
Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer on DVD ► amzn.to ► XmasFLIX.com ► Like! ► http Xmas MP3 ► XmasTRAX.com ► Podcast ► http The last cartoon ever produced by Max Fleischer who produced the Popeye the Sailor man, Betty Boop and Koko the Clown cartoons from the 1910's to the 1940's. MORE: amzn.to You know Dasher, Dancer, etc., as the song goes and for the past several decades, you've known Rudolph as well. He's become so familiar a part of the Christmas scene that, like his contemporaries, the gremlins, a lot of people aren't even aware that he only goes back to the early-to-middle 20th century. Rudolph began as an attempt to promote a chain of department stores. It was in 1939 that Montgomery Ward, which had been giving away coloring books every Christmas for years, decided to produce its promotional give-away in-house. Robert L. May, who worked there as an advertising copywriter, was commissioned to write a story for young readers, and the result was Rudolph. May drew on some of his own childhood experiences as a puny kid that other kids sometimes picked on, to craft a story of a picked-on kid who made good, prospering as a result of the very attribute the others made fun of. Though the story, written in the form of rhyming couplets, passed its first test with flying colors, Montgomery Ward's publicity department initially chose not to follow the judgment of May's 4-year-old daughter, to whom he'd read the story aloud as he wrote it. Red noses smacked of drunkenness <b>...</b>
Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer
Christmas
cartoons
Rudolph
The
Red
Nosed
Reindeer
movies
cartoon
music
holiday
Max
Fleischer
johnny
marks
montgomery
ward
robert
may
children's
songs
Popeye
Sailor
man
Betty
Boop
and
Koko
Clown
Petteri
Punakuono
animated
animation
rudolf
raindear
rudoplh
rednosed
nose
santa
claus
sleigh
children
song
original
story
1944
1948
classic
1940s
film
films
short
color
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Xmas
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