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The video begins by panning down a long hallway being vacuumed by one person but is otherwise deserted before entering a room in the building in which both doors are open. In the room the video shows a woman in a bikini in an apartment looking in the mirror with Fred Durst watching her. Then she turns around and opens her mouth and spits out a ...
Closer (music video) Closer (Nine Inch Nails song) Cocoon (Björk song) Columbus (Mrs. Green Apple song) Coma White; Come Undone (Robbie Williams song) Confetti (Little Mix song) Nick Conrad; Criminal (Britney Spears song) Cry Me a River (Justin Timberlake song)
The total cost was to be £50 million, with a further £150 million for the Warm Front Scheme. [1] To qualify, one had to live in England and have a working G-rated boiler. Successful applicants received a voucher for £400 off the price of either a modern A-rated boiler or a renewable heating system (such as a biomass boiler, heat pump or ...
Supershow (later with the subtitle "The Last Great Jam of the 60's!") is a 1969 music documentary film directed by John Crome and produced by Tom Parkinson. [1] Tom Keylock, the Rolling Stones road manager was another figure pivotal in the production of the show.
A 2010 European survey conducted by the digital broadcaster Music Choice, interviewing over 11,000 participants, rated the decade rather low, with only 19% declaring it the best tune decade in the last 50 years, [80] while participants of an American land line survey rated the 1960s a bit higher, with 26% declaring it as best decade in music.
(also known as Pop Go The 60s! ) [ 1 ] was a one-off, 75-minute TV special originally broadcast in colour on 31 December 1969, [ 2 ] to celebrate the major pop hits of the 1960s. [ 3 ] ( Not to be confused with the 2007 BBC series of the same name and on the same subject).
The clip opens with Chris Kattan, who appeared in the sketch and performed on SNL from 1996 to 2003, discussing Ferrell's exposed belly. "It's hard to be serious when you see that stomach," he ...
D-TV is a music video television series produced by Charles Braverman [1] and edited by Ted Herrmann. Premiering on May 5, 1984 on the Disney Channel, [2] the series combined both classic and contemporary popular music with various footage of vintage animated shorts and feature films from The Walt Disney Company, created out of the trend of music videos on cable channel MTV, which inspired the ...