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Now if you're going to teabag, this is how you do it

Farhad2000 says...

>> ^spoco2:
Really, Anime fricken leaves me so cold. People wax on and on and on and on about how it's so damn superior to western animation, but really, so much of it is lazy (a LOT has an awful lot of static image in the frame with barely a mouth moving), outlets for the repression of the Japanese culture.


Really you made that entire conclusion from watching a short segment of the entire film and what you saw on Nickelodeon?

The entire film is centered around animals fighting mans encroaching development on their forest, packaged in this cute way that sometimes borders on the ridiculous for western viewers but is actually highly relevant to Japanese folklore and mythology.

How you watched anime films like Grave of the Fireflies? Perfect Blue? Millennium Actress?

I don't think you explored enough in the genre to make such a statement, its like saying all Hollywood films suck because they are all centered around violence and sex.

FULL LENGTH VIDEO BK - Spongebob Squarepants "Square Butts"

EDD says...

This is off-the-charts awesome. And that's coming from someone who hates Spongebob Squarepants (holy crap I just wrote that name *shivers*) with a thermite-bright passion. I might even have to change my opinion of Nickelodeon.
*promote

Calling All Sci-Fi Geeks - James Cameron's "Avatar"

SNL: Michael Steele is His Own Man

Child's Invention Defies Gravity

Nickelodeon Title themes explained. n-n-n-nn-nn Nickelodeon!

There's a Counter on this Ball

schmawy says...

"Skip-It is a children's toy invented by Victor Petrusek and manufactured by Tiger Electronics. During its initial release in the late-1980s, the Skip-It apparatus became a commercial success through its avid advertisements on daytime Nickelodeon broadcasting as well as other children's programming. The 'Skip-It' apparatus was designed to be affixed to the child's ankle via a small plastic hoop and spun around in a 360 degree rotation while continuously skipped by the user.

During a second production occurring in the early-1990s, the toy was manufactured with a counter on the Skip-It ball; designed to make the number of skips impeccably accurate.

Some Skip-It's have colorful glitter filled and covered plastic decorations that can be slid on and of the make colorful paterns.

There was a model which may have been called skiparoo or skip-a-roo that is from the 60's that was all plastic and had a red bell-shaped end.

There was also a model called the "lemon twist" which was made in the seventies. It was black PVC piping and had a big lemon at the end. It had little rocks inside that made noise as you twisted.

Marshall Swails of Irmo, SC won the 1995 World Skip-It Open at the 1995 Toy Congress in Wolfsburg, Germany. He skipped 300,546 times on his custom glitter filled Skip-It. What was remarkable about this achievement was that Swails was the only sponsored entrat, endorsing both Keds and BIKE. He worse simple white, canvas Keds and a pair of skin tight BIKE bicycle shorts with his name on the side. He did not wear a shirt." -[wikip.]

Diff'rent Strokes - "I will kill your parents, Sam."

Archive of American Television Interview with Don Herbert (Sift Talk Post)

You Can't Do That on Television!! (Intro)

Justin Timberlake/Janet Jackson infamous Super Bowl show

Michael Nesmith - Crusin' with Lucy, Ramona & Sunset Sam

silvercord says...

Son of Bette Nesmith Graham, the inventor of Liquid Paper. Former Monkees member Michael Nesmith, inherited the $50+ million estate of Liquid Paper upon her death. Exploring the world of video production further, he created a television program called Pop Clips for the Nickelodeon cable network. The concept was sold to Time Warner/Amex, who developed it into the MTV network. He was the executive producer for the movie Repo Man.

The Lost World - First In-flight Movie - See Comments

silvercord says...

The Lost World takes away this distinction, being shown in an Imperial Airways flight from London to Paris in April of 1925. It was also shown again when the German Air Service Company premiered it on Feb. 4th, 1926 during a flight over Berlin.

It has been noted that this presentation created a strange sensation: seeing prehistoric monsters running amok in the cabin of a 20th century aircraft. While the set-up was a simple projector and screen, a flying Nickelodeon, it was no doubt better than most in-flight movies we've had to endure since.

Check out the early stop motion. It's been said to be the first used on a feature film.

This is the final scene of the movie.


The information here is from:

http://silentmoviemonsters.tripod.com/TheLostWorld/LW1925.html

Roundhouse Intro

boom says...

a variety show that was one of the shows that were on during snick. nickelodeon's saturday night line up which included ren and stimpy and are you afraid of the dark. i used to watch this show religiously... if only they released this on dvd...

Spock shows low-budget FX



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