Stories by @tracywerkheiser
38 stories

Fictional Characters voicing Insects
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My Movie 3
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Five Nights At Freddy's Movie (crossover)
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Five Nights At Freddy's Movie (crossover)
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Monica and Little Lulu
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snowstorm904's Madeline and the Great Wolf Lodge
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Otis And Friends
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Lucy And Friends
Only Kids, Girls only

Schroeder And Friends
Only Kids, Boys only, No Girls Allowed!

snowstorm904's A Bug's Life (1998)
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Villains the movie
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snowstorm904's Universal Studios Theme Park the series
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snowstorm904's Disneyland the series
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A Bug's Life (Crossover)
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SuperMarioLogan (If Fictional Characters Play Them)
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Gigantosaurus (If Fictional Characters Play Them)
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Fictional Characters voicing North American Animals
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Zoo Animals
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Dinotopia
Frank Scott, a wealthy American, crashes into the Caribbean. His two teenage sons, Karl and David, survive, only to find themselves castaways on Dinotopia. They constantly are at odds, even as they struggle to adjust to life in their strange new world where talking dinosaurs live side by side in an uneasy alliance with humans.

A Bug's Life
A Bug's Life (stylized in all lowercase) is a 1998 American animated comedy film produced by Pixar Animation Studios for Walt Disney Pictures. It is Pixar's second feature-length film, following Toy Story (1995). The film was directed by John Lasseter, co-directed by Andrew Stanton, and produced by Darla K. Anderson and Kevin Reher, from a screenplay written by Stanton, Donald McEnery, and Bob Shaw, and a story conceived by Lasseter, Stanton, and Joe Ranft. It stars the voices of Dave Foley, Kevin Spacey, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, and Hayden Panettiere. In the film, a misfit ant named Flik looks for "tough warriors" to save his ant colony from a protection racket run by a gang of grasshoppers. However, the "warriors" he brings back are a troupe of Circus Bugs. The film's plot was initially inspired by Aesop's fable The Ant and the Grasshopper.[5][6]