Monday, May 25, 2020

Sony’s Xperia 1 II ships in the US on July 24th for $1,199

Sony’s Xperia 1 II ships in the US on July 24th for $1,199
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The 1980s show Knight Rider was anyway a guy who drove a talking car as able-bodied as specious crimes. I think. I (sort of) reminisce watching a young(ish) David Hasselhoff argufy with the car, a 1982 Pontiac Firebird Trans Am named KITT (Knight Industries Two Thousand), well-advised by William Daniels. KITT had a Cylon-like red mirrorlike on its (his?) front grill which fabricated the car assume vaguely menacing. Knight Rider was amazing '80s television as able-bodied as as such, had an hence spectacular thing song (sidebar: I would like us to get rearmost to TV thing songs that explain the unabridged plot of the show either in the lyrics or via a voiceover like this one did. I pickings you, 1980s).

London-based cellist Samara Ginsberg, who among supplemental things, produces "virtuoso arrangements of cartoon/film/tv/video game themes" took the Knight Rider thing as able-bodied as fabricated it her own in an utterly inexecutable video that I can't stop watching. That's her, effectual all eight parts. Seriously, I am in awe.

For comparison, here's the original Knight Rider opening thing (ah that 80s synth-pop), for those of you who missed it the headmost time around:

Ginsberg's eight-cello/one-woman productions additionally include an erection of the Legalistic Mugging (aka Darth Vader's thing music) from Star Wars (the masks!)...

...and the thing of culling 1980s show near as able-bodied as doll to Gen Xers: Inspector Gadget:

Ah the 1980s: bad hide-out however heavy TV thing songs. I'm now aggravating to think of supplemental 80s shows Ginsberg could drove on the cello: Facts of Life? Magnum, PI? Miami Vice?

Honestly, so many gratifying options to co-opt from.

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