Featuring the strapline, ‘
Because how we eat today feeds tomorrow,” the Dear Alice slot features a young woman (Alice) hosting an outdoor feast (with strategically placed Chobani products) on farmland that borders a futuristic utopian cityscape with flying wind turbines and robots that pick oranges, and then cuts to the interior of her house where we see a letter from her grandmother passing on the baton (family farm?) and reminding her that ‘
A business is only as good as its people, so treat them well.’
‘We’re more than a Greek yogurt company’
The message Chobani wants viewers to come away with is that
Unistella has a lengthy list of celebrity clients, including, but not limited to, BLACKPINK and Irene Kim. The beloved nail studio based in Seoul, South Korea, just added two members of K-pop group NCT to its star-studded lineup.
In a new edition of his popular vlog series, Johnny s Communication Center, Johnny shared his first-ever experience getting his nails done with Yuta in tow. “During our ‘Work It’ promotions, we were like, ‘Let’s try to get our nails done one day, Johnny revealed before they sat down with their nail artists. “I ve always wanted to get my nails done,” Yuta later revealed after mentioning he likes fancy things. “That s why I adorn myself a lot when I m performing.”
by
Juno Daily’s reviewing prospectors digging deep for this week’s vinyl gold nuggets
SINGLE OF THE WEEK
It’s hard to keep up with Denham Audio right now. The last few years have seen a salvo of killer 12”s splaying across labels like Sneaker Social Club, Frendzone! and WNCL’s Library Tool Kit, while frequent sparring with Borai helped launch the Club Glow series as well as essential drops on Higher Level and E-Beamz. It’s a buoyant time for hypercharged rave music, which seems ironic given the dearth of raves across the globe, but right now there’s a great catharsis in listening to peak time rushers and imagining a crowd losing their collective minds.
50 Famously Misheard and Misunderstood Song Lyrics, Explained
By Madison Troyer, Stacker News
On 1/17/21 at 10:00 AM EST
The word
mondegreen is defined as a misheard word or phrase that makes sense in your head, but is, in fact, incorrect. The term was coined in a November 1954
Harper s Bazaar piece, where the author, Sylvia Wright, recalled a childhood mishearing. According to the author, when she was young her mother would read to her from a book called
Reliques of Ancient Verse. Her favorite poem from the 1765 book went like this: Ye Highland and Ye Lowlands / Oh where have you been? / They have slain the Earl o Moray / And laid him on the green. Wright, however, heard the last line as And Lady Mondegreen.