banana500 wrote:
It did it.
It really did it.
On 12.21 no less!
Geez, we're like master predictors aren't we.
Take that Mayans.
The Mayans never predicted the world to end... They predicted this...
OPPAN 1 BILLION STYLE!
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Oppa billion style!
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joletole wrote:
Oppa billion style!
http://i.imgur.com/jYAt4.png
4 million views in the last hour?
Barf
*Dies from view syndrome*
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GUYS! It's not oppa gangnam style! It's oppan! the n means is!
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Guys, I don't know if this was already posted, but it is shocking.
If you guys watch the new episode of Phineas and Ferb where they drop a New Years ball from space, they actually dance the Gangnam Style dance.
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one word:
no
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Kidz Bop covered Gangnam Style. :o
http://www.scratch.mit.edu/ext/youtube/?v=Sj-C6JOVoDs
Last edited by kimmy123 (2013-01-19 13:29:46)
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kimmy123 wrote:
Kidz Bop covered Gangnam Style.
http://www.scratch.mit.edu/ext/youtube/?v=gYsTNPn4TBw
DANG.
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kimmy123 wrote:
Kidz Bop covered Gangnam Style.
http://www.scratch.mit.edu/ext/youtube/?v=gYsTNPn4TBw
They soiled the good Gangnam Style song!
SOILED IT! SOILED IT! SOILED IT! SOILED IT! SOILED IT! SOILED IT! SOILED IT!
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TheSupremeOverLord wrote:
It kinda runiened by his whole anti American concert.
epicepicman wrote:
nama wrote:
ImagineIt wrote:
Anyways, why does everyone hate psy?
Perhaps because they don't like his music?
Well, he wrote an anti-American song a couple years ago. People just found that out, and now they hate him.
During a 2002 protest concert against the presence of 37,000 American troops in Korea, PSY took the stage in gold face-paint and, with the crowd egging him on, lifted a miniature "American tank" and smashed it on the ground to massive applause. UPDATE: The performance was inspired by the recent death of two Korean school girls who were run over by an American tank in South Korea. The soldiers driving the tank were acquitted by a US military court.
And then in 2004, a Korean missionary was captured in Iraq by Islamists who demanded that South Korea not send troops to aid America in the war in Iraq. Seoul refused to negotiate and the missionary was beheaded. The result: massive protests throughout Korea against both Muslim extremism and the U.S. military for indirectly bringing this fate upon a Korean missionary.
As part of the protests, PSY and several other popular Korean musicians put on a live performance of a Korean rock band's song "Dear American." When PSY's turn came, he rapped: Kill those [] Yankees who have been torturing Iraqi captives Kill those [] Yankees who ordered them to torture Kill their daughters, mothers, daughters-in-law and fathers Kill them all slowly and painfully
As this particularly incendiary verse made its way to American news outlets, the outrage has grown. Conservative Twitter aggregator Twitchy sums up some of the anti-PSY anger, pondering why his anti-American military past was not discussed during his appearance on Ellen.
Think of all the musicians who've said unseemly things in their art: Ice-T rapped the perspective of killing a police officer years ago in "Cop Killer," but he is now a star actor who portrays a police officer on NBC's Law and Order: SVU. At the time, Ice-T said he was simply rapping from the perspective of another man — telling a story — and not calling for the actual murder of police officers.
On the other hand, Chris Brown and Eminem have rapped about violence against women... and have followed through on it in real life.
But as others have noted, PSY's handling of his newfound global fame has been remarkably gracious. He hasn't thrown up the middle finger and rejected his American popularity because of the Iraq War he rightfully found so deplorable (albeit with highly vitriolic rhetoric).
it's understandable
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ToxicQuillz wrote:
kimmy123 wrote:
Kidz Bop covered Gangnam Style.
http://www.scratch.mit.edu/ext/youtube/?v=gYsTNPn4TBwThey soiled the good Gangnam Style song!
SOILED IT! SOILED IT! SOILED IT! SOILED IT! SOILED IT! SOILED IT! SOILED IT!
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kimmy123 wrote:
Kidz Bop covered Gangnam Style.
http://www.scratch.mit.edu/ext/youtube/?v=gYsTNPn4TBw
oh, dear lord
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Found this in an odd corner of the internet:
ヽ(゜∇゜)ノ Eeeeyyyy sexy laaaaaadyyyy
ヘ( ̄ー ̄ヘ) Op
(ノ ̄ー ̄)ノ Op
(〜 ̄▽ ̄)〜 Op
〜( ̄△ ̄〜) Op
(☞゚∀゚)☞ Oppan Gangnam Style
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kimmy123 wrote:
Kidz Bop covered Gangnam Style.
http://www.scratch.mit.edu/ext/youtube/?v=gYsTNPn4TBw
Glad I'm not American!
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나는 싸이입니다.
(I am PSY)
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officialpsy wrote:
나는 싸이입니다.
(I am PSY)
seems legit
banana500 wrote:
Geez, we're like master predictors aren't we.
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that was a fake ^o^
just like pretty much every other prediction attributed to nosty
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@cartooncreator
jukyter wrote:
TheSupremeOverLord wrote:
It kinda runiened by his whole anti American concert.
epicepicman wrote:
nama wrote:
Perhaps because they don't like his music?Well, he wrote an anti-American song a couple years ago. People just found that out, and now they hate him.
During a 2002 protest concert against the presence of 37,000 American troops in Korea, PSY took the stage in gold face-paint and, with the crowd egging him on, lifted a miniature "American tank" and smashed it on the ground to massive applause. UPDATE: The performance was inspired by the recent death of two Korean school girls who were run over by an American tank in South Korea. The soldiers driving the tank were acquitted by a US military court.
And then in 2004, a Korean missionary was captured in Iraq by Islamists who demanded that South Korea not send troops to aid America in the war in Iraq. Seoul refused to negotiate and the missionary was beheaded. The result: massive protests throughout Korea against both Muslim extremism and the U.S. military for indirectly bringing this fate upon a Korean missionary.
As part of the protests, PSY and several other popular Korean musicians put on a live performance of a Korean rock band's song "Dear American." When PSY's turn came, he rapped: Kill those [] Yankees who have been torturing Iraqi captives Kill those [] Yankees who ordered them to torture Kill their daughters, mothers, daughters-in-law and fathers Kill them all slowly and painfully
As this particularly incendiary verse made its way to American news outlets, the outrage has grown. Conservative Twitter aggregator Twitchy sums up some of the anti-PSY anger, pondering why his anti-American military past was not discussed during his appearance on Ellen.
Think of all the musicians who've said unseemly things in their art: Ice-T rapped the perspective of killing a police officer years ago in "Cop Killer," but he is now a star actor who portrays a police officer on NBC's Law and Order: SVU. At the time, Ice-T said he was simply rapping from the perspective of another man — telling a story — and not calling for the actual murder of police officers.
On the other hand, Chris Brown and Eminem have rapped about violence against women... and have followed through on it in real life.
But as others have noted, PSY's handling of his newfound global fame has been remarkably gracious. He hasn't thrown up the middle finger and rejected his American popularity because of the Iraq War he rightfully found so deplorable (albeit with highly vitriolic rhetoric).it's understandable
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zubblewu wrote:
@cartooncreator
jukyter wrote:
TheSupremeOverLord wrote:
It kinda runiened by his whole anti American concert.
epicepicman wrote:
Well, he wrote an anti-American song a couple years ago. People just found that out, and now they hate him.During a 2002 protest concert against the presence of 37,000 American troops in Korea, PSY took the stage in gold face-paint and, with the crowd egging him on, lifted a miniature "American tank" and smashed it on the ground to massive applause. UPDATE: The performance was inspired by the recent death of two Korean school girls who were run over by an American tank in South Korea. The soldiers driving the tank were acquitted by a US military court.
And then in 2004, a Korean missionary was captured in Iraq by Islamists who demanded that South Korea not send troops to aid America in the war in Iraq. Seoul refused to negotiate and the missionary was beheaded. The result: massive protests throughout Korea against both Muslim extremism and the U.S. military for indirectly bringing this fate upon a Korean missionary.
As part of the protests, PSY and several other popular Korean musicians put on a live performance of a Korean rock band's song "Dear American." When PSY's turn came, he rapped: Kill those [] Yankees who have been torturing Iraqi captives Kill those [] Yankees who ordered them to torture Kill their daughters, mothers, daughters-in-law and fathers Kill them all slowly and painfully
As this particularly incendiary verse made its way to American news outlets, the outrage has grown. Conservative Twitter aggregator Twitchy sums up some of the anti-PSY anger, pondering why his anti-American military past was not discussed during his appearance on Ellen.
Think of all the musicians who've said unseemly things in their art: Ice-T rapped the perspective of killing a police officer years ago in "Cop Killer," but he is now a star actor who portrays a police officer on NBC's Law and Order: SVU. At the time, Ice-T said he was simply rapping from the perspective of another man — telling a story — and not calling for the actual murder of police officers.
On the other hand, Chris Brown and Eminem have rapped about violence against women... and have followed through on it in real life.
But as others have noted, PSY's handling of his newfound global fame has been remarkably gracious. He hasn't thrown up the middle finger and rejected his American popularity because of the Iraq War he rightfully found so deplorable (albeit with highly vitriolic rhetoric).it's understandable
and your point...?
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