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“ | Why, Jessie, you know he wouldn't last an hour on the streets in his condition. It's a dangerous world out there for a toy. | „ |
~ Stinky Pete's most famous quote while describing that Woody can't do much as his arm is ripped off, partly foreshadowing his true colors. |
“ | [Stinky Pete screws in the ventilation hole in Al's apartment tight.] Jessie: Prospector? Woody: You're out of your box! Stinky Pete: I tried reasoning with you, Woody. But you keep forcing me to take extreme measures. [Stinky Pete walks over to the TV remote and turns the TV off.] Woody: Wait a minute. You turned on the TV last night, not Jessie. Stinky Pete: Look, we have an eternity to spend together in the museum. Let's not start off by pointing fingers, shall we? Woody: You really are "Stinky Pete", aren't you? Jessie: Prospector, this isn't fair! Stinky Pete: "FAIR"?! I'll tell you what's not fair. Spending a lifetime on a dime-store shelf watching every other toy be sold! Well, finally my waiting has paid off, and no hand-me-down cowboy doll IS GONNA MESS IT UP FOR ME NOW! |
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~ Stinky Pete revealing his true nature to Woody, Jessie, and Bullseye. |
Stinky Pete the Prospector is one of the two main antagonists (alongside Al McWhiggin) of Pixar's 3rd full-length feature film, Toy Story 2, the second installment in the Toy Story film series.
He is a prospector doll who was on the Woody's Roundup TV show, alongside Sheriff Woody, Jessie, and Bullseye, and never experienced a child's love, which is what made him bad in the first place. In order to fulfill his need to be loved, he tried to keep the rest of the Roundup Gang assembled when Woody arrives. That way, Al McWhiggin can donate him to a toy museum in Tokyo. Pete's underhanded means of accomplishing this had almost destroyed Woody's friendship with Andy Davis and Buzz Lightyear. Stinky Pete is the former friend and father-figure turned arch-nemesis of Woody and Jessie, and the archrival of Buzz Lightyear.
He was voiced by Kelsey Grammer, who also played Harold Attinger in Transformers: Age of Extinction, Sideshow Bob in The Simpsons, Rothbart in Barbie of Swan Lake, Dr. Ivan Krank in Teacher's Pet: The Movie, and Hunter in Storks. In the video game adaptations, he was voiced by Stephen Stanton, who later played Grand Moff Tarkin in Star Wars Rebels.
Personality[]

Stinky Pete, as he appears in Woody's Roundup.
When he first appeared, Stinky Pete was initially a grandfatherly and mentor-like character, giving support and advice to Jessie, Woody and Bullseye throughout the first half of the film. However, in truth, Stinky Pete merely was a manipulative, traitorous and embittered person. This was caused by the years of emotional pain that he had endured during a lifetime on a dime-store shelf and not being sold to any children due to their preference of space toys after the launch of Sputnik (itself launched in real-life on a modified Russian R-7 ICBM, also simply named Sputnik, not to mention the fact that he was probably seen as less desirable to kids than the toys of more prominent characters like Woody and Jessie as a toy of the show's bumbling comic-relief character).
Along with the shift of interest to space toys, the fact that this resulted in the TV show, Woody's Roundup getting cancelled further contributed to his own hatred of space toys and children. Even while he shrouded his true nature, he secretly plotted to prevent Woody from returning to his owner Andy at any cost, sabotaging his escape by secretly turning on the TV to wake Al up while playing the part of an innocent, incorrupt, and impeccable character by claiming that he "didn't know" how the TV turned on and that Woody and Jessie fighting about it would not solve anything.
When Woody finally decided that he would return to Andy and take the other Roundup toys with him, this finally prompted him to snap and reveal his true nature and intentions to the other Roundup toys and Andy's toys. In the process, he sealed the air vent to prevent their escape and allow Al to take the Roundup toys to the toy museum in Japan. The fact that he was willing to spend years of eternity sealed inside a museum away from contact with children also showed that he had developed solitary traits due to spending most of his time within his box. He also believed that rare, unpopular, and collectible toys like him and the other Roundup toys were doomed to either always ending up in storage or remaining unsold to any children similar to his fate before Al found him.
He also turned out to be extremely treacherous, hypocritical, sanctimonious and exploitative, as he was willing to beat up other toys, so that his goal of toys escaping harm from children in the eternal museum life would be fulfilled (which later failed due to Andy's toys rescuing them from Al's airplane taking off), evidenced by him reopening the old rip in Woody's arm and threatening to tear him apart. His own inexperience of being played with by a child, along with hearing Jessie's story of being outgrown by her previous owner Emily lead to him believing that children were only destroyers of toys whose ultimate fate will be spending an eternity rotting in landfills.
Despite his villainous and spiteful nature, Stinky Pete appeared to have redeemable traits as he stated in his online interview after the film that he liked his new owner Amy and her face paint decorations, even though he initially feared it after Andy's toys placed him in Amy's backpack. This can demonstrate that Stinky Pete was a villain who was wronged by rejection and ingratitude, and that he most likely would have been so hospitable in the first place if he had been owned by a child to start off with. However, as this online interview was most likely made by people who weren't involved in the film, it's up to speculate whether this information is canonical or not.
That said, despite Stinky Pete's villainous demeanor, he cares deeply about his co-stars and only wants what's best for them. He also can be quite insightful as when he briefly gave Woody a chance to go, he correctly pointed out that Andy will outgrow and lose interest of Woody, pointing out that it would be unlikely for Andy to take Woody to college or on his honeymoon and that Woody can't stop on it, something which Woody agreed on, though as it turned out years later, Andy would have kept Woody even at his college had he decided not to give him away, but later changed his mind by giving him to a little girl named Bonnie.
On Woody's Roundup, Stinky Pete was a regular recurring protagonist. Though depicted mostly as an accident-prone, unpropitious, stereotypical, unsophisticated and simple-minded hillbilly and comic relief, Stinky Pete was established on the show as an overall agreeable, complaisant and good-natured friend and ally of Woody, Bullseye and Jessie.
Biography[]
Past[]
“ | Jessie: Say Hello to the Prospector! Woody: It's a box. Jessie: He's Mint in the Box! Never been opened! |
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~ Jessie telling Woody about the Prospector |
Stinky Pete spent his life on a dime-store shelf, jealously watching every other toy be sold to their new owners. Because of the fact that he was never sold to a kid, he grew to be very bitter, selfish, and angry in nature. Stinky Pete was soon sold to Al McWhiggin, but he never took him out of his box, which made him even more insane and angry. Since Al was grown up, he decided to sell Stinky Pete to a toy museum in Tokyo, Japan.
Stinky Pete found this to be good news, thinking that if kids did not want him, they could not have him. However, Al learned that the museum wanted the whole Woody's Roundup gang and went to collect them all, so Stinky Pete would have to wait. Al eventually found Jessie the cowgirl and Bullseye the horse and Stinky Pete became their friend while they waited for Al to find Woody.
Present[]
Greeting Woody[]
“ | Turn me around Bullseye, so I can see. Why the prodigal son has returned. | „ |
~ Stinky Pete seeing that Al has finally found a Woody doll, also his first lines. |
Stinky Pete is first seen when Woody, finally arrives at Al's apartment. He first appears as a good friend to Woody, becoming happy and pleased that he has returned. He welcomes Woody, tells him who he really is, and even shows him the television show called Woody's Roundup, which lasted a few seasons and eventually being cancelled as he tells Woody that children began playing with space toys after the show abruptly ended, due to the arrival of Sputnik with Woody replying of how he knows how that feels (referencing his jealousy towards Buzz in the first film).
A Hidden Agenda[]
“ | Stinky Pete: We've been in storage a long time waiting for you. Woody: Why me? Stinky Pete: The museum is only interested in the collection if you're in it, Woody. Without you, we go back into storage. It's that simple. |
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~ Stinky Pete telling Woody about Al's plan to sell the Roundup toys. |
When Stinky Pete reveals that Al plans to sell him, Woody, Jessie, and Bullseye to the Konoshi Toy Museum in Tokyo, Japan, Woody reveals that he is still owned by a 7-year-old boy named Andy Davis, and that Al actually stole him from a yard sale while Woody was trying to save a broken squeaky toy penguin named Wheezy from getting sold. Despite learning this, Stinky Pete secretly thinks of a way to stop Woody from going back to Andy. When Al unintentionally rips off Woody's right arm completely (similar to Buzz losing his left arm from the first film), Woody starts to panic, but Stinky Pete calms him down by saying that Al will get his arm fixed as soon as possible.
However, Woody can't wait, and attempts to retrieve his arm while Al is sleeping in his couch. Stinky Pete secretly leaves his box by using his pickaxe and turning on the TV, causing Al to wake up. He also frames Jessie by putting the TV remote near her before getting back in his box. Once Woody is back in his case, he then accuses Jessie of messing up his escape, causing her to attack him (similar to how Woody and Buzz fought at the Gas Station from the first film) until Stinky Pete tells them to stop. Stinky Pete then tells Woody he should just wait until morning as Al has called in a cleaner to fix Woody's arm.
Convincing Woody To Stay[]
“ | How long will it last, Woody? Do you really think Andy is going to take you to college? Or on his honeymoon? Andy is growing up and there's nothing you can do about it. It's your choice, Woody. You can go back. Or you can stay with us and last forever. You'll be adored by children for generations. | „ |
~ Stinky Pete persuades Woody to stay. |
The next day, after Woody's arm is repaired (similar to Buzz having his left arm reattached by the Mutant Toys from the first film), Stinky Pete convinces Woody to make amends with Jessie before he leaves. After Woody listens to Jessie's story about when she was abandoned by her owner Emily (similar to Buzz finally discovering that Woody was right as he is just a toy from the previous film), Stinky Pete tells him that Andy would do the same to him one day and Woody agrees to stay.
Stinky Pete's True Colors[]
“ | Stinky Pete: It's too late, Woody. That silly Buzz Lightweight can't help you. Woody: HIS NAME IS BUZZ LIGHTYEAR!!! Stinky Pete: Whatever. I've always hated those upstart space toys. [Closes his box.] |
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~ Stinky Pete making fun of Buzz's name, as well as expressing his hatred towards him, Utility Belt Buzz, and other space toys.
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“ | Stinky Pete: Your choice, Woody. You can go to Japan together or in pieces. If he fixed ya once, he can fix ya again. NOW GET IN THE BOX! Woody: NEVER! Stinky Pete: FINE! |
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~ Stinky Pete coercing Woody to be in the Konishi Toy Museum by threatening and intimidating him. |
However, Woody's friends, Buzz Lightyear, Rex, Hamm, Slinky Dog, and Mr. Potato Head soon arrive at the penthouse (along with another Buzz Lightyear action figure) to rescue Woody (as Al stole him), and convince Woody to go back with them. Buzz uses Woody's words from the first film at him in order to convince him to come home. At first, Woody refuses. But after hearing himself sing "You've Got a Friend in Me" on the TV, he decides to go home, and runs to the vent (similar to Buzz choosing to escape Sid's house with Woody after he learns the truth of being a toy from the first film).
When a panicking and devastated Stinky Pete asks Woody where he's going, he tells him that he's right he can't stop Andy from growing up, but he wouldn't miss it for the world, shocking Stinky Pete. He then persuades Jessie, Bullseye, and Stinky Pete to come with him. Unfortunately, this is where Stinky Pete reveals his true colors; he had somehow managed to escape out of his box, and he seals the vents shut, preventing Woody's escape. Stinky Pete expresses his displeasure having to keep forcing himself to take extreme measures to reason with Woody. Stinky Pete then turns the TV back off with his pickaxe, revealing himself to be the one who ruined Woody's escape the prior night and framed Jessie for it.
Jessie is outraged by Stinky Pete's betrayal, saying that it isn't fair. Hearing this, the normally calm and phlegmatic Stinky Pete snaps and declares he was never sold to a child and that is why he will go to Japan by any means possible, feeling that he would finally get the love and affection that he has sought for a lifetime. When Woody calls out to Buzz, Stinky Pete mockingly refers to him as "Buzz Lightweight", causing Woody to angrily correct him saying that his name is "Buzz Lightyear". Stinky Pete mutters that he had always hated space toys before going back into his box. While the toys try to rescue Woody, Stinky Pete keeps shoving him back into Al's luggage and foiling the toys' rescue plans.
Your Flight Is Cancelled, Prospector![]
“ | Stinky Pete: IDIOTS! CHILDREN DESTROY TOYS! YOU’LL ALL BE RUINED, FORGOTTEN, SPENDING ETERNITY ROTTING IN SOME LANDFILL! Woody: Well, Stinky Pete, I think it's time you learned the true meaning of "playtime". [smiles and points off screen] Right over there, guys! Stinky Pete: No! NO! NOOOOOO!! |
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~ Stinky Pete's villainous breakdown and last words as he angrily rants towards Andy's toys just before Woody, Buzz and his friends put him into Amy's backpack, thus foreshadowing the events of Toy Story 3. |
Sooner or later, the toys arrive at the airport to save Woody. They seem to find Al's luggage, but it turns out to be a different one with cameras inside. Buzz goes to find the other luggage, which he does. However, when he opens it to get Woody, Stinky Pete pops out and punches Buzz off the ramp. This makes Woody finally snap that he fights Stinky Pete for harming Buzz, only for Stinky Pete to kick Woody off of him and reopen his old rip in his right arm. He gives Woody a choice: he can go to Japan either together or in pieces, assuring that Al will have him fixed again like before. He orders Woody to get back in the box, but Woody angrily refuses. This left the infuriated Prospector to feel as if he had no choice but to rip Woody apart.
However, Buzz (who survived the fall) and the other toys suddenly show up again and save Woody by flashing the cameras in Stinky Pete's eyes, temporarily blinding him. This gives Buzz a chance to capture Stinky Pete by the collar of his shirt. Stinky Pete rants to the toys rather delusionally for wanting to go with Andy, saying that children destroy toys and they'll soon be taken away to rot in a landfill.
Having enough of Stinky Pete's behavior and deciding that Stinky Pete should learn the true meaning of playtime, Woody orders his friends to dump Stinky Pete into a Barbie backpack that belongs to a girl named Amy as punishment for his betrayal, much to Stinky Pete's shock and horror. When Amy sees Stinky Pete (calling him a "big, ugly man-doll") in her backpack, she happily decides to take him home with her, declaring that he needs a makeover. Stinky Pete encounters a Barbie doll in the backpack, who assures him that he'll like Amy because she's an artist. She then turns her face, revealing the side of her face painted with tattoos, which frightens Stinky Pete.
Stinky Pete is last seen in the Barbie backpack, crying. As Stinky Pete cries while being taken to his new owner's home, Woody happily bids farewell to Stinky Pete by saying, "Happy trails, Prospector!", knowing that Stinky Pete will finally get the love of a child that he was denied so many years ago. This will make him reform again, and become a good guy, just like at the beginning of the film.
Relationships[]
Relatives[]
- Al McWhiggin - Former owner
- Amy - Current owner
Allies[]
- Woody - Former son-figure
- Jessie - Former daughter-figure
- Bullseye - Former pet-figure
- Amy’s Barbie doll (possibly)
Enemies[]
- Woody - Arch-nemesis, former co-actor, and attempted victim
- Buzz Lightyear - Archrival and attempted victim
- Jessie - Second arch-nemesis and former co-actor
- Bullseye - Former co-actor
- Utility Belt Buzz
- Rex
- Mr. Potato Head
- Hamm
- Slinky Dog
- Little Green Men
- Space Toys
Other Media[]
Video games[]
Toy Story 2: Buzz Lightyear to the Rescue[]
The Prospector is also one of the two main antagonists in Toy Story 2: Buzz Lightyear to the Rescue, the video game based on Toy Story 2, as well as one of the final bosses of the game. He is the boss of the game's thirteenth level Airport Infiltration. He can be found on a conveyor belt in the luggage storage room, positioned high above the ground. Buzz can only reach this conveyor belt after he obtains the Hover Boots from Mr. Potato Head. When confronted, the Prospector attacks Buzz by slamming his pickaxe onto the floor, sending lines of harmful energy running straightforward.
Unlike most other bosses, the Prospector is invulnerable to Buzz’s laser; Buzz will be forced to damage this boss using his spin attack alone. This also puts Buzz in immediate range of the Prospector’s pickaxe attack, so he must try and strike him from behind to avoid damage. Eventually, the Prospector will admit defeat and collapse, granting Buzz a Pizza Planet Token in the process.
It is later revealed that the Prospector survived his conflict with Buzz, as he appears in the final level, Final Showdown (also called Prospector Showdown), along with the Gunslinger and the Blacksmith. His attacks, however, remain the same.
Toy Story 3: The Video Game[]
Although Stinky Pete doesn't appear in Toy Story 3, he appears in Toy Box mode on the Xbox 360, Playstation 3, Wii and PC versions of the Toy Story 3 video game. However, he is portrayed in his Woody's Roundup personality as opposed to his evil behavior in Toy Story 2. In the Toy Story 3 video game, he is voiced by Stephen Stanton who also voices Grand Moff Tarkin on Star Wars Rebels.
Toy Story Mania!/Toy Story Midway Mania![]
Stinky Pete also makes an appearance at the end of the final game on the ride exclaiming "Wow-wee! Look at all that gold!".
Trivia[]
- Stinky Pete is mentioned in one of the phrases of the 2013-current Disney Store Exclusive Woody doll.
- Stinky Pete is one of the three real toy villains in the Toy Story movies, though there was an element of sympathy given the fact that he has been confined to a box since the 1950s when Woody's Roundup was made.
- In the movie credits, Stinky Pete is credited as "Prospector".
- A couple of hints in the film foreshadowed Stinky Pete's truly embittered nature as a toy himself:
- When he saw his own in-universe character in Woody's Roundup on TV, he reacted with an explicit facepalm. Although this is can be simply out of personal embarrassment, it also indicates that he was disappointed by the fact that his limited popularity is largely due to his in-universe portrayal.
- What's more, said in-universe character in that show is both mentally and vocally different from his toy self. This gives an implication to Stinky Pete's deceptive facade.
- As he was curious about Woody's original ownership with Andy, he instantly thought that the human boy was apparently careless to his own cowboy toy.
- After Jessie's indifference from the detachment of Woody's right arm, Stinky Pete mentions to her that it's dangerous for a toy to go outside as they're being prepared for display in the Konishi Toy Museum in Tokyo, Japan. While he does have a point about the risks that came with it, this also suggests that he was trying to make sure that the entire Roundup Gang in Al's apartment would be with him inside the museum.
- He mentioned that the reason why Woody's Roundup was cancelled is due to the launch of the Sputnik, resulting in the human children to shift from Western-themed toys to space-themed toys, which also caused him to openly hate them (although, Woody did briefly empathized with him about that, due to the first film's events with Buzz).
- At the moment when Woody was trying to reclaim his detached right arm from Al, Bullseye suddenly followed him, only for the cowboy to ask the horse to back away. After Bullseye's departure from Woody, the TV suddenly turned on, preventing Woody from reclaiming his arm, and when he falsely suspected that Jessie's the one who turned it on, the TV remote was on the desk where the glass cases were placed on top. With Jessie's genuinely negative reactions towards Woody's suspicions about her, and given Bullseye's naivety during that moment, it's safe to assume that Stinky Pete was the one who did that.
- This comes back to light when Pete revealed his true nature by turning off the TV with his pickaxe, revealing that he was the one that foiled Woody's plan to get his arm back and not Jessie.
- As Andy's other toys were about to rescue Woody, Stinky Pete gets to be the most responsive about it. When Woody declined it, Pete felt satisfied about it. However, once Woody changed his mind, Pete gets to react devastatingly from that.
- When he saw his own in-universe character in Woody's Roundup on TV, he reacted with an explicit facepalm. Although this is can be simply out of personal embarrassment, it also indicates that he was disappointed by the fact that his limited popularity is largely due to his in-universe portrayal.
- The suitcase that Al put Stinky Pete in has the word "KRUMM" on it. This was also on the truck that Lotso ends up on in Toy Story 3.
- One of the outtakes of Toy Story 2 is during the scene where Woody was about to give Stinky Pete the chance to experience toy ownership for the first time with Andy, Pete himself was later seen talking to two Barbie dolls about having roles in Toy Story 3 while in his box. As of 2019, any re-release of Toy Story 2 has that particular outtake being removed, apparently due to sexual misconduct allegations against John Lasseter (one of the film's directors) amidst the controversial #MeToo movement.[1]
- Interestingly, Stinky Pete's talk with the two Barbies about landing roles in Toy Story 3 foreshadowed a Barbie doll of Molly Davis ending up in Sunnyside Daycare.
- Ironically, 2019 was the same year Toy Story 4 was released, and it features multiple female elements that correlate to the entire franchise itself:
- It gets to have a human girl being the core toy owner.
- It introduces the franchise's very first female main antagonist.
- It involves a supporting female character from the previous fims returning with a major role.
- It has a major female character officially becoming the leader of the franchise's main cast.
- In a more minor case, another major female character from the previous film makes a cameo.
- In another Toy Story 2 outtake, while giving Woody a choice to go back or stay, the Prospector accidentally farted, which he guesses is why he is called "Stinky Pete". Then again, it is also implied that he sometimes ate beans on Woody's Roundup; even one of his voice-box lines is indicative to this.
- Although Stinky Pete and Woody are now against each other, Woody did agree with him on the fact that he can't stop Andy from growing up, but said that he wouldn't miss it for the world.
- Stinky Pete is essentially foil to the main heroic characters in Toy Story 2:
- Woody: Woody only wanted to go back to Andy while Pete didn't want to get adopted by a child as he still hates children. If Woody choose to stay in the museum along with the Roundup Gang instead of going back to Andy, then he would've ended up like Stinky Pete.
- Jessie: Jessie, like Woody, only wanted to be played with while Pete only wanted love and adoration. Stinky Pete also represents what Jessie would have became if she didn't want to be played with.
- Bullseye: While Bullseye is a loyal animal, Pete is a traitorous toy. Additionally, while Bullseye had a strong moral, Pete is bitter and angry.
- Buzz Lightyear: Both Buzz and Pete convince Woody to move on with their life. However, while Buzz convinces Woody to go back to Andy, Pete convinces Woody to go to the museum with the Roundup Gang. If Buzz left Woody to be sold to the museum instead of saving him, then Woody would never have returned to Andy.
- While Stinky Pete nearly convinced Woody about staying with him and the Roundup Gang in the Japan toy museum because they would be loved and adored, it would have been really worse for them. Given that museums have security cameras to avoid any kind of theft, this means that the Roundup Gang would have been forced to never move ever again. Of course, given his hatred towards children, Stinky Pete would have easily gone through with this but not his friends, serving this as an example of his extreme selfishness.
- According to his box, he had only a total of nine sayings, such as "There's gold in them hills!", "Help! I think I'm stuck!", "Aw, shucks-a-roo!", and "Oh, boy! Beans for dinner!"
- There is an Epcot and a Lego version of Stinky Pete.
- Unlike in the film, Stinky Pete had henchmen (Gunslinger and Blacksmith) in the video game version on Nintendo 64, PlayStation, and PC.
- Stinky Pete is the first main antagonist in a Pixar film who was not revealed to be evil at first.
- Unlike most other characters in the franchise, he was never released as a movie size figure, nor in Toy Story Collection.
- Even if Stinky Pete did successfully ripped Woody into shreds with his pickaxe as a form of coercion, theoretically speaking, this would actually backfire on him, as the Konishi Toy Museum in Tokyo, Japan expects the entire Roundup Gang to be completely intact, so Al McWhiggin would have to spend more time in knowing how to repair Woody again if that ever happens, hindering Stinky Pete's longing plans of being in display at that museum.
- Quite ironically, although he's the film series' first openly tragic villain, he's also the only one of them so far who didn't immediately redeem in the end (as Lotso's minions and Gabby Gabby have managed to do so, albeit on separate occasions).
- To further aid this irony, even Emperor Zurg, despite lacking a sorrowful backstory, was able to change just moments after he fell down from the elevator, where he can be seen happily playing with Utility Belt Buzz.
- Stinky Pete's downfall wouldn't have been possible if it weren't for his betrayal against Jessie. If he hadn't let all the blame be put on her for turning on the TV the night before by leaving its remote in front of her case, then his plans to go to the Konishi Toy Museum in Tokyo, Japan with the rest of the Roundup Gang wouldn't have been fully hindered.
External Links[]
- Stinky Pete on the Disney Wiki
- Stinky Pete on the Pixar Wiki
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