Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The video features V.I.C. and Soulja Boy Tell 'Em "getting silly". It premiered on BET 's 106 & Park on February 14, 2008, and was added to his official YouTube channel on February 26, 2008. [ 1 ] A video by V.I.C. teaching the "Get Silly" dance appeared a few weeks later.
"Wobble" is the second single by rapper V.I.C. from his debut album Beast. The single was produced by Mr. Collipark . Before recording this song, he made a track called "Wobble (Skit)" to introduce the song "Wobble".
"Wobble" (song), a single by V.I.C. "Wobble", a song by Flo Rida from his 2015 EP My House; Wobble, an album by Black Market Karma; Wobbles (equine disorder), a disorder of the nervous system in dogs and horses; Wobble base pair, a type of base pairing in genetics; Chandler wobble, short-term periodic change in Earth's axial tilt
The video opens with the first use of the Harlem Shake meme, [3] [6] and started a viral trend of people uploading their own "Harlem Shake" videos to YouTube. [10] Despite its name, the meme does not actually involve participants performing the original Harlem Shake dance, a street and hip hop dance that originated in 1980s Harlem, New York City.
"Wiggle Wobble" is an instrumental written by Les Cooper and performed by Cooper & the Soul Rockers. The single was produced by Bobby and Danny Robinson. [ 1 ] It was featured on their 1963 album Wiggle Wobble Dance Party .
V.I.C. was born Victor Grimmy Owusu in 1987 in Corona, Queens to a mother from New York City and a father from Ghana.At ten, he wrote his first song, a drug awareness rap for his elementary school.
In 2007, Silver filed DMCA-based take-down notices to YouTube users who posted videos of people performing the 18-step dance variation. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) filed suit on behalf of videographer Kyle Machulis against Silver, asking the court to protect Machulis's free speech rights in recording a few steps of the dance in a documentary video posted to the Internet. [6]
For the opening of the 4th mainline entry in the Yo-kai Watch video game series, Yo-kai Watch 4, a cover of "Gera Gera Po" by HardBirds was used. [7] [12] [13] A rhythm game spin-off in the Yo-kai Watch video game series titled after "Gera Gera Po", Yo-kai Watch: Gerapo Rhythm, was released for mobile devices exclusively in Japan on May 10 ...