I really don't have the heart to eat Rudolph. After all, how terrible his life can be? Being bullied and laughed at when he was young and when he thought he got acceptance and family, his so called family eat him as Christmas dinner?
Life is indeed cruel. Excuse me while I grab some tissue. On the other hand, this story will make a great horror movie.
Well, I would be sad, just like when I watch the show every year, but I'd say Frosty. After all, anyone who has ever watched it knows that Frosty dies anyway and magically comes back every year. I prefer to live in my own reality where Rudolph is immortal, thus he will never, ever die and Frosty always returns to delight all of the little children.
And okay, maybe a few of us big ones, too!
What a great question! I think that Rudolph has to be the one to go. S job can easily be replaced with technology anyway.
If Santa can make PS3s and remote controlled airplanes, replacing him shouldn't be too difficult.
Well, Rudolph is a very vital part of Christmas day, since he helps light the way when he and the other reindeer pull Santa’s sleigh across the world. Therefore, I would not root for eliminating him from the picture. However, Frosty the Snowman sort of “dies†each year anyways, as he melts away in the midst of the first rays of late-winter sunlight.
Although, he comes to life again and again in the spirit of the song, when the winter season ends, Frosty and all his snowman pals are temporarily dead and unable to “live†during the warm weather that follows. Rudolph on the other hand is able to continue to exist in a cozy stable, while munching on apples and carrots. Since this is their natural way of existence, I would not change much and just let nature take its course.
Frosty “goes†with the onset of spring and Rudolph will continue to take Santa around the world, even on Christmas Eves when no snow has fallen.
Frosty the Snowman is a 1969 animated Christmas television special based on the song "Frosty the Snowman". The program, which first aired on December 7, 1969 on CBS (where it still airs to this day), was produced for television by Rankin/Bass Productions and featured the voices of comedians Jimmy Durante as the film's narrator (Durante's final performance in a film) and Jackie Vernon as the titular character Frosty. Billy De Wolfe was also featured as the voice of the villainous Professor Hinkle.
Arthur Rankin, Jr. and Jules Bass wanted to give the show and its characters the look of a Christmas card, so Paul Coker, Jr., a greeting card and Mad magazine artist, was hired to do the character and background drawings. The animation was produced by Mushi Production in Japan, with then-Mushi staffer Osamu Dezaki among the animation staff. Rankin/Bass veteran writer Romeo Muller adapted and expanded the story for television as he had done with Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.
TV Guide ranked the special number 4 on its 10 Best Family Holiday Specials list. On Christmas Eve, the schoolteacher hires an inept magician named Professor Hinkle to perform magic for the class Christmas party and keep her students' attention.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.