Saturday, April 17, 2021

Nadia: Anywhere Can Happen

  1. "When I was a boy of 14, my father was so ignorant I could hardly stand to have the old man around. But when I got to be 21, I was astonished at how much he had learned in seven years." 
  2. - Mark Twain

  • Happy 21st birthday! Our wish for you is that your future is filled with supportive family, soulful friends, precious memories, and happiness in all you do.

 This party ๐ŸŽ‰ ๐ŸŽˆ ๐ŸŽŠ on Saturday is a special one indeed, where you are given the key that unlocks the door to your future ...


The multicultural world commend all the people who are able to remember their 21st birthday and salute those who cannot.

In 2000 neither YouTube nor Instagram existed and internet explorer was the most popular web browser

Study shows that people born in 2000 are the smartest people on earth 
 

Summer Olympic were held in Homebush not far from Winston Hills

Top song in 2000 was Joe - I wanna know


The name Nadia means "hope" in many Slavic languages, e.g. Ukrainian Nadiya (ะะฐะดั–ั, accent on the i), Belarusian Nadzeya (ะะฐะดะทะตั, accent on the e), and Old Polish Nadzieja, all of which are derived from Old East Slavic. ...

Pronounced Nad-Ya, the girl’s name is widespread with origins in Bulgarian and Russian. In Arabic it means tender and delicate. It is derived from the name Nadawhich means “dew”.

Nadia Turns 21 While Spotify Turns 15 — It Revolutionized The Music Business

How completely has streaming transformed the music world? The platform rose from 7% of the U.S. market in 2010 to a whopping 83% by the end of 2020 — and recorded-music revenues saw their fifth consecutive year of growth, topping $12.2 billion, per the RIAA. It’s no understatement to say that streaming saved the record- ed-music business, and that global market leader Spotify led the charge toward the stability and growth that the industry is enjoy- ing today. – Variety

Anywhere Can Happen


Sure, there’s the big budget superhero & action films, but the falling cost and increasing availability of really good motion graphics tools also enables a sort of everyday surrealism that’s on display in this short video by Fernando Livschitz. (via colossal)


The Zemo Cut


Marvel’s newest TV series, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, contained a scene in the third episode that featured a tantalizingly short glimpse of erstwhile villain Zemo dancing awkwardly in a nightclub. Fans clambered for more, and so Marvel released an hour-long video of Zemo dancing, cheekily called “The Zemo Cut”. Tag yourself — I’m the clapping. (For some reason, this reminds me of Mad Men’s Ken Cosgrove dancing to Daft Punk.)