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Can someone please help me plan my travel route in USA from Orlando for 10 days?

I will be going to Seaworld Orlando on work & travel program in July 2008 and I will have time to travel in August 2008 for 10 days departing from Orlando. Can someone help me or give me advice on how to plan the travel route in USA for 10 days in the lowest budget possible as I am just a student. Thanks a lot :)
I would like to know which places I should go in just 10 days around USA and how (by road or plane) and how much the cost will be :) I m on a very tight budget here. Thanks a lot!

2 comments - What do you think?  Posted by - March 27, 2011 at 9:04 pm

Categories: SeaWorld   Tags: , , , , , , , ,

CINDERELLA SOMEONE SAVE ME Live Orlando House of Blues HOB August 8th 2010

2 comments - What do you think?  Posted by - December 22, 2010 at 7:53 pm

Categories: House Of Blues   Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Can someone recommend an excellent hotel in Orlando Florida near Seaworld?

This will be my daughters first trip to Seaworld she’s 4 & I really want to make it special. I would like it to be a small suite with a frig & I would like the price to be $100.00 to $120.00 a night. Any ideas?

4 comments - What do you think?  Posted by - September 27, 2010 at 9:09 pm

Categories: SeaWorld   Tags: , , , , , , ,

Does someone know the name of the song we can hear at Typhoon Lagoon in Disney World Orlando, by Miley Cyrus?

I remember it says ‘Mr. Blue bird…”

3 comments - What do you think?  Posted by - June 3, 2010 at 8:52 pm

Categories: Typhoon Lagoon   Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Can someone tell how is to work @ Disney Vacation Club?

3 comments - What do you think?  Posted by - May 20, 2010 at 10:53 pm

Categories: Disney Vacation Club   Tags: , , , , ,

Can someone help me with my Spanish homework?

Necesito alguien traducir este reseña de Madagascar 2. Hablo de una traducción literal de un hablante nativo. ¡Gracias!

“Madagascar,” the 2005 animated film that brought us pampered zoo critters Alex the lion, Marty the zebra, Melman the paranoid hypochondriac giraffe and Gloria the hippo (and the penguins, don’t forget those crafty penguins) pulled in about half a billion dollars at the box office. The sequel, “Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa,” is a better film, though — less manic, more easygoing.

The first movie referenced so many other movies so indiscriminately, from “Chariots of Fire” to “Planet of the Apes” to “American Beauty,” watching it was like being caught on a bus with a bunch of screenwriters on the way to a wisenheimer convention. The new one lays off that stuff, comparatively, and while there are booger jokes and such, you’ll likely avoid that “Over the Hedge” headache so many of these critter outings instill.

Marooned on Madagascar, Alex (voiced by Ben Stiller), Marty ( Chris Rock), Melman ( David Schwimmer) and Gloria ( Jada Pinkett Smith) yearn for home in the Central Park Zoo, where starry-eyed, egocentric Alex’s antics have made him “king of New York.” The penguins rig up an old, busted plane, slingshot fashion, and zing the quartet (plus stowaways) not to Manhattan, but to Africa, somewhere near Mt. Kilimanjaro.

From there, “Escape 2 Africa” begins a serious poaching session on “Lion King” territory. Alex finds his parents — the late Bernie Mac provides the voice of daddy Zuba, big mane on campus — and with obvious allusions to Scar in “The Lion King,” Alec Baldwin lends his sterling basso distrusto voice to jealous Makunga, a petty and venal lion indeed, who exploits naive, showbizzy Alex for his own political gain.

When I say “Escape 2 Africa” goes easy on the pop culture jokes, I should clarify: One of the smarter things in the script is how Alex, who digs his Bob Fosse and Jerome Robbins dance moves, becomes the film’s primary pop-cult gag. (When he suits up for ceremonial battle, a fight he doesn’t realize will involve actual fighting, his war paint includes a dandy pair of tragic/comic masks.) This allows the rest of the movie to spread out and ease up in other ways, exploring other avenues.

And, naturally, most of the elements that made “Madagascar” all those millions are back, including lemur leader King Julien (Sacha Baron Cohen with a wittily un-peggable dialect), and the song — the song — “I Like to Move It.”

Screenwriter-directors Eric Darnell and Tom McGrath were joined this time by co-writer Etan Cohen. The visual style is typical, ultra-crisp computer animation, bright, sharp, somewhat clinical.

I took my kid and three of his pals to an Imax screening, and while I could’ve done without the film’s martial arts slapstick involving the cranky old outer-borough lady on safari, in a role expanded from her Grand Central Station cameo in the first picture, well, if there’s one thing parenthood teaches anybody in this country, it’s that boys rarely fail to laugh at someone gettin’ it in the ‘nads from a senior citizen.

Reviews from our second-grade posse: “Really liked it.” “Four million stars.” “Five million stars.”

1 comment - What do you think?  Posted by - at 9:38 pm

Categories: Lion Country Safari   Tags: , , ,

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