From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9950 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Friday, October 21 2022 Volume 14 : Number 9950 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Get.WiFi.anywhere..anytime. ["Portable WiFi" ] Who said smoking has to be unhealthy? ["Anti Tar" Subject: Get.WiFi.anywhere..anytime. Get.WiFi.anywhere..anytime. http://cvsrouter.ltd/iLfj63ikJoT1MmXu6KbvPluDWnGg_V-DD6dp3RovxIJBwmafrw http://cvsrouter.ltd/sKDC0BAbkMsu2Z7_CXP8hjR3pjebaShKyS6Xbc4vEV49f64IKQ Lucy Shanker, in a review of Hot Pink, argued that "Streets" presents Doja Cat "in her most serious form". For Lakin Starling of Pitchfork, the track fell under the "ultra-soft and chill" side of the album. Shanker hailed "Streets" as one of Hot Pink's best songs and cited how it demonstrated Doja Cat's musical versatility: "[in the previous songs, she] sounds great, but just as you settle into hearing her in that manner, she switches it up again." Starling shared a similar opinion about this versatility, but wrote that Doja Cat ran the risk of having listeners mistake her for another artist due to Hot Pink's use of several musical styles. Nonetheless, Starling praised Doja Cat's slow and raspy voice which was present in tracks like "Streets", believing that such vocal performances constituted one of the album's clearest. In an analysis of "Streets", Aaron Williams of Uproxx opined that Doja Cat's reaction to its growing popularity was an example of how to properly handle fame online. He wrote that she can adapt to her audience's interests and activities, consciously capitalizing on the Internet trends that her fans create and letting them determine which songs she should promote as new singles. Williams described this behavior as "rid the changing tides" whenever any of her old releases eventually go viral. Similarly, staff writers at Billboard believed that the track's gradual rise to fame de ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 21 Oct 2022 11:11:43 +0200 From: "Anti Tar" Subject: Who said smoking has to be unhealthy? Who said smoking has to be unhealthy? http://statefarms.shop/pRSFlsY5gK8XRy5M863WZHBQCJRZ8Rzrm7XTAtoOJYsvR9S-gQ http://statefarms.shop/Uixg3kmCUpiL836ekuNG4PtOzKkfVMLxtC-LCVV79LL6p_Ddlw ot Pink, the album in which "Streets" appears, was released on November 7, 2019. Initially, the song was not intended to be sent to radio stations as a single. Although the senior staff in RCA Records considered it a highlight of the album, they did not think "Streets" would gain a similar level of recognition as "Say So", "Like That", or "Juicy". Speaking on behalf of the label in an interview with Billboard, chief operating officer John Fleckenstein thought that he and the others had "moved on" from Hot Pink with the amount of singles the album produced. In the beginning of 2021, around 15 months after its initial release, the track experienced a surge in popularity on TikTok. There, user Giulia Di Nicolantonio created a mashup of "Streets" and the 1959 Paul Anka song "Put Your Head on My Shoulder". The mashup became the soundtrack for the "Silhouette Challenge", an online video trend. Participants of the challenge would pose and dance to the rhythm of the two songs; Anka's part played first. Once "Put Your Head on My Shoulder" ended and the beat dropped to signal the beginning of "Streets", TikTok users would then show themselves covered in red lighting, backlit to give the impression of a silhouette. The Silhouette Challenge went viral. Consequently, it helped to propel "Streets" up the Billboard Hot 100 and Spotify Top 200 charts. Within one month, the mashup had appeared in over 300,000 vid ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 21 Oct 2022 04:16:27 -0400 From: "CVS Shopper Gift Opportunity" Subject: ONLY 1 DAY LEFT to avail this DEAL! ONLY 1 DAY LEFT to avail this DEAL! http://startsurvey.rest/SaNjPiOATkESo1GjFgzLLWYUKGy1WGbMO8x9oDl-2b-VF7rgew http://startsurvey.rest/rkhosF-6IQKJlltuYHmWUoqav29YqsDJi_SsOCWg06RI82KxcQ leased her debut studio album Amala in March 2018, four years after the viral success of her first single, "So High". The album received little media coverage. Meanwhile, in August of the same year, she self-published a music video for "Mooo!", a novelty song that incorporated elements of Generation Z humor and meme culture. Achieving unanticipated popularity on several social media platforms, it bolstered Doja Cat's rise to mainstream fame. This prompted her to issue and promote a deluxe edition of Amala. She included "Mooo!" in its tracklist, along with the single "Tia Tamera", featuring the rapper Rico Nasty, as well as the song "Juicy". A remix of "Juicy", with a guest appearance from the rapper Tyga, served as the lead single for Doja Cat's next album, Hot Pink (2019). Commercially successful, the single became her first to reach the US Billboard Hot 100. Furthermore, it went viral on the video-hosting application TikTok, where several dance challenge clips used it as background music. During 2019, Doja Cat released three more singles in promotion of Hot Pink: "Bottom Bitch", "Rules", and "Cyber Sex". By September 2021, "Rules" and "Cyber Sex" had appeared in 64,200 and 171,400 TikTok videos, respectively. TikTok's users contributed to the popularity of two more tracks from Hot Pink. One of these is "Say So", which topped the Billboard Hot 100 and earned Doja Cat her first number one on the chart. The other song, "Like That", received a platinum certification from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). Pitchfork writer Cat Zhang believed that the TikTok-driven successes of "Say So" and "Like That" demonstrated that Doja Cat had an "unimpeachable ... reign" over the application. Aliya Chaudhry of Slate argued that TikTok users' propensity of making songs go viral b often due to an Inte ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 21 Oct 2022 07:32:49 -0400 From: "Apple Shopper Gift Card Chance" Subject: Shopper, You can qualify to get a $100 Apple gift card! Shopper, You can qualify to get a $100 Apple gift card! http://applegut.email/Y5d0Ch0ykT46urj6FyrRus4FBCN8ewsPmpkdZs2KsV_hnr2W9w http://applegut.email/JEU97AY4PCyKhdg1Iye2TuQ0c5x1Adlq7XrDMel66J0g4sH2-A A music video for "Streets", directed by Christian Breslauer, premiered via YouTube on March 9, 2021. Its release happened as Doja Cat was preparing to promote her then-upcoming third studio album, Planet Her. Jackson Langford of NME and Halle Kiefer of Vulture observed multiple tonally dark and "twisted" scenes present in the video, whereas Jessica McKinney of Complex used the word "sexy" to describe the scenes. Because it utilizes a combination of erotic and horror elements, Rolling Stone's Claire Shaffer summarized the music video as a "sultry ... horror-fantasy". The video begins with a shot of a male driver, played by Kofi Siriboe. While inside a cab on a heavily congested street, he notices Doja Cat posing as a mannequin by a shop window across the sidewalk. Similar to the TikTok mashup, the first few seconds of "Put Your Head on My Shoulder" begin to play. Upon the beat drop, Doja Cat, still in the shop window, performs the Silhouette Challenge. The lights suddenly change to a red color, and the music transitions from "Put Your Head on My Shoulder" to "Streets" as she dances to the beat, seducing the cab driver while doing so. In the next scene, Doja Cat dances on top of a des ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 21 Oct 2022 10:05:04 +0200 From: "Airbnb Feedback" Subject: Shopper, You can qualify to get a $100 Airbnb gift card! Shopper, You can qualify to get a $100 Airbnb gift card! http://statefarms.shop/YgrdJ62w0TShltrHmxmlWjy5MzpYJAy9Xu77O_Iv4GpKa6zfBw http://statefarms.shop/C2wCXhNqL0wnnY-T3IKOkkBQuztqzbwymF8Ag3x8xvorRmLy Streets" is a song by American rapper and singer Doja Cat from her second studio album, Hot Pink (2019). She wrote it with David Sprecher and Lydia Asrat, alongside its producers Dominique and Darius Logan. In "Streets", an R&B ballad with elements of trap music, Doja Cat sings and raps about her desire to return to a former romantic partner. Some critics who reviewed Hot Pink praised the song for demonstrating her versatility as a musical artist. "Streets" became an Internet-driven sleeper hit in early 2021. It gained commercial success after the "Silhouette Challenge", an online challenge in which participants struck poses while illuminated from behind with red lighting, used the song as background music and went viral on TikTok. Reacting to its online popularity, Kemosabe and RCA Records promoted "Streets" to US contemporary hit radio stations on February 16, 2021. With this, the song became Hot Pink's seventh and final single. Assisted primarily by streams and digital sales, "Streets" peaked at number 16 and number 8 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and Global 200 charts, respectively. It received platinum certifications in eight countries. Doja Cat performed "Streets" in three videos posted to YouTube during 2020; she also included it in performances at the 2021 iHeartRadio Music Awards and the ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 20 Oct 2022 11:44:50 +0200 From: "Banking Offer Alert" Subject: 30 seconds to a $90 Offer! 30 seconds to a $90 Offer! http://bankofamerican.today/VjPEnZviz1KBKNGMTSIxe0aWGrCLMhsWpF-qA7TOTKqd0UvK-Q http://bankofamerican.today/ZazOYzzFU5Ls3UjgYUhGOCHVrIbd4hp9tA8WlYUTGDD4XWJsyQ e Nasrid dynasty of Granada had no specific rule of succession, and the sources are silent as to why Yusuf was chosen over Ismail's second son Faraj, who was a year older. There are differing reports of where Yusuf was proclaimed and who selected him. According to the historians L. P. Harvey and Brian Catlos, who follow the report of the Castilian chronicles, the hajib (chamberlain) Abu Nu'aym Ridwan, who was present at Muhammad IV's assassination, rode quickly to the capital Granada, arriving on the same day and, after consultation with Fatima bint al-Ahmar (Ismail's mother, and grandmother of Muhammad and Yusuf), arranged for the declaration of Yusuf as the new sultan. The proclamation took place the next day, 26 August (14 Dhu al-Hijja 733 AH). Another modern historian, Francisco Vidal Castro, writes that the declaration and the oath of allegiance took place in the Muslim camp near Gibraltar instead of in the capital, and that the instigators of the assassination, the Banu Abi al-Ula brothers, were the ones who proclaimed him. Coming to the throne at the age of fifteen, Yusuf was initially treated as a minor and, according to Ibn al-Khatib, his authority was limited to only "choosing the food to eat from his table". His grandmother, Fatima, and the hajib Ridwan became his tutors and exercised some powers of government, together with other ministers. Upon his accession he took the laqab (honorific or regnal name) al-Mu'ayyad billah ("He who is aided by God"). The founder of the dynasty, Muhammad I, had taken a laqab (al-Ghalib billah, "Victor by the grace of God") but the subsequent sultans up to Yusuf ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9950 **********************************************