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Dr. Seuss Books Like 'Horton Hears a Who!' Branded Racist and Problematic in New Study "Racism spans across the entire Seuss collection," scholars write in a new study ...
A beloved children's book first published 50 years ago has been made into a computer-animated feature film with the comic actors Jim Carrey and Steve Carell as the voices of the main characters ...
“Dr. Seuss’ Horton Hears a Who!” is OK, but certainly nothing to shout about. (You might want to strike the exclamation mark in the title.) As long as it sticks to Seuss — which, given the ...
But this year's Horton Hears a Who! brings the scale back down -- a bit -- as it spins a CGI- animated tale of an elephant named Horton (voiced by Jim Carrey) who finds a speck of dusk on a flower ...
Horton, the star of the Dr. Seuss book and subsequent film “Horton Hears a Who!,” will lead a series of educational shipboard activities designed to help build character.
Kareem Abdul-Jabaar blogs that Fox’s “Horton Hears a Who,” one of the year’s most successful films, is divisive. He writes on Huffington Post, “To make the story long enough for a full ...
The story is simplicity itself: Big-eared elephant Horton (voiced by Jim Carrey) hears voices coming from a tiny dust speck that contains the city of Whoville.
Are we but specks on a slightly larger, spinning speck called Earth? There's a loopy, cosmic philosophy at the heart of Dr. Seuss' book "Horton Hears a Who!" -- a late-night, highly speculative ...
A different way of looking at all things Alabama athletics through the eyes of Anthony Sisco.
As long as it sticks to Seuss — which, given the brevity of the book, amounts to about a third of the 88-minute running time — “Horton” makes for charming, kid-friendly entertainment.