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The band was originally formed in 1955 at the end of the first jazz boom in Japan under the name The Cuban Cats. [1] [2] Signed to Watanabe Productions, their performances mixed music and comedic bits, in the spirit of Frankie Sakai and the City Slickers, and they soon changed their name to the Crazy Cats.
A black-and-white music video to "Crazy Crazy" was released on June 4, 2014, directed and edited by Hoshino and starring himself, Kobayashi, and Okamoto wearing white suits as they play their respective instruments. Though Kobayashi played the song's piano alone, the video shows a duet as a reference to Crazy Cats.
The song's music video broke the records for the biggest music video premiere on YouTube, with 1.66 million concurrent viewers, and the most-watched music video within 24 hours, with 86.3 million views in its first day. [49] It became the fastest video to reach 100 million views, in just 32 hours, [50] and 200 million views, in seven days. [51]
The music video features a cat meowing to the beat. io/X A video of the tune had raked in more than 267,000 views on X Friday — with fans howling with laughter and calling it the purr-fect fall ...
Hajime Hana (ハナ肇, Hana Hajime; February 9, 1930 - September 10, 1993) was a Japanese actor. He was the leader of the comic jazz band The Crazy Cats, which featured such talent as Hitoshi Ueki and Kei Tani, and which starred in a series of film comedies (such as the "Irresponsible" (Musekinin) series at Toho) and in TV variety shows such as "Shabondama Holiday."
Since Lady Gaga's "Bad Romance" in 2009, every video that has reached the top of the "most-viewed YouTube videos" list has been a music video. In November 2005, a Nike advertisement featuring Brazilian football player Ronaldinho became the first video to reach 1,000,000 views. [1] The billion-view mark was first passed by Gangnam Style in ...
Aces around, dix or double pinochles. Score points by trick-taking and also by forming combinations of cards into melds.
Cats made up 16% of views in YouTube's "Pets & Animals" category, compared to dogs' 23%. [28] The YouTube video Cats vs. Zombies merged the two Internet phenomena of cats and zombies. [29] Data from BuzzFeed and Tumblr has shown that dog videos have more views than those of cats, and less than 1% of posts on Reddit mention cats. [30]