Very cool. I remember how the graphics on Xevious blew me away when it came out, especially the mirrors. Never knew about the flag in the river trick. Super cool!
🤣🤣🤣🤣Jesus man this is god awful. I bet you’re so racist saying the illegal immigrants are storming the borders but you’re mum on the traitors storming the capitol on January 6th.
There was one particular 80s novelty song video that managed to set itself apart from the others. (I only saw it once, but it left a lasting impression.) It involved a 30-ish South-East Asian immigrant with zero singing experience. A song producer, having met him and learning of how appreciative the immigrant was to be in the US, decided to put him in a music video in which the fellow would sing while soaring over and around sites things evocative of America. The special effects didn't go beyond video graphics typical for MTV videos back then, but the cheesiness worked beautifully, the fellow's arms outstretched, soaring, and singing a song specially written for him. The lyrics included, "I so happyyyyy to beeee hheerrrrre!" I wish I could remember the name of that song or even who produced it, just to watch the video again.
Michelle is beautiful. Philippines Cagayan De Oro is swarming with women like her in beauty. Great street food too, but drink bottled water only and no ice.
Part of the inspiration! That sequence starts with the Pussycat Dolls and ends with the first radio transmission, Marconi sends the letter S sent in Morse code over the Atlantic. Less entertaining radio transmissions were destined to follow Marconi's S.
That post 2000 period is absolutely atrocious. 95% of the sounds recorded are irritating and some downright aggravating you want to chuck the radio across town.
Type in "Au Clair De La Lune 1860" and you'll find it. It's the first cound ever recorded (Edison's is the first ever played back). It was recorded with an invention called the Phonoautograph, and played back for the first time just about a decade ago by scientists.
No offense intended. It's my band's name. The drummer to the punk-pop band The Sheckies said it should be the name of a heavy metal band, not my new-wave synth-pop electro-punk band.