Close Up is synonymous with 'Freshness' that gives a confidence to get close to someone you love. Close Up STP Segment Gel Toothpaste – Alternative to White Toothpaste. Target Group Urban population specially the youth. Positioning Toothpaste that is also a mouthwash for fresh breath. Close Up SWOT Analysis Strengths. The original version was way back on the late 80’s or early 90’s. According to my intensive research (again), the early Closer You and I commercial was starred by Raffy Ladao and Raya Roa. The TV Ad: Close-up Toothpaste. What things were changed: The concept of the commercial.
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Song: Titanium (feat. Sia) – Nothing But the Beat
Artist: David Guetta featuring Sia Album: Nothing But the Beat – David Guetta Download:
You guys, I am so excited to write about this Closeup commercial so a big, giant, THANK YOU, to our loyal reader Adi who wanted to know what the song is and placed a request via our awesome request form. Let’s start by talking about the spot itself… actually, let’s not. I mean it’s two people dancing on a rooftop and being excited that they can get so close to each other thanks to their toothpaste which did not leave them with nasty stank breath. Does this commercial remind anyone else of Teen Witch? Speaking of Teen Witch, check out this Buzzfeed interview with the teen witch herself, Robin Lively.
The song in this dance-tastic commercial is “Titanium” by David Guetta featuring Sia. This is one of my personal faves from the album, Nothing But the Beat. You can read my previous post where I send my love to David Guetta in this Beats by Dre commercial. I also highly recommend checking his collaboration “Shot Me Down” with Skylar Grey. It is straight up addicting. So do yourself a favor and download the song above, download his albums and stay tuned to all things Guetta by heading to his website, Facebook and Twitter.
Keep these commercial requests coming! Sleuthing makes us happy!
Lyrics
You shout it out But I can’t hear a word you say I’m talking loud not saying much I’m criticized But all your bullets ricochet Shoot me down, but I get up
I’m bulletproof, nothing to lose
Fire away, fire away Ricochet, you take your aim Fire away, fire away
You shoot me down but I won’t fall
I am titanium You shoot me down but I won’t fall I am titanium
Cut me down
But it’s you who’ll have further to fall Ghost town and haunted love Raise your voice, sticks and stones may break my bones I’m talking loud not saying much
I’m bulletproof, nothing to lose
Fire away, fire away Ricochet, you take your aim Fire away, fire away ![]()
You shoot me down but I won’t fall
I am titanium You shoot me down but I won’t fall I am titanium I am titanium I am titanium ![]()
Stone-hard, machine gun
Firing at the ones who run Stone-hard as bulletproof glass
You shoot me down but I won’t fall
I am titanium You shoot me down but I won’t fall I am titanium You shoot me down but I won’t fall I am titanium You shoot me down but I won’t fall I am titanium I am titanium
The Cosby Show, the sitcom that singlehandedly revived the fortunes of the genre and its network, NBC, turns 30 today, having debuted back in 1984. The show was, in many ways, revolutionary; its humor leaned less on story and more on hanging out with a warm, funny family, breaking with years of sitcoms that were heavy on the 'sit' and not so heavy on the 'com.'
But one of the things most worth celebrating about Cosby is its opening credits sequence, which might be the best in television history.This is not an opinion I issue lightly, nor one that you would hear all that often. The low-key premise of the Cosby credits — everybody dances!
— doesn't make for something as instantly memorable as the opening sequences for, say, Gilligan's Island or All in the Family. But where those shows worked overtime to establish premise or character, Cosby's minimalist credits are telling you everything you need to watch the show, purely through visuals.The Cosby credits act as a kind of visual family album.
In every one of the seven basic iterations of them, we first meet Cliff Huxtable, then his wife Clair. They dance together long enough to establish their partnership, before we go through the couple's five children, one at a time, from oldest to youngest. This quickly establishes Cliff's relationships with Sondra, Denise, Theo, Vanessa, and Rudy, before returning to Cliff on his own. (He is the star, after all.)The subtle shifts in the sequence drove home the series' evolution, too.
As the kids got older, they were no longer extensions of their father, dancing while paired with him, and, instead, got solos of their own.
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March 2023
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