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THOR-50M & THOR-5F Crash Test Dummies. THOR is an advanced crash test dummy designed to expand the Hybrid-III test dummy capabilities in assessing frontal impacts. THOR-50M, the mid-size male, was created to improve human-like anthropometry and increase the instrumentation for mitigating injury. [28]
"Mmm Mmm Mmm Mmm" is a song by Canadian rock band Crash Test Dummies, and written by its singer Brad Roberts. It was released in October 1993 by Arista and BMG as the band's lead single from their second album, God Shuffled His Feet (1993). The accompanying music video was directed by Dale Heslip.
The first recorded use of cadaver crash test dummies was performed by Lawrence Patrick, in the 1930s, after using his own body, and of his students, to test the limits of the human body. His first cadaver use was when he tossed a cadaver down an elevator shaft.
This to date is the band's best selling and most popular album, bringing an international audience and selling over six million copies. The Crash Test Dummies were nominated for three Grammy Awards in 1994. The group was nominated for eleven other Junos from 1992 to 2000.
"Mmm Mmm Mmm Mmm" Crash Test Dummies: 1993: A car crash turned a kid's hair "from black into bright white" because "the cars had smashed so hard." "Motorcrash" The Sugarcubes: 1988: From the album Life's Too Good "Motorist" Jawbox: 1994 [4] "Mr. Ambulance Driver" The Flaming Lips: 2006: From the album At War With the Mystics.
It's official. The crash dummies are joining the slippers from the Wizard of Oz in the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History's collection. The Department of Transportation and the ...
Moments later, the footage goes black, you hear crash noises, and then the video comes back into focus. You can hear (very quietly), a woman trying to talk to the men, telling them that an ...
Mmm, Mmm, Mmm, Mmm → Mmm Mmm Mmm Mmm. The latter (without commas) is how it is given on the Crash Test Dummies website, and it seems to be the more common use. Jonathunder 15:49, 2005 Apr 2 (UTC) Also, the version without commas appears to be where the article was originally, and most wikilinks still go there. Jonathunder 15:56, 2005 Apr 2 (UTC)