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"Record Breaker" Sunsilk: 2010 "Love Will Keep Us Together" Hating Kapatid: 2011 "Fallin" Catch Me, I'm in Love "I Won't Last A Day Without You" Won't Last A Day Without You: 2012 "Tuloy" (with Somedaydream and Gary Valenciano) Coca-Cola: Tuloy Ang Happiness!!! 2013 "It Takes A Man And A Woman" It Takes A Man And A Woman "Own Today" Sunsilk ...
Also included on the album is "Record Breaker", a song from Geronimo's Sunsilk endorsement. The album was made available on digital download through iTunes on July 5, 2009. [2] It reached platinum status after a month of its release, eventually selling 20,000 copies.
Sunsilk began its first television advertising in 1955 with a campaign that focused on specific hair "issues". In the UK, the campaign focused on shiny hair. During the 1960s, a television commercial of Sunsilk featured a tune composed by John Barry, "The Girl with the Sun in Her Hair", which became so popular that it was subsequently released as a pop single.
From the verb bokeru 惚ける or 呆ける, which carries the meaning of "senility" or "air headed-ness," and is reflected in a performer's tendency for misinterpretation and forgetfulness. The boke is the "simple-minded" member of an owarai kombi ( "tsukkomi and boke" , or vice versa ) that receives most of the verbal and physical abuse from ...
Joe Kudou: At 19, Japanese athlete Kudou is the youngest of the male competitors and thus lacks experience. He relies on his high skill levels in all event types. He wears a reversed baseball cap. Femi Kadiena: A national record breaker in her home nation, Kadiena has come to break records on the world stage. The 24-year-old Jamaican athlete ...
Kesha's remix of "Spring Breakers" was added to the tracklist on 14 October 2024, three days after the album's original release. Prior to the album's release, billboards appeared around the US, Europe, and Japan teasing new collaborations, confirming BB Trickz , Bon Iver , Julian Casablancas , Tinashe , Shygirl , the 1975 , Jon Hopkins , the ...
The Japanese edition of a record can be visually distinguished by the addition of a cardboard obi, which is usually folded over the left side of the cover. In this context, these obi are commonly called spine cards in English, particularly by collectors.
In February 1989, several American and Japanese companies unveiled their versions at the annual toy fair in New York. [3] In late 1989, an average Japanese boy owned eight to 11 Mini 4WD cars. [4] By November 1989, Hasbro introduced their Record Breakers: World of Speed series of cars, imported from Japan.