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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.
When he is commended for his "berserker dance rage" performance by the voices in his head, he speaks before the committee to have the law repealed. A mashup of Toy Story and Toddlers & Tiaras ; Mrs. Potato Head chronicles her spoiled, overachieving daughter Savannah's for her participation in a toddler pageant, hoping to score a victory against ...
Unlike the first two films in the franchise, the score for Hidden World has a "dark theme" for the main antagonist, dragon-hunter Grimmel, a "fate" riff, which signalled changes in the lives of key characters, lighthearted romantic music for Toothless and the potential mate, as well as "mystical, ethereal sounds for that “hidden world” of the dragons themselves".
The video was preceded by an older clip of her dancing to "We're All in This Together" from Disney's 2006 movie High School Musical. "How it started." "How it's going," the dancer, 35, wrote over ...
Brolsma's video, entitled "Numa Numa Dance", was uploaded to the website Newgrounds on December 6, 2004 under the username Gman250, showing Brolsma's lip-syncing of the song with lively dance moves. The video's title is derived from the Romanian words " nu mă nu mă " occurring in the refrain of O-Zone's song, which was the first Numa Numa ...
At the 2024 Paris Olympics, breaking (also known as breakdancing) made its debut as an Olympic sport—and Rachael Gunn of Team Australia quickly inspired a flurry of memes and jokes after a video ...
Toothless is a 1997 American made-for-television fantasy comedy film that first aired as part of The Wonderful World of Disney on ABC on October 5, 1997 and produced by Disney Telefilms and Mandeville Films.
The four-minute video shot by experimental video artist Matthias Fritsch at the Fuckparade on 8 July 2000 [1] begins with the title "Kneecam No. 1". The camera is focused on a group of people dancing to techno music, [2] with a blue-haired woman in front. A man stumbles into the scene and grabs the woman.