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Later, in season two's episode "We Can Be Heroes", shows that a prison facility at National City is using the Flash's world's (Earth-1) metahuman-power dampeners to restrain its transhuman prisoners; the technology is later used by Department of Extranormal Operations (DEO) and eventually they align with Earth-1's S.T.A.R. Labs. Human criminals ...
A virtual crash test dummy. A virtual human (or also known as meta human or digital human) [1] is a software fictional character or human being.Virtual humans have been created as tools and artificial companions in simulation, video games, film production, human factors and ergonomic and usability studies in various industries (aerospace, automobile, machinery, furniture etc.), clothing ...
In DC Universe, a metahuman is a character with superpowers. This is a list of metahumans that have appeared in comic book titles published by DC Comics , as well as properties from other media are listed below, with appropriately brief descriptions and accompanying citations.
C. Calculator (character) Captain Atom; Captain Boomerang; Captain Cold; Captain Comet; Snapper Carr; Celsius (character) Centrix; Jesse Chambers; Chase (comics)
On September 28, 1991, only a month after the August Putsch failed, 500,000 (the figure stated in the notes of the original VHS and subsequent DVD release) rock and metal music fans converged in Moscow at Tushino Airfield for the first open-air rock concert, as part of the Monsters of Rock series. The concert was completely free, causing many ...
Australian Made was a festival concert series held during 1986–1987 in the six state capitals of Australia and featured local rock acts Mental as Anything, I'm Talking, The Triffids, The Saints, Divinyls, Models, INXS and even Jimmy Barnes. [1] [2] The series started in Hobart on 26 December 1986 and concluded in Sydney on 26 January 1987 ...
The concert was first broadcast on 8, 9 and 10 July 1983 on NBC's radio network The Source under the title War Is Declared. The broadcast was sponsored by Budweiser and the United States Army, and was distributed to radio stations on two LP records, which included the full concert minus "I Threw A Brick Through A Window" and "A Day Without Me".
"Radio Ga Ga" came to inspire synchronized hand-clapping (this routine, originating from the song's video, was the invention of the video's director, David Mallet). This influenced Queen's appearance at Live Aid , where the 72,000-person crowd at Wembley Stadium would sing loudly and clap their hands in unison.