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Mac Tonight is a character that was used in marketing for McDonald's restaurants during the late 1980s. Known for his crescent moon head, sunglasses and piano-playing, the character played the song "Mack the Knife", which was made famous in the United States by Bobby Darin.
The restaurant opened on October 8, 1990, in Shenzhen's special economic zone. The South China Morning Post reported that on its opening day, the unique McDonald's received over 40,000 customers ...
Rip Off is a multidirectional shooter with black and white vector graphics written by Tim Skelly and released as an arcade video game by Cinematronics in 1980. It was the first shooter with cooperative gameplay [1] and an early game to exhibit flocking behavior. A port for the Vectrex was published in 1982.
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That's McDonald's...and then some (2009–present) (this phrase was voted #2 most irritating piece of British advertising likely to deter custom after the Moonpig.com cards jingle in an independent March 9 survey by RM) That's McDonald's...but cozy (Used for the Winter Menu in 2009) That's McDonald's...with Yee-Hah!
AP. By the late 1960s, McDonald's had ditched the two-arch design, with the golden arches appearing instead on signs. This is the era in which Ray Kroc had taken over the business and was swiftly ...
The negative comments aimed at McDonald's were the latest in what is known as "review bombing," where an establishment is hit with a litany of bad reviews based on a political view or an ...
Orange artifact color, generated from white and black pixels, on the TRS-80 Color Computer Example of artwork created with the intent of having individual pixel values horizontally averaged over composite video. Composite artifact colors is a technique commonly used to address several graphic modes of some 1970s and 1980s home computers.