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Daker's first name was misspelled in the original subtitles, so he is sometimes referred to as "John Daker." [3] [1] Jon Graham Daker was born November 19, 1939, in Peoria. [1] Daker grew up on the West Bluff and attended Peoria High School, earning his GED later. [3] He enjoyed music and played the harmonica. [3] He died on February 20, 2022 ...
Lasagna Cat is a web series created by production company Fatal Farm as a parody of the Garfield comic strips created by American cartoonist Jim Davis.The series was uploaded in bulk to YouTube in 2008 and 2017, and consists mainly of humorous live-action recreations of classic Garfield comics.
Jonathan Q. "Jon" Arbuckle is an American cartoonist who is the owner of Garfield and Odie. His exact age is unknown. Jon's age was given as 29 years old in a December 23, 1980, strip when he tells Garfield a joke that he "would be 30 but he was sick a year" (although given that this is presented in the context of Jon telling a joke, it is possible Jon may not have stated his actual age). [18]
ATL RMX is a free download album released in 2009 by Adult Swim (through Williams Street Records). [1] It is presented by Rockstar Games' Beaterator.The track listing contains remixes of songs by many mainstream hip hop artists, all of whom are based out of Atlanta, Georgia (the home of Adult Swim).
The Navy Seal copypasta, also sometimes known as Gorilla Warfare due to a misspelling of "guerrilla warfare" in its contents, is an aggressive but humorous attack paragraph supposedly written by an extremely well-trained member of the United States Navy SEALs (hence its name) to an unidentified "kiddo", ostensibly whoever the copypasta is directed to.
"10 Minutes" is the debut single by South Korean recording artist Lee Hyori. It is taken from her debut studio album Stylish..., which was released through DSP Media and CJ E&M on August 13, 2003. A R&B and hip hop number, "10 Minutes" was written by MayBee with production handled by Kim Do-hyun. Following its release, the song became a ...
The clips, noted by one writer to symbolize frustration of fans of WWE regarding American wrestler John Cena's over-publicity, depict a snippet of a popular film, TV series, song or other form of media that gets interrupted by Cena's entrance video, as an announcer yells "And his name is John Cena!", or simply "John Cena!", [4] and his theme ...
The song is used in chapter 11 of the novel Dodsworth by Sinclair Lewis. [7] Carl Sandburg included the song in his April 1959 folk song collection, Flat Rock Ballads. [8] [9] The Canadian band The Dave Howard Singers released an industrial/punk version of "Yon Yonson" in 1987.