Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The music video for "Kōsui" was directed and filmed by Keita Inaba. The video was released on YouTube on 28 May 2019, and has accumulated over 124 million views as of November 2020. The video features Eito singing over the acoustic guitar, played by Junnosuke Onodera, and the contemporary dance played by Akari Kamayachi.
Wakabayashi Yasushi is a Japanese designer, known as the creator of the first Kaomoji. He used (^_^) to replicate a facial expression. He used (^_^) to replicate a facial expression. Despite not creating the design until 1986, a number of years after the American Scott Fahlman , it is believed that the concepts evolved completely independently ...
Wartke had the idea of making a humorous rap-like song and video based on the tongue twister and wrote the lyrics, [15] while Fisher created the music. [ 2 ] [ 16 ] [ 17 ] Wartke often makes comedic songs from German tongue twisters, [ 15 ] which he says he frequently discovers on speech therapy websites . [ 17 ]
Kaomoji on a Japanese NTT Docomo mobile phone A Kaomoji painting in Japan. Kaomoji was invented in the 1980s as a way of portraying facial expressions using text characters in Japan. It was independent of the emoticon movement started by Scott Fahlman in the United States in the same decade. Kaomojis are most commonly used as emoticons or ...
The emoticon uwu is known to date back as far as April 11, 2000, when it was used by furry artist Ghislain Deslierres in a post on the furry art site VCL (Vixen Controlled Library). [9]
Japanese music distributor Exit Tunes gained the rights from the original Caramell producers, Remixed Records, to distribute the sped-up version of the original song in Asia, releasing first an album in April 2008 called Uma Uma Dekiru Trance wo Tsukutte Mita which included "Caramelldansen" (named "U-u-uma uma" (Speedycake Remix)) and other popular meme songs at the time.
"Free & Easy" was written by Hamasaki and produced by CREA along with DAI. In the director notes for Rainbow, Hamasaki explained that the song was inspired by an actual magazine photo shoot with Free & Easy magazine. The lyrics speak of self-empowerment and freedom. [1] Hamasaki explained: "In 'Free & Easy', I wrote what I am feeling at the moment.
Taki's original version of the song uses E♯ on the second bar, but the modern version usually uses E probably because the original version did not fit the traditional Japanese music. Japanese tenor singer Yoshie Fujiwara put his singing of the song on a record in 1925. He was the first Japanese singer to popularize the song throughout the ...