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The song is a duet, featuring the Japanese actress Michiko Namiki and the singer Noboru Kirishima and released in January 1946. It is considered the first hit song in Japan after World War II. [citation needed] "Soyokaze" (そよかぜ, Soft breeze) was released on October 11, 1945, and was the first movie produced after World War II in Japan ...
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"Zoot Suit Riot" is a song by the American ska-swing band the Cherry Poppin' Daddies, written by vocalist and frontman Steve Perry for the band's 1997 compilation album of the same name on Mojo Records.
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When Tamaki is shot and his Quirk is temporarily blocked, Kirishima uses his new Red Riot Unbreakable technique to stop the remaining criminal. Fat Gum and the citizens commend Eijiro on a spectacular debut. However, Kirishima recalls his cowardly past and realizes that he has improved since then.
When Tamaki is shot and his Quirk is temporarily blocked, Kirishima uses his new "Red Riot: Unbreakable" technique to take down the criminals. Izuku, Uraraka, Kirishima and Tsuyu Asui learn that Sir Nighteye has organized a meeting with the other Hero Agencies and numerous pro-heroes to discuss the threat posed by Overhaul's Shie Hassaikai clan.
A man coated head-to-toe in wet blue paint was filmed scrawling a victory message across a Los Angeles sidewalk as the city descended into chaos after the Dodgers’ World Series win.
Frank Tellez, a 22-year-old Mexican American man, models a zoot suit while arrested during the Zoot Suit Riots (1943) Pachucos and Pachucas were early Chicano youth who participated in a subculture that fashioned zoot suits. [24] The subculture emerged in El Paso, Texas, in the late 1930s and quickly spread to Los Angeles. [25]