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Vladimir Polyakov was born in 1953 in Novy, Khabarovski Krai, Russia. His father, Ivan Grigorievich Polyakov, worked as a machine operator in a geosurvey expedition. The family moved a lot, participated in the Virgin Lands Campaign in Kazakhstan and in the Russian Far East. Vladimir has been passionate about radio devices since his childhood.
In the 1990s, Chupa Chups began supplying FC Barcelona manager Johan Cruyff with lollipops. Cruyff would suck Chupa Chups on the touchline during matches, having been forced to give up smoking for health reasons. [12] [13] When Cruyff died in 2016, fans left lollipops at his memorial. [14] Chupa Chups sponsored the 1992 video game Zool. Their ...
On July 14, 2022, YouTube made a special playlist and video celebrating the 317 music videos to have hit 1 billion views and joined the "Billion Views Club". [65] [66] On April 1, 2024, the communications app Discord incorporated a short trailer video into their in-app April Fools' Day prank regarding loot boxes. The video automatically looped ...
Candy isn't always bad for you -- 14-year-old Aline Morse created a holiday lollipop that turned into a booming business. What started out as an in-home experiment has transformed Zollipop, a ...
Melody Pops are marketed with a tagline stating "play real music". [4] The Melody Pop's handle contains a slide whistle-like plunger. Each lollipop's inner wrapper has sheet music printed on it. Each note is numbered, so the whistler can change the notes they play by sliding the plunger up and down to the different numbers engraved on the plunger.
Tarik Johnston (born 12 April 1988), commonly known as Rvssian and previously as Russian (stylized in all caps), is a Jamaican record producer, singer, and entrepreneur. He is the founder of Head Concussion, a music production company situated in Kingston, Jamaica. He rose to popularity [2] shortly after producing Vybz Kartel's "Life Sweet" in ...
Candy isn't always bad for you – this teen created a dentist-approved lollipop that's changing the way we think of sweets and rotting our teeth. Show comments Advertisement
Alina Morse (born May 2005) [1] is an American entrepreneur, the CEO of Zolli Candy, which she founded when she was ten years old. Her company sells the candy she developed: sugar free lollipops called Zollipops, hard candy called Zolli Drops, and taffy called Zaffi Taffy. The candy is sold online and in about 25,000 stores in the United States ...