BURBANK, CA — Disney Company Inc. has officially announced plans to proceed with the long-rumored thawing of its founder, Walt Disney, from cryogenic suspension. The move, according to the press release, comes after “encouraging signs that the American sociopolitical climate has finally aligned with Mr. Disney’s… original vision.”
The press statement, issued from a suspiciously vintage typewriter and accompanied by a black-and-white propaganda reel, cites “the successful resurgence of authoritarian aesthetics, uniformed youth rallies, oddly well-funded book burnings, and the delightful return of fascism” as key indicators that America is ready for Walt’s grand return.
“It’s not every day that you see this level of synergy between a 1930s ideological fever dream and 2025 reality,” said Disney CEO Bob Iger’s AI avatar, now the only version of him allowed to speak in public. “Our data shows that the country is primed for a strong, visionary leader with an appreciation for ‘traditional values,’ rigid control over messaging, and a fondness for goose-stepping parades. We just think Walt’s going to love it here.”
“Walt’s America: The Frozen Führer” – Coming this Fall to Disney+
The press conference, held outside the newly renamed Magic Führer Kingdom, featured a performance of “It’s a Small World” with slightly more arm salutes than usual and a commemorative fireworks show choreographed to Wagner.
Critics of the move—including the Anti-Defamation League, every historian with a soul, and the entire cast of The View—have expressed concern that thawing a man whose idea of cultural harmony included segregated bathrooms and caricature-heavy cartoons might not be the best idea in today’s fragile climate.
“We really thought this whole ‘Walt frozen under Disneyland’ thing was a myth,” said Dr. Miriam Kline, professor of ethics at Stanford. “But apparently not only is it true, they’ve been feeding him daily updates through a speaker in his chamber. And he loved January 6th.”
Inside sources say the revival process will involve state-of-the-art warming chambers, a steady IV drip of Mid-century bourbon, and a private screening of The Sound of Music where the Nazis win.
When asked if they were worried about public backlash, Disney executives simply pointed to a chart showing that 68% of the American public can’t name the Vice President, but 92% know all the lyrics to “Let It Go.”
“Besides,” added one unnamed executive while polishing a golden swastika-shaped Mouseketeer pin, “if we’ve learned anything, it’s that you can repackage literally anything as long as you slap a Disney+ logo on it.”


