The most important part of any resume or portfolio is phrasing. Often that involves omitting outdated terms like "flash" and highlighting terms of importance.
Things you've already said you did:
- "Developed military projects."
- "Developed educational products."
- "Worked for Disney."
- "Multiple years of experience working with a large scale CMS." It doesn't matter which one. You still understand the conceptual intricacies of a CMS in general.
Things which you probably did without realizing it and should be highlighted:
- Headed project X which resulted in Y.
- Designed thing X responsible for 10% increase in signups. It doesn't matter that it's technically insignificant. It brought in $$$.
- Designed animation X which resulted in Y. Sometimes the smallest parts are the most important. A single important UI animation alone got me a job offer once.
- Created design guidelines which increased developer efficiency by x%. 1% times 100 people means that small change alone payed for one person's salary.
You can also add things to your portfolio & resume which you haven't developed but demonstrate knowledge & expertise. My favorite parts of my portfolio website are the recommended reading section, Pinterest boards, and Twitter account.