Pleasure (Marion Meadows album)

Pleasure is the fifth album by Marion Meadows, released in 1998.

Track listing

  • "January Spring" - 5:33
  • "Get Away" - 5:21
  • "Picture This" - 5:27
  • "Luck Girl" - 5:25
  • "No Other Love" - 5:07
  • "Unbreak My Heart" - 4:47
  • "Gotta Move On" - 5:04
  • "U. K. Underground" - 5:08
  • "A Ce Soir" - 5:00
  • "Child's Play" - 5:18
  • References

    External links

  • Album at Last.fm


  • Pleasure (2013 film)

    Pleasure is a 2013 Swedish short film that won the "Semaine de la Critique" also known as the Canal + Award at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival. Directed by Ninja Thyberg the film tells the story of a girl Marie (played by Jenny Hutton) who agrees to perform a double-anal sex scene in a hard porn video so she will not lose her job. The short film also tells about the darker side of the porn industry. By winning the award the film will be broadcast on Canal + in France.

    References

    External links

  • Pleasure at the Internet Movie Database
  • Pleasure at the Swedish Film Institute Database

  • Pleasure (album)

    Pleasure is the third studio album by the Ohio Players and the second released through the Westbound label.

    History

    Pleasure continues with vocal harmonies more reminiscent of earlier work than what they would do when they moved to Mercury two years later, and would often show jazz tendencies with some of their musical arrangements. The songs are a mixture of radio-friendly material with songs that come off as late night studio jam sessions, such as "Walter's First Trip".

    The song "Funky Worm" was released as a single and went to #1 on the Billboard R&B charts, their biggest hit during their time with Westbound. The song, about a unique worm that enjoyed going in mysterious places, would later be sampled by a number of producers in hip-hop and R&B during the late 80's and early 90's.

    The single and album mixes of "Funky Worm" are slightly different, most notably the opening drum break and the synthesizer solo that represents the sound of the worm. Upon listening to hip-hop and R&B songs that have sampled it, one can detect if they used the single or album version.

    Arabs

    Arabs (/ˈærəbz/; Arabic: عرب, ‘arab) are a major panethnic group whose native language is Arabic, comprising the majority of the Arab world. They primarily inhabit Western Asia, North Africa, and parts of the Horn of Africa. Before the spread of Islam, Arab referred to any of the largely nomadic Semitic tribes inhabiting the northern and central Arabian Peninsula. In modern usage Arab refers to a heterogeneous collection of Arabic-speaking peoples in the Middle East and North Africa. The ties that bind Arabs are linguistic, cultural, and political, and to a lesser extent genetic, with Arabized Arabs displaying genetic admixture from the Arabian peninsula as well as indigenous elements. As such, Arab identity is based on one or more of genealogical, linguistic or cultural grounds, although with competing identities often taking a more prominent role, based on considerations including regional, national, clan, kin, sect, and tribe affiliations and relationships. Not all people who could be considered Arab identify as such. If the Arab panethnicity is regarded as a single population, then it constitutes the world's second largest group of people after the Han Chinese.

    Arabian (video game)

    Arabian (アラビアン) is a platform arcade game created in 1983 by Sun Electronics and published by Atari Inc. The player assumes the role of an adventurous Arabian prince whose goal is to rescue the princess from her palace. During his quest, the prince will sail seas, crawl through caves, and fly magic carpets.

    Ports

    Arabian was converted for home computers as Tales of the Arabian Nights by Interceptor Software in 1984/5 for the Acorn Electron, Amstrad CPC, BBC Micro, Commodore 64 and ZX Spectrum. A Famicom version was developed and released by Sunsoft only in Japan as Super Arabian (スーパーアラビアン). Super Arabian was also re-released in a two-in-one Sony PlayStation game, Memorial Series Sunsoft Vol.2, which also included Ikki.

    References

    External links

  • Memorial Series: SunSoft Vol. 1 webpage
  • Arabian at Arcade History
  • Arabian at the Killer List of Videogames
  • Tales of the Arabian Nights at World of Spectrum
  • Arabian (video game) at Coinop.org

  • Arabian (disambiguation)

    The word Arabian may refer to:

  • politically, all citizens of member countries of the Arab League, whatever their origins, languages and cultures
  • linguistically:
  • Arabian people (Arab peninsula people; not to be ambiguously related to Maghrebis, Levantine and other arab people)
  • Arabian residents of member countries of the Arab League, neighboring countries thereof and the diaspora
  • The etymology comes from Arabah meaning "desert".

    Arabian may also refer to:

  • Arabian, a video game
  • Arabian Business magazine
  • Arabian Desert
  • Arabian horse
  • Arabian mythology
  • Arabian Nights, or One Thousand and One Nights
  • Arabian oryx
  • Arabian Peninsula
  • Arabian Plate
  • Arabian Sea
  • USS Arabian (1896), a United States Navy tug in service from 1918 to 1919
  • See also

  • Arab (disambiguation)
  • Stargate SG-1 (season 10)

    Season ten of Stargate SG-1, an American-Canadian television series, began airing on July 14, 2006 on Sci Fi Channel (United States). The final season of the series concluded after 20 episodes on March 13, 2007 on British Sky One, which overtook the Sci-Fi Channel in mid-season. The series was developed by Brad Wright and Jonathan Glassner. Brad Wright, Robert C. Cooper, Joseph Mallozzi, and Paul Mullie served as executive producers. Season ten regular cast members include Ben Browder, Amanda Tapping, Christopher Judge, Beau Bridges, Claudia Black, and Michael Shanks.

    The season (and the Ori arc of the show) is continued with direct-to-DVD film Stargate: The Ark of Truth.

    Reception

    Will O'Brien of TV Squad thought "Company of Thieves" was, for the most part, a good one, despite a disappointing performance by Rudolf Martin. Jason Van Horn of IGN, however, was less than impressed, suggesting that the episode just wasn't interesting – that the Lucian Alliance was an enemy no one cares about and that Paul Emerson wasn't enough of a character within the show for his death to have had any meaningful impact.

    Podcasts:

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