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The orange girl is the oldest, who is the matriarch of the group that is in denial about her husband cheating on her. The red girl is insecure about her looks, and she is the youngest of the group. The blue girl is a beauty, and she doesn't have any friends due to her vanity. The green girl is slutty, and the yellow girl is loud and brass.
RDGLDGRN (disemvoweling of Red Gold Green) is an American band based out of Reston, Virginia, a suburb of Washington, D.C. [1] Formed in 2011, the band recorded their debut album at Sound City Studios in 2012 with producer Kevin Augunas and engineer Clif Norrell.
(with tolerance bands Gold, Silver or None) Better Be Right Or Your Great Big Plan Goes Wrong - Go Start Now! Black Beetles Running Over Your Garden Bring Very Grey Weather. Bad Booze Rots Our Young Guts But Vodka Goes Well – get some now. [2] Bad Boys Run Over Yellow Gardenias Behind Victory Garden Walls. [3]
Run with the Pack is the third studio album by English supergroup Bad Company.It was released on 30 January 1976, by Island Records. [5] The album was recorded in France using the Rolling Stones Mobile Truck in September 1975 with engineer Ron Nevison, and mixed in Los Angeles by Eddie Kramer.
"Karma Chameleon" is a song by English band Culture Club, featured on the group's 1983 album Colour by Numbers. The single was released in the United Kingdom in September 1983 [8] and became the second Culture Club single to reach the top of the UK singles chart, after "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me".
ROYGBIV is an acronym for the sequence of hues commonly described as making up a rainbow: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. When making an artificial rainbow, glass prism is used, but the colors of "ROY-G-BIV" are inverted to VIB-G-YOR".
Image credits: Frazer Harrison / Getty #5 Willow Smith. The 24-year-old bedazzled the red carpet in a shimmery bra and matching short bottoms. She paired it off with a black maxi blazer that ...
The first four notes of the song thus formed a major chord, do-mi-so-do (red-yellow-green-red), a playful variant on the exercise of singing scales, similar to the Rodgers and Hammerstein song "Do-Re-Mi" from The Sound of Music. The Shermans thus compare colors to musical notes, stating in the lyric that "Color has its harmony".