I only caught snippets of Moonbeam City because I no longer pay for cable, but Rob Lowe was actually perfect for the role too when you consider his history with sex, drugs, and the 80s.
I have a cocktail for you today. It's like combining spinache pancakes and mincemeat sauce and then adding some garlic. The idea is this: put these two songs to play on background and then start watching the final one which is a game video. It's even better if you actually have the game and can play it with the two songs looping on background but you'll get the gist of it like this. And the game
what about Country Rap? Basically if there is a fusion of country + some other genre. Shit even death Country is a thing (I don't think it a big thing).
This one is subtitled. And some of the groups do songs completely in English (and korean and occasionally japanese)
I blame the gateway to k-pop song in the Tower of God anime (it's the opening song). it's crazy how large some of these groups are. Like in america most music groups/bands seem to only be 3-5 people. But the k-pop groups are 6 or more. I think the largest one right now has 21 members.
But has the Red Army Choir been used as a weapon against another country? South Korea does use K-pop as a weapon at the Korean Demilitarized Zone and blare it at the North Koreans. https://theoutline.com/post/4269/k-...rth-korea-demilitarized-zone?zd=1&zi=ocqx3gmx
When our forces recaptured Viipuri in 1941 the Soviets had placed a ton of radio frequency detonated mines all over the city. The national broadcasting borrowed the army a mobile transmitter car that was sent to the city to play 24/7 of Säkkijärven Polkka-song which being a local high power transmission jammed all the mine frequencies and prevented the mines from being activated. The endless music broadcast continued all the way up until 1944 evacuation of the city and there was no need to find the mines or to be able to clear them out. Here's the song if you're interested. Anyone in the region could listen to this song 24/7 on the given frequency from their radias while the jamming operation endured. It's actually a really good polka song This could very well be the earliest and longest one-song marathon. Another more popularly known Finnish polka song, 'Ieva's polka': Ieva's polka is essentially a polka about Ieva's mom who doesn't quite know what her precious girl is up to with this certain boy who's "giving it to her wide and wide" and so... and it ends with the boy confronting Ieva's mom and saying she can piss off and that he's not giving her up