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"Make It in America" is a song performed by the Victorious cast featuring Victoria Justice. It was co-written by Justice, for Victorious 2.0: More Music from the Hit TV Show (2012), the soundtrack to the Nickelodeon television series, Victorious.
In "Wi-Fi in the Sky", she yells at Andre for "talking to himself" when he was in reality video chatting with Tori, Cat, and Beck then freaks out and punches Andre's computer. During an interview on a video on TheSlap.com in which Andre read off her crazy text messages, her first name is revealed to be Charlotte.
Tori Vega: Yes Victorious 2.0 "Cheer Me Up (Only One's Dancing)" Yes Victorious 3.0 (bonus track) "The Blonde Squad" "I Think You're Swell" Robbie Shapiro Yes Victorious 2.0 "Three Girls and a Moose" "L.A. Boyz" Tori Vega and Cat Valentine: Yes 4 Victorious 3.0 "Tori Fixes Beck and Jade" "You Don't Know Me" Jade West Yes "One Thousand Berry ...
A Victorious episode of the same name premiered on November 26, 2010, and features Tori Vega (Justice), Jade West (Elizabeth Gillies) and Cat Valentine (Ariana Grande) trying to expose a rigged karaoke competition. The song was met with generally positive reviews from critics, with the majority of them praising its catchiness.
After the spin-off series Sam & Cat was announced, fans of Victorious expressed dismay that its spin-off series was the reason for its ending, but Schneider himself stated otherwise. [2] Although the Victorious cast only filmed three seasons, when the decision to end the series was made, Nickelodeon split the third season in half, making a ...
Tori and Trina's flight home from New York City gets delayed, so Tori uses video chat via the plane's Wi-Fi service to work on a group project for school with Andre, Cat, and Beck while she is on the plane. While attempting to get it done, the rest of the group keeps getting distracted, making Tori frustrated.
Tori is primarily a given name. It is more common among females, and it is often a hypocorism of Victoria (Latin: “victory”). Separately, it is also a name with Hebrew roots, from the name Tova, meaning “good” or “pleasant”, and often associated with the biblical character Ruth . [ 1 ]
By combining upper body movements with punches, players can duck down and hit to the body or lean back and throw a quick punch to the head. [5] The initial setup uses the left analog stick for all the character's bodily movements; minor movements to the stick control the upper body movements, while larger movements control the lower body and ...