“Finding Nemo” centers on an adorable clownfish who is separated from his father before being reunited to live out his days, swimming wild and free in his ocean home. The success of the 2003 film ...
The success of the 2003 Disney-Pixar movie Finding Nemo, which featured an orange clownfish father looking for his kidnapped son, brought about a tragic irony. Instead of grasping the film's true ...
Claire Parkinson does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond ...
Representations of wildlife in television and films have long been hypothesized to shape human-wildlife interactions. A recent example is Pixar’s film Finding Dory, which featured a blue tang fish ...
There’s a blue fish with a yellow tale that’s starring in a popular Disney Pixar sequel coming to theatres June 17. If you ask a child, they’ll probably tell you the fish’s name is Dory. Technically ...
One of Pixar's most beloved characters will hit the big screen later this month with her own eponymous sequel to 2003's Finding Nemo. Dory, the chatty sidekick to Nemo's father voiced by talk show ...
Australian researchers are warning people not to take the "wrong message" from the sequel to Finding Nemo. Decline populations of tropical fish featured in the film linked to popularity as pets The ...
If a piece of information is repeated often enough, it will eventually be believed, even if there is no evidence for it. One example of this features the friendly clownfish Nemo and his side-kick Dory ...
Michael Tlusty is also the Director of Ocean Sustainability Science at the New England Aquarium. He has not received funding from any organization or company that would benefit from this research.