Disney has been hiding a secret message in its movies for years

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Woody, Toy Story, number

YouTube screengrab

A113 is a reference to the California Institute of the Arts, where many animators attended college.

Pixar has been known for its Easter eggs - hidden messages in films - but one of its best has to do with A113.

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A video on Disney Pixar's YouTube page shows A113 can be found in almost all of Pixar's films, from "Toy Story" to "Finding Nemo."

It's also probably hidden in Disney and Pixar's latest film, "Inside Out," debuting this weekend.

What does it mean?

Pixar's John Lasseter has explained A113 is the number of the animation classroom at the California Institute of the Arts.

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Many animators like Lasseter attended school there, and by including the number they are giving a subtle shoutout to their alma mater.

The number has been used for many different things in Pixar films, such as Andy's mom's license plate in 1995's "Toy Story."

It was on a camera in 2003's "Finding Nemo."

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A113 is the number of a train in 2006's "Cars."

It can also be found on a box that Flik walks by in 1998's "A Bug's Life."

Here's Sully from 2013's "Monsters University" entering a classroom whose number is A113.

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monsters university sulley

Disney / Pixar

However, Pixar films aren't the only ones to hide the number in plain sight. Here's Tiana from Disney's 2009 "The Princess and the Frog" jumping on a trolley car marked A113.

"The Simpsons" used it for Bart Simpson's mug shot.

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It even shows up on a door in 1987's "The Brave Little Toaster." Joe Ranft, who went on to work on Pixar movies including "Toy Story," "A Bug's Life," and "Monsters, Inc.," and Dan Haskett, a character designer on "Toy Story," worked on the film.

the brave little toaster

Hyperion Pictures

You can also notice the number on a chewed-up vehicle in Warner Bros.' 1999 movie "The Iron Giant." The director, Brad Bird, later made Pixar hit "The Incredibles."

the iron giant a113

The Iron Giant screencap

Even live-action films like 2012's "The Avengers" had a file labeled A113.

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Finally, here's a photo of Lasseter and Pixar animators Andrew Stanton and Pete Docter standing outside the famed classroom:

Frank Pallotta contributed to an original version of this story.

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