Perhaps you personally don't like it, but that doesn't change the fact that Disney's style is what originally inspired the earliest Japanese animated shows and features. Disney's quality, multi-generational appeal, and adherence to telling stories that may not always be original but are certainly creative and carry the handprints of the artists who made them, are nearly uncontested traits of the company's work while the man was alive, and while things went a bit off the rails when Michael Eisner got all paranoid they're starting to get things back on track by putting the right people in charge. Disney was not only good at making cartoons both parents and children wanted to see, but also amazing at marketing the shit out of them without becoming a parody of itself like Hanna Barbera did.Julius Terrell said:The kid I once was did, but as I matured I had to push Disney aside. Just isn't for me.
Animation has a brief but rich history, and whether or not you like Disney the company has played a huge part in it, and most historians would agree there's more good to it than bad. The company can be shrewd and manipulative, and they're doing some rather obnoxious things with copyright law, but there's a reason it became so big and the reason it still remains this big and this independent to this day. When the show Disneyland first premiered, Disney made a deal with ABC and they aired it. Now Disney owns ABC. That's the kind of growth I'm talking about. Again, you can feel however you want to feel about Disney personally, but if you want to look at the history and current condition of both western animation and anime you're going to have to learn to look at Disney a bit more objectively. If you're going to collectively look at the works of the Walt Disney company and call them "shit" while mentioning none of the flaws that come with anime, then your authority on the matter is automatically zero.