"Like Me" is the official debut single by the American girl group Girlicious. It was released to iTunes on April 22, 2008, a day before the group was formed in the season finale of the reality television show Pussycat Dolls Present: Girlicious. Since Tiffanie's departure, Chrystina Sayers performs her part of the bridge and melismatic vocals.
On iTunes, "Like Me" was released on April 22, 2008 one day prior to The CW's airing of the finale, allowing many fans to find out who won before the finale aired. A 1:30 preview of the song was released on their official website on April 22, 2008. On September 19, 2008 the single was sent to radio in India.
Without being sent to radio or a physical release, the single managed to debut at number two on the US Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles and number seventy on the Pop 100 solely based on digital sales. In addition, during the week of May 1, 2008, "Like Me" made a "Hot Shot Debut" at number four on the Canadian Hot 100 becoming an instant hit in Canada.
Nasti Muzik is the third studio album from American rap artist Khia. The album was released on July 22, 2008 on Thug Misses Entertainment/Big Cat Records. One of the feature producers on the album is DJ Craze, with Gucci Mane and Maceo being the featured guest artists on the album.
"What They Do" was the first single off the album but did not chart but had a successful underground and streets impact. The second single, "Be Your Lady", was produced by Tampa's Push-a-Key Productions.
Goofy (구피) is a K-pop group who achieved minor successes from their albums.
Mouse (Japanese: マウス, Hepburn: Mausu, sometimes typeset as "MØUSE") is a manga series written by Satoru Akahori and drawn by Hiroshi Itaba. It was serialized in the Japanese magazine Young Animal and published by Hakusensha between 1999 and 2004 .
Mouse was adapted into a twelve-episode anime television series written by Hiroyuki Kawasaki, directed by Yorifusa Yamaguchi, and produced by Media Factory and Studio Deen.
In 2005, Hakusensha published a one-volume manga prequel titled Mouse Bakumatsu-den (マウス ~幕末伝~).
For 400 years, there was a family of thieves stealing money and priceless property, particularly those items that were originally illegally stolen. The main motivation is that anything and everything can be stolen, no matter how much they protect that item. And in those years, that thief was only known by one name, Mouse.
In the latest version, a young college art teacher named Muon Sorata is the latest to take up the name of Mouse. He is surrounded by three highly devoted and attractive assistants who help him pull off heists of art museums and landmark towers. The thieves have the power and resources to steal entire buildings and take structures out to sea but never get caught. Mouse is also known for not abandoning those who serve him, even if it means his capture.
A computer mouse is a pointing device (hand control) that detects two-dimensional motion relative to a surface. This motion is typically translated into the motion of a pointer on a display, which allows for a fine control of the graphical user interface.
Physically, a mouse consists of an object held in one's hand, with one or more buttons. Mice often also feature other elements, such as touch surfaces and "wheels", which enable additional control and dimensional input.
The earliest known publication of the term mouse as a computer pointing device is in Bill English's 1965 publication "Computer-Aided Display Control".
The online Oxford Dictionaries entry for mouse states the plural for the small rodent is mice, while the plural for the small computer connected device is either mice or mouses. The dictionary's usage section states that the more common plural is mice and claims the first recorded use of the plural is mice (though it cites a 1984 use of mice when there were actually several earlier ones, such as J. C. R. Licklider's "The Computer as a Communication Device" of 1968). According to the fifth edition of The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language the plural can be either "mice" or "mouses".
Sgt. Savage and his Screaming Eagles is the name of a short-lived line of G.I. Joe, the military-themed toys by Hasbro. The main character is an imposing "Hard charger from the greatest generation" as depicted in his various filecards. Survivor of Omaha Beach and an infantry commander renowned for his skill, who after being frozen for over 50 years is resurrected and found out that he was subject of experiments made by the enemy. Now in the present, he possesses incredible levels of physical strength and enhanced reflexes. Devoted to destroying a "recently created" enemy team for the series called I.R.O.N. Army (International Robotic Operations Network) and its leader, General Blitz, Savage now joins forces with the G.I. Joe Team.
The toyline is notorious for the way Hasbro eliminated the old O-ring hip system that allowed a figure to sustain the legs and provided the figure's hip articulation point, replaced by a simpler vessel for a twist peg inside the legs' frame. It is even more noticeable that the new scale used for the whole line is 4.5" instead of the classical 3.75".
By Ruan O'Lochlainn
NOW YOU CAN COUNT ON ME,
I'LL BE THERE YOU SEE,
ON THE STAGE OF THE CARNEGIE HALL.
WHEN THE HOUSE LIGHTS GO DOWN,
THAT'S WHEN I'LL COME ON,
'CAUSE I'M A MOUSE AND I'M REALLY QUITE SMALL.
'CAUSE A MOUSE LIKE ME BELONGS TO THE WORLD,
AND THE WORLD IS A GREAT PLACE TO BE.
AND A MOUSE LIKE ME JUST SINGS FOR THE WORLD
THAT GOES ROUND AND ROUND FOR FREE.
YOU CAN COUNT ON ME,
I'LL BE THERE YOU'LL SEE,
I'LL BE THERE WHEN YOU NEED A FRIEND.
WHEN YOU'RE FEELING DOWN,
THAT'S WHEN I'LL BE YOUR CLOWN,
AND WE'LL SING OUR SONGS TO THE END.
'CAUSE A MOUSE LIKE ME BELONGS TO THE WORLD,
AND THE WORLD IS A GREAT PLACE TO BE.
AND A MOUSE LIKE ME JUST SINGS FOR THE WORLD
THAT GOES ROUND AND ROUND FOR FREE.
A MOUSE LIKE ME BELONGS TO THE WORLD,
AND THE WORLD IS A GREAT PLACE TO BE.
AND A MOUSE LIKE ME JUST SINGS FOR THE WORLD
THAT GOES ROUND AND ROUND FOR FREE.
A MOUSE LIKE ME BELONGS TO THE WORLD,
AND THE WORLD IS A GREAT PLACE TO BE.
AND A MOUSE LIKE ME JUST SINGS FOR THE WORLD
THAT GOES ROUND AND ROUND FOR FREE.
A MOUSE LIKE ME BELONGS TO THE WORLD,
AND THE WORLD IS A GREAT PLACE TO BE.
AND A MOUSE LIKE ME JUST SINGS FOR THE WORLD
THAT GOES ROUND AND ROUND FOR FREE.