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A music video for the song was uploaded to YouTube on October 25, 2012. [2] The video, which was directed by Jim Turner and Annie Quick, features animated sequences produced by Newgrounds animators Zach Hadel and Chris O'Neill. [2] [3] The video is the eighth most viewed upload on the channel, with 6.3 million views as of June 2019. [4]
Tech sent him a picture of his lyrics, following which Jelly Roll decided he had another song that could be a better fit for them and sent it to Tech. Tech's verse was then used for the song, which became "Creature". [1] After releasing the song, Jelly Roll wrote on YouTube: I hope this song helps somebody out there today. This song was written ...
The official music video for "On a Roll" was released on June 13, 2019, on Netflix's official YouTube channel. [11] Andrew Unterberger of Billboard described the video as "[splitting] the difference between 'Bad Romance'-era Gaga and 'California Gurls'-era Katy Perry in a way that would've certainly made it a YouTube smash." [10]
“Imagine if ninja knew what a low taper fade was,” one TikTok user parodied in the comments on Ninja’s video. As an online public figure, Ninja has been the face of memes and internet trends ...
Advantages of rolling over your 401(k) 1. You can consolidate your 401(k) accounts. Especially if you change jobs often, you might find yourself with many 401(k) accounts scattered around. The ...
[7] All four options must be for the same underlying at the same strike price. For example, a position composed of options on futures is not a true jelly roll if the underlying futures have different expiry dates. [5] The jelly roll is a neutral position with no delta, gamma, theta, or vega. However, it is sensitive to interest rates and ...
Ninjai first appeared on June 4, 2001 as a trailer created using Adobe Flash, [1] [4] and had a trademark filed for its title on June 14, 2001. [6] The animation series drew a strong following with its unique style and storyline at the time, and ended up producing a total of 12 episodes thereafter, [2] each a few minutes in length. [citation ...
Rolling Stone magazine noted the use of both Afrikaans and English in Ninja's lyrics, whilst also mentioning the problem this presents for people not used to his strong South African accent, but ultimately concluded that "Die Antwoord don't dispense with rap clichés – they give them a new accent that's both disorienting and thrilling".