- Money Bin
The Money Bin is a fictional structure in Disney
comic book s, first appearing in comic book stories created byCarl Barks . It was later depicted inanimated cartoon s such as the theatrical short "Scrooge McDuck and Money " and thetelevision series "DuckTales ". It is in this building thatScrooge McDuck stores the portions of his money he earned by himself and is the tallest building in the city ofDuckburg ,Calisota .Origin
The Money Bin was built in 1902, shortly after Scrooge entered the
diamond market and could no longer sleep at night because all the money he was storing under his mattress raised his bed too close to the ceiling, necessitating a more suitablestorage facility for his money. His favorite pastime is to dive off a board into his money and swim through it.Although the Money Bin is a twelve story
skyscraper and a vault filled with three cubic acres of money, on various occasions it has been pulled around by atractor , lifted to the top of amountain , stolen by aliens from the bottom of theocean , and blasted open with acannon . The traditional location of the Money Bin is on top of Killmotor Hill. The Money Bin sits atop Futterman's Fault, afault line which would prove catastrophic in the event of anearthquake .The Money Bin is the victim of repeated assaults by many of Scrooge's enemies who try to steal his money, such as his archnemesis
Flintheart Glomgold , theBeagle Boys , andMagica DeSpell , who is after Scrooge's Number One Dime (the first dime Scrooge ever earned).To protect against these attempted break-ins, Scrooge has installed the greatest security system in the world to thwart any thought of even trying to intrude onto the premises.
Glomgold's bin
Flintheart Glomgold has his own Money Bin, somewhere around
Limpopo Valley, with a pound sign (£) instead of the dollar sign ($) that appears on Scrooge's as revealed when Scrooge pays him a visit in "The Second-Richest Duck". Although Glomgold uses some of Scrooge's ideas, like thecannon , he apparently doesn't havebooby trap s around his Money Bin, as Scrooge enters it without having to handle them although Flintheart didn't know about his visit.Although it's not so often as Scrooge's, Flintheart's Money Bin is also victim of assaults, as it's revealed in
A Little Something Special , by theBeagle Boys , who don't care if the money they steal is Scrooge's or Flintheart's, andMagica De Spell , who was working with the possibility of Flintheart Glomgold being the world's richest duck, meaning she would need his Number One Rand instead of Scrooge'sNumber One Dime .Dimensions
A frequent topic of speculation among McDuck fans regards the dimensions of the Money Bin. Barks defined the volume of money contained inside as "three cubic acres," but the exact meaning, and therefore the volume, of a "cubic acre" is subject to interpretation by the reader, since an
acre is a measure ofarea , notlength . A series of blueprints created for a Scrooge McDuck story byDon Rosa state that the Money Bin is approximately convert|127|ft|m tall, and convert|120|ft|m wide. In the story, said blueprints are accredited to an architect named Keno D. Rosa, which is Don Rosa's actual name.Development
Carl Barks invented the "money swim" in 1950, while he invented the "money bin" in 1951. ["Carl Barks: Conversations", p xxxviii. [http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=YM0koT-ENLsC&oi=fnd&pg=PR9&dq=%22money+bin%22+Scrooge&ots=dnd9soCz1v&sig=car1hEgz5Vjr1P8-1nXi4XExRsg#PPR38,M1 Google Books] ]
Influences on Norwegian
The Norwegian name for the Money Bin is "Pengebingen", and has become regular word in the Norwegian language for a large amount of money or cash. [ [http://www.nrk.no/programmer/radioarkiv/sann_er_livet/2706708.html Vår tids eventyr] ("Our time's adventure") nrk.no May 6 2003 no icon]
References in academia
Russell W. Belk mentions the money bin in "Material Values in the Comics: A Content Analysis of Comic Books Featuring Themes of Wealth", where he remarks that Scrooge's "childish fascination with money", where he takes pleasure in diving and swimming in the money bin, might account for Scrooge not being portrayed as a villain. [The Journal of Consumer Research, Vol. 14, No. 1. (Jun., 1987), pp. 26-42.]
Penelope Fritzer in the article "Scrooge McDuck: Postmodern Robber Baron" considers it possible for the money bin to symbolize the entire Disney empire. [The Journal for the Liberal Art and Sciences, Scrooge McDuck: Postmodern Robber Baron, Penelope Fritzer, Florida Atlantic University]
ee also
*
Scrooge McDuck universe References
External links
* [http://duckman.pettho.com/characters/moneybin.html The Money Bin] Who's who in Duckburg
* [http://www.flickr.com/photos/matsgull/sets/72157602185120037/ Scale model of the Money Bin]
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