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| - Funny Farm was the 17th episode in Dreamworld and the fifth episode of World Three of Dreamworld. This episode was released on 28 April 2014. It was the Dreamworld equivalent to the Reality episode Chocolate Barn.
- Funny Farm was, as the name implies, planned to be a farm playground. However, the playground would have had a black and white color scheme, paying a tribute to the classic Mickey Mouse cartoons. The playground owner was debated within the development team to be either "Farmer Goofy" or "Farmer Donald"; in particular, "Farmer Donald" was already featured in some older Disney cartoons. However, Jesse Schell replied to a comment on his reveal of the beta map on Twitter saying that the playground would have also included Oswald, Clarabelle and Black and White Mickey, which were ideas from Bruce Woodside.
- Andy Farmer (Chase) is a New York City sports writer who moves with his wife, Elizabeth (Smith) to the seemingly charming town of Redbud, Vermont, so he can write a novel. They do not get along well with the residents, and other quirks arise such as being given funeral bills for a long-dead man buried on their land long before they acquired the house. Marital troubles soon arise from the quirkiness of Redbud as well as the fact that Elizabeth was critical of Andy's manuscript, while secretly getting her ideas for children's books published. They soon decide to divorce and sell their home, enticing the town's residents with a $15,000 donation to Redbud, as well as a $50 cash bonus to whoever made a friendly impression toward their prospective home buyers. To that end, the citizens remake Re
- Opened in 1969 by Vix Noelopan (his Ojibwe name Aaah-ah Yawa Em Ekat Ot Gnimoc Er'yeht translates as He Who Runs With Scissors) the Funny Farm was the first city farm complex run entirely by clowns and retired comedians. Now part of an extensive network of such facilities, the first farm was opened on the site of the Armitage Shanks Sanitorium in Winnipeg, Manitoba, with sponsorship from His Royal Highness Screaming Lord Sutch and Iowa’s own Chester Conklin.
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