My Little Pony Pony Portal Time! Lets Play / PlayThrough / - TopicsExpress



          

My Little Pony Pony Portal Time! Lets Play / PlayThrough / WalkThrough Part / MLP Pony Portal Time Lets Play / PlayThrough / WalkThrough Part Apply To Join The Freedom Network For Free Under A No-Lock In Revenue Share Contract ➜ ift.tt/NsO4VI Join Any.TV For Free And Get The Epic Dashboard ➜ ift.tt/MsblGY Custom Made TGNDireGaming Merchandise And Apparel Can Be Purchased Via ➜ ift.tt/1s6cq90 Please Feel Free To Donate To TGNDireGaming ➜ ift.tt/1kgqRQf Please Comment, Like, Favorite, And Subscribe Follow / Like TGNDireGaming On : TGNDireGamingHD YouTube Channel ➜ ift.tt/1s6cohy TGNDireGaming YouTube Channel ➜ ift.tt/1ood23A Twitter ➜ ift.tt/NsO2Nn FaceBook ➜ ift.tt/W2EhK7 Google+ ➜ ift.tt/1s6cohA Blogger ➜ ift.tt/1ood23E Tumblr ➜ ift.tt/NsO2Nz Pinterest ➜ ift.tt/1s6cq97 TGNDireGamings Epic Website ➜ ift.tt/1lYaurb My Little Pony Description : My Little Pony is an entertainment franchise developed by Hasbro which is marketed primarily to girls. It started as a line of plastic pony toys which have been produced since 1983. The ponies feature colorful bodies, manes and a unique symbol on one or both sides of their flanks. Following the original My Pretty Pony toy, introduced in 1981, My Little Pony was launched in 1983 and the line became popular during the 1980s. The original toy line ran from 1983 to 1995 (1992 in the US), and inspired animated specials, an animated feature length film, and four animated television series. Media adaptations : Along with other Hasbro products, My Little Pony was adapted into various media. Generation One : Mid-80s animated features : Main articles: Rescue at Midnight Castle, Escape from Catrina, My Little Pony: The Movie, and My Little Pony (TV series) As a part of Hasbros media strategy, My Little Pony, along with their other properties like Transformers and G.I. Joe, was adapted into following animated features: • My Little Pony (later retitled Rescue at Midnight Castle), the first 22-minute syndicated prime-time special premiered in 1984 • My Little Pony: Escape from Catrina, the second 22-minute syndicated special premiered in 1985. • My Little Pony: The Movie, the first and only theatrical feature film released in 1986. Directed by Michael Joens, it featured the voices of Rhea Perlman, Madeline Kahn, Tony Randall and Danny DeVito. It had mediocre box-office earnings, grossing almost $6 million in the United States[3] and received mostly negative reviews from critics. • And My Little Pony n Friends, a half-hour syndicated television series that featured various characters from Hasbros properties by having My Little Pony in its first segment and either Glo Friends, Potato Head Kids or MoonDreamers in the second segment. The My Little Pony segment promoted many of the toys available in 1986--1987, featuring a regular cast of Earth, Pegasus and Unicorn ponies with guest appearances by new lines, such as the Flutter and Princess Ponies. The TV specials, the film and the TV series were all set in the same milieu: Dream Valley, a land inhabited by witches, goblins and other magical creatures with whom the ponies, their human friend Megan, and their dragon friend Spike interacted. In 2004, the first season of the original My Little Pony television series was released on DVD. The four-DVD collection features the two prime-time television specials and 50 episodes from the original series. Some songs from the original airing of the two specials have been cut, leaving the specials as they appeared when syndicated as part of the cartoon series. The ten-episode miniseries The End of Flutter Valley was released on DVD in 2005. 2006 brought the release of episodes from the second season, with two DVD releases: Flight to Cloud Castle and Other Stories and Quest of the Princess Ponies and Other Stories, as well as a DVD entitled Two Great Pony Tales with The Magic Coins and The Glass Princess available in eight episodes. My Little Pony Tales (1992) : My Little Pony Tales, premiered on July 3, 1992 on Disney Channel, was set in a different environment. This series anthropomorphised the ponies further than the original series; the ponies lived in a town, went to school, ran businesses, went on vacation and exchanged currency for goods.
Posted on: Sat, 09 Aug 2014 22:06:47 +0000

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