| Song: Call Me, Beep Me! |
| Artist: Christina Milian |
| Album: Kim Possible Soundtrack |
| Played: 78,263 times. |
Call Me, Beep Me - Kim Possible
I accidentally had my earbuds unplugged, and after the first beep my brother sat up and said “KIM POSSIBLE!”

| Song: Call Me, Beep Me! |
| Artist: Christina Milian |
| Album: Kim Possible Soundtrack |
| Played: 78,263 times. |
Call Me, Beep Me - Kim Possible
I accidentally had my earbuds unplugged, and after the first beep my brother sat up and said “KIM POSSIBLE!”
What makes mothers all that they are?
Might as well ask, “What makes a star?”
“from failing, you learn. from success, not so much.”
I am going to say this again: YOU NEED TO WATCH MEET THE ROBINSONS IT IS THE MOST UNFAIRLY NEGLECTED MOVIE DISNEY EVER MADE
I love this movie so much… ;-;
//Why can’t teachers and parents be like this?
Like, when you fuck something up, instead of being like:
I’M SO ASHAMED OF YOU! GO SLEEP IN THE YARD!
Could they instead be like:
WOW! YOU FAILED! LOOK AT HOW MUCH BETTER YOU’RE GOING TO BE IN THE FUTURE!
Because, that’s how I’m gonna be as a parent.This is legit my favorite Disney movie

Submitted by jacquisaysno
Wow, it looks like she popped right out of the film *A*
Just compare the two. Holy. Crap.
J. Scott Campbell has once again OUT DONE himself with the coolest Disney Art I have seen!
Amazing Disney Lyrics : I’m Still Here -
Treasure Planet[more]
They can’t break me …It’s really great and important that Treasure Planet dealt with the traditional absent Disney parent syndrome as a father who walked out, because at the time there really weren’t any movies for this age group that reflected that as a thing it was okay to be angry at
I mean when you think about it in so many movies for adults and kids you see the Absent Parent as a thing the kid just gets over, accepts, and moves on with like it’s totally okay, like if I had a fucking dollar for every kid in every movie that deals with their mother or father walking out like the termination of a fucking business contract and, like, at the age of six or seven just matures into the role to replace them and they have their adorable little basically-an-adult-in-a-child’s-body rapport with their single parent, I would be richer than fucking Bill Gates, and I can believe there are kids that are totally okay with their mom or dad or whatever walking out, but to be honest i’m pretty sure there are a whole lot more that are angry and upset and betrayed and blame themselves, and Treasure Planet dealt with all that raw emotion in Jim’s character and I think they did it really well. I can’t know for sure because I didn’t grow up in a home with a parent that walked out, but to me it always felt real and authentic. And that’s important.
But what we need even more than that is a female character who deals with the same confused and angry emotions that Jim has because good fuck if I don’t ever see that kind of female character anywhere ever. I never see a female character just walking around confused and angry and good and rebellious, and not even sorry for it - not at any point do you see Jim sorry for his rebellious nature after the very beginning when the cops bring him home and he has to face his mother. That’s the only part. Jim never apologized for his rebellious behaviour. He was sorry that it embarassed his mother, but he didn’t want to be sorry for it and he didn’t want anyone to make him feel sorry for it. He just wanted people to stop yelling at him for acting out and start asking why he was acting out, and he didn’t even know, but just people asking would show they would care so much more than them criticizing him.
And we need a lot more female characters like that in our media, both children’s, young adult, and adult.
haha
All the companies disney has bought. Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars
Jim Hawkins could get it all fucking day
Jim, and Herc, and Eric, come here, I need help with something. Yes, in my bedroom, just come. No, that’s not lube, just get on the bed.
I’m bad, and that’s good. I will never be good, and that’s not bad. There’s no one I’d rather be than me.