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unusual facts about Beep!!/Sunshine Sunshine


Beep!!/Sunshine Sunshine

As part of the involvement with KDDI's "Meet the Music" campaign, Superfly would have performed "Sunshine Sunshine" at the Okinawa Namura Hall in Naha, Okinawa Prefecture, on March 20, with the performance broadcast live over FM52 radio stations Tokyo FM, J-Wave, and FM Okinawa.


Beep the Meep

Beep first appeared in the comic strip Doctor Who and the Star Beast, written by Pat Mills and John Wagner and drawn by Dave Gibbons, which ran in issues #19-#26 of Doctor Who Weekly.

Beep! Beep! Back Up the Truck

Back up the Truck is a Dutch record label based in Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands.

Casio F-105W

The watch's display shows the day of the week, day of the month, hour, minute, seconds, and the signs for PM (or 24-hour clock), alarm signal, and hourly signal (double beep on the hour).

InteracTV

InteracTV (playout) is a television playout system from Beep Telecommunications and Computing Ltd., Hungary

Jerry Jacoby

His first race was in the 1978 Tampa Bay Race, where he rented one of current US Champion Joel Halpern's 38' Cobra's (named 'Beep Beep').

Joseph Santoliquito

In 2006, he was nominated for an Emmy Award for a special project piece for ESPN.com called "Love at First Beep," about blind baseball.

Piep Piep

Piep Piep (Beep Beep) is the fifth hit single released by Schnuffel, in 8 October 2009 by Sony BMG Germany (Sony BMG).

Prelude to History

The album saw minor success with a peak position of number 44 on the Germany albums chart, and spawned two moderately successful singles with double A-side "Walking on Sunshine/Call Me, Beep Me", and a remake of The Contours' "Do You Love Me".

Ralph Garr

He became so popular with fans in Atlanta that the Braves negotiated exclusive big-league baseball rights with Warner Bros. Cartoons to use animated scenes of the Looney Tunes character Road Runner on the scoreboard, while the calliope erected behind right field went "beep-beep" like the cartoon character every time Garr reached first base.

Sega Meganet

Positive coverage from magazines Famitsu and Beep! helped to establish a following, but Sega only managed to ship 400,000 units in the first year.


see also