Creative Artist Reimagines Disney Tales Through Social Media Platforms

The result is not just a humorous take on these characters but also a subtle critique of the digital age.

A 28-year-old artist refused to keep Disney characters in storybooks, and instead shoved them straight into the feed. The result is a wild, colorful mashup where classic fairy-tale vibes collide with the messy reality of modern platforms.

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Justin Hall’s comics take familiar Disney moments and drop them into the exact places people scroll, like Etsy for fan-made merch, YouTube for dramatic “official trailer” reenactments, and Twitter for the kind of hot takes that never sleep. Characters don’t just post, they react, compare, and spiral based on likes, comments, and algorithm-driven attention. It’s charming, funny, and somehow complicated all at once.

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By the time Cinderella hits Pinterest and Reddit starts dissecting every frame, you realize this is less about Disney and more about how social media rewires what we think we’re seeing.

1. Etsy.

Artist’s social media themed Disney character comics referencing YouTube and BuzzfeedJustin Hall
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2. YouTube.

2. YouTube.Justin Hall
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3. Buzzfeed.

3. Buzzfeed.Justin Hall

4. Pinterest.

4. Pinterest.Justin Hall

5. Google.

Disney characters portrayed as social posts, logos include Buzzfeed, Pinterest, Twitter, AmazonJustin Hall

6. Twitter.

6. Twitter.Justin Hall

7. Amazon.

Comic panel featuring Disney characters with Google, Twitter, Facebook, Bing brandingJustin Hall

8. Facebook.

8. Facebook.Justin Hall

This reminds us of the AITA fight over refusing to lend money to a struggling friend, despite their unpaid-loan history.

9. Bing.

Disney character artwork shown across social platforms, Amazon, Facebook, Reddit, Tumblr logosJustin Hall

10. Reddit.

10. Reddit.Justin Hall

11. Tumblr.

11. Tumblr.Justin Hall

12. 4chan.

Social media mashup comic with Disney characters, Reddit and Tumblr leading to Vine and DeviantArtJustin Hall

13. Vine.

Disney comics blending internet culture, Tumblr and 4chan with DeviantArt and Imgur iconsJustin Hall

14. Deviantart.

14. Deviantart.Justin Hall

15. Imgur.

Disney characters interacting in tech world, comics highlight social media perceptions and communicationJustin Hall

That’s when the Etsy listings and YouTube “behind-the-scenes” clips start feeling like more than fanfare, they feel like a whole new storyline for the characters everyone thought they knew.

Then Buzzfeed-style headlines and Google-style “people also searched” prompts turn each character moment into something that’s supposed to be shareable, not just meaningful.

Pinterest boards and Facebook posts start stacking up, and suddenly the characters are judged by what gets saved, not what gets understood.

By the time Twitter threads, Reddit debates, and even 4chan-style chaos get involved, the Disney charm is still there, but the attention game is the real villain.

As these Disney characters step into the world of social media, they show us how our use of technology is changing. Justin Hall's comics make us think about how social media affects how we perceive things and interact with others.

These comics combine the old charm of Disney with the modern world of digital communication, offering both entertainment and something to ponder. Disney and digital culture fans will find much to enjoy in Justin Research.

Now those Disney characters are wondering if the internet is telling the truth or just the loudest version of it.

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