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Pepsi got the right ones (baby!) when they cast Beyoncé, Britney Spears and Pink in a Gladiator-inspired commercial. While the brand spent lots of money to make it, the ad ended up never airing ...
"You Got the Right One, Baby, Uh Huh" was a popular slogan for PepsiCo's Diet Pepsi brand in the United States and Canada from 1990 to 1993. A series of television ads featured singer Ray Charles, surrounded by models, singing a song about Diet Pepsi, entitled "You Got the Right One Baby, Uh Huh". The tag-phrase of the song included the words ...
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, she was "The Pepsi Girl" in a series of Pepsi commercials. [12] She made her film debut in the children's film Paulie, playing the young owner of the title parrot. After appearing in a few made-for-television films, she had supporting parts in 1999's The Insider and Bicentennial Man.
The "Dancing Baby", also called "Baby Cha-Cha" or "the Oogachacka Baby", is an internet meme of a 3D-rendered animation of a baby performing a cha-cha type dance. It quickly became a media phenomenon in the United States and one of the first viral videos in the mid-late 1990s.
NatGeo's "Rewind the '90s" looks at the birth and significance of the web's dancing baby.
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos. ... POV: Your daughter wants to see her baby ...
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.
The 57-year-old's cameo in a new video will look familiar to longtime fans. ... Two young boys looked on, as Crawford chose a Pepsi from the vending machine, then popped it open and sucked it down ...