, terminated the plan, and Star Tours was born.  Star Tours was sponsored from 1989 to 1995 by M&M’s.  The sponsorship of this attraction changed to Energizer in 1995 and was later dropped in 2006.  In the show there were animated lasers which were made separately from the film that was shown.  The lasers were animated by a small special effects company in Burbank, California: Available Light Ltd.  This is the same company that was involved in the creation of Captain EO and Honey I Shrunk The Audience.  In Star Tours’s pre-boarding video, the woman who briefs riders on safety tips also played the role of Sherry, the assistant in the original Test Track briefing room video.  The area that is now Tattooine Traders, the gift shop that guests walk through as they exit Star Tours, was originally called Endor Vendors.  It was themed to appear as if it belonged on the moon of Endor.  This was changed to Tattooine Traders around 1998-1999.  Star Tours closed in September 2010 to be renovated into Star Tours – The Adventure Continues.

Many previously running parades ran through parts of Echo Lake, including Disney Stars and Motor Cars Parade, Pixar Pals Countdown to Fun!, and Block Party Bash.  For a background of these former parades, please visit WDWNT – The Magazine: The History of Hollywood Studios Parades.

Around the Hub – Season 3 – Episode 17 – Season Finale

The Season Finale! Join Ron D’Anna, Ben Harris, Justin Heyman, and David Smith as they take a hilarious look at the future of the Disney company. Around the Hub jumps three years into the future. We send Season 3 out with a bang!

Around the Hub is a game show based on ESPN’s Around the Horn. Four contestants from around the WDWNT Network of Podcasts match wits in a game of competitive banter. Points are awarded for good arguments and points may be deducted if a podcaster loses their train of thought or says something the host does not agree with. There are 3 rounds of play, starting off with the Rope Drop (which covers the biggest news stories of the week from the entire Walt Disney Company) and ending with the Face-Off between the last two podcasters standing. At the end of each round the podcaster with the lowest point total is eliminated. The winner of each episode gets a thirty second Meet ‘N’ Greet to discuss anything from the World of Disney that is on their minds.

Around the Hub – Season 3 – Episode 16

The Stars return to Around the Hub and we take on the hottest stories of the week – Frozen coming to Maelstrom, as well as Food & Wine! Join our cast of characters: Ron D’Anna, Jason Diffendal, Justin Heyman, and Ben Harris as we debate the most controversial topics in the Disney Community!

Around the Hub is a game show based on ESPN’s Around the Horn. Four contestants from around the WDWNT Network of Podcasts match wits in a game of competitive banter. Points are awarded for good arguments and points may be deducted if a podcaster loses their train of thought or says something the host does not agree with. There are 3 rounds of play, starting off with the Rope Drop (which covers the biggest news stories of the week from the entire Walt Disney Company) and ending with the Face-Off between the last two podcasters standing. At the end of each round the podcaster with the lowest point total is eliminated. The winner of each episode gets a thirty second Meet ‘N’ Greet to discuss anything from the World of Disney that is on their minds.

Around the Hub – Season 3 – Episode 15

FINALLY the Hub returns to normal. Or does it!? This week’s episode of Around the Hub features FOUR FANS vying to be the first fan to win a meet ‘n’ greet here on Around the Hub. Lucas Heffner, Jeff Peterson, Janelle Cordner, and Mark Houston all have had their chance on the Hub but now it’s time to proclaim a champion of the fans! Topics discussed include: Guardians of the Galaxy, San Diego Comic Con, Disney XD’s TV Line up, and so much more. PLUS: The Worst Meet and Greet EVER!?

Around the Hub is a game show based on ESPN’s Around the Horn. Four contestants from around the WDWNT Network of Podcasts match wits in a game of competitive banter. Points are awarded for good arguments and points may be deducted if a podcaster loses their train of thought or says something the host does not agree with. There are 3 rounds of play, starting off with the Rope Drop (which covers the biggest news stories of the week from the entire Walt Disney Company) and ending with the Face-Off between the last two podcasters standing. At the end of each round the podcaster with the lowest point total is eliminated. The winner of each episode gets a thirty second Meet ‘N’ Greet to discuss anything from the World of Disney that is on their minds.

Around the Hub – Season 3 – Episode 14 – Beyond the Hub

We continue celebrating WDWNT’s “Seven, yeah, Seven” years with a Beyond the Hub profile on John Corigliano. John hosts “Your Ear to the World” on WDWNTunes and has been a huge part of WDWNT’s history. Join John and host Patrick Hackett as they discuss the space program, “Your Ear to the World”, John’s reluctance to be on Around The Hub, and of course, the seven years of WDWNT as they go BEYOND THE HUB.

Around the Hub is a game show based on ESPN’s Around the Horn. Four contestants from around the WDWNT Network of Podcasts match wits in a game of competitive banter. Points are awarded for good arguments and points may be deducted if a podcaster loses their train of thought or says something the host does not agree with. There are 3 rounds of play, starting off with the Rope Drop (which covers the biggest news stories of the week from the entire Walt Disney Company) and ending with the Face-Off between the last two podcasters standing. At the end of each round the podcaster with the lowest point total is eliminated. The winner of each episode gets a thirty second Meet ‘N’ Greet to discuss anything from the World of Disney that is on their minds.

Around the Hub – Season 3 – Episode 13 – Beyond the Hub

Unlucky 13 is reserved for the owner and founder of WDWNT Tom Corless to sit down with Patrick Hackett on Beyond the Hub. The two spend their time talking about Tom’s competitiveness, his relationship with his fiancee and the integral part Hub played in it, as well as celebrating and recalling the first seven years of WDWNT.

Around the Hub is a game show based on ESPN’s Around the Horn. Four contestants from around the WDWNT Network of Podcasts match wits in a game of competitive banter. Points are awarded for good arguments and points may be deducted if a podcaster loses their train of thought or says something the host does not agree with. There are 3 rounds of play, starting off with the Rope Drop (which covers the biggest news stories of the week from the entire Walt Disney Company) and ending with the Face-Off between the last two podcasters standing. At the end of each round the podcaster with the lowest point total is eliminated. The winner of each episode gets a thirty second Meet ‘N’ Greet to discuss anything from the World of Disney that is on their minds.

Around the Hub – Season 3 – Episode 12

Spoiler alert for Maleficent! We go back “Beyond the Hub”! This time our host Patrick Hackett sits down with frequent Hub panelist Ben Harris. The two discuss all things Disney but take a special time-out to break down “How to Train Your Dragon”. Also featured are John Carter, The Fantasyland Dragon, Figment’s comic, and is Nemo a jerk!? It’s Disney, it’s Dreamworks, it’s fun for the whole family. Get to know a Hub panelist as we once again travel “Beyond the Hub”!

Around the Hub is a game show based on ESPN’s Around the Horn. Four contestants from around the WDWNT Network of Podcasts match wits in a game of competitive banter. Points are awarded for good arguments and points may be deducted if a podcaster loses their train of thought or says something the host does not agree with. There are 3 rounds of play, starting off with the Rope Drop (which covers the biggest news stories of the week from the entire Walt Disney Company) and ending with the Face-Off between the last two podcasters standing. At the end of each round the podcaster with the lowest point total is eliminated. The winner of each episode gets a thirty second Meet ‘N’ Greet to discuss anything from the World of Disney that is on their minds.

Around the Hub – Season 3 – Episode 11

Fan Frenzy Part 2! Two fans join two Hub veterans trying to avoid the Pit of Despair! Can Janelle Cordner and Mark Huston score upsets or will the podcast veteran Jason Diffendal and former WDWNT: The Magazine Editor-in-Chief David Smith survive? We discuss Starbucks in the Disney Parks as well as Disney Springs. We mix that in with some video game and dining discussions to give you a full plate full of Around the Hub action!

Around the Hub is a game show based on ESPN’s Around the Horn. Four contestants from around the WDWNT Network of Podcasts match wits in a game of competitive banter. Points are awarded for good arguments and points may be deducted if a podcaster loses their train of thought or says something the host does not agree with. There are 3 rounds of play, starting off with the Rope Drop (which covers the biggest news stories of the week from the entire Walt Disney Company) and ending with the Face-Off between the last two podcasters standing. At the end of each round the podcaster with the lowest point total is eliminated. The winner of each episode gets a thirty second Meet ‘N’ Greet to discuss anything from the World of Disney that is on their minds.