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| - Take On Me is the sixteenth episode of Season 3 of the Canadian television series, Degrassi: The Next Generation. It originally aired on February 16, 2004 on CTV Television and on June 11, 2004 on The N. The episode was written by story editors Aaron Martin and Sean Carley and directed by Phil Earnshaw. It shares its title with the song by A-ha.
- A song added to the first Mungyodance.
- "Take on Me" is a song by the Norwegian synthpop band a-ha. Written by the band members, the song was produced by Alan Tarney for the group's debut studio album Hunting High and Low. The video features the band in a pencil-sketch animation method called rotoscoping, combined with live action. In "Breaking Out is Hard to Do", Chris Griffin is pulled into the music video at the grocery store and recreates several scenes with Morten Harket singing before escaping.
- "Take on Me" is a synthpop song by the former Norwegian pop band, A-ha. It was played Season Six episode, "Asspen".
- Take on Me – to synthpopowy przebój norweskiego zespołu muzycznego a-ha. Wydany został w roku 1985 i zasadniczo jest to ich najbardziej znany utwór. Jednak był tak dobry, że grupa kontynuowała swoje istnienie bazując niemal wyłącznie na tej jednej piosence.
- "Take On Me" is a song by a-ha {| class="collapsible collapsed" style="width: 100%; text-align: center;"
- Take On Me utilizes extensive rotoscoping. It begins with a young woman, played by actress Bunty Bailey, in a London cafe, reading a comic book about competitive motorcycle racing. While reading, the waitress writes out the bill for her to pay. The winner of the race, played by the band's lead vocalist Morten Harket, winks at the girl from the page. A cartoon hand reaches through the comic book, inviting the girl to enter his animated world. Through a creative effect they both view each other through a mirror which shows them, and the band members, alternately in live action and animated.
- Todd: Hi there. You know, I get a lot of requests to review older music, but I never seem to get the chance. But one thing I do like to do when I'm [clips of "Drive By"...] bitching about Train or [...and "Turn Up the Music"] trolling Chris Brown, is to study one-hit wonders. Yeah, yeah, I know, everyone does. [Promo from VH1's 100 Greatest One Hit Wonders of the 80s] VH1 releases another list every week, something like The Top 100 Awesomely Bad One Hit Wonders of the 90s. But what bothers me is they don't go in deep enough. [Clips of "Tubthumping," "Afternoon Delight," "I'm Too Sexy," "Rock Me Amadeus"] This band formed, they had a hit, they didn't have another, they broke up, and that's all you ever hear.
- "Take on Me" is a song by the Norwegian synthpop band A-ha. Written by the band members, the song was produced by Alan Tarney for the group's debut studio album Hunting High and Low, (1985). The song combines synthpop with a varied instrumentation that includes acoustic guitars, keyboards, and drums.
- "Take On Me" is a song by the Norwegian synthpop band A-ha. Written by the band members, the song was produced by Alan Tarney for the group's debut studio albumHunting High and Low (1985). The song combines synthpop with a varied instrumentation that includes acoustic guitars, keyboards and drums.
- Take on Me is an 18-chapter sex-comedy manga written and illustrated by Takamura Sessyu; collected in two volumes, following a fairly loose chronology. The story follows a small, skinny high-schooler named Tomonori Tsuda and his sexual adventures with his class's Huge Schoolgirl Hikaru Ohno. After accidentally photographing an upskirt of her, he half-heartedly blackmails her into sex, to which she enthusiastically agrees. Guilty for blackmailing her, he tells her she shouldn't have to have sex with him- only to find out that his blackmail didn't scare her in the first place, and that she was interested in him all along. From that point forward, their relationship progresses personally and sexually in this manga. Along for the ride are Hikaru's older sister (who is apparently 26, but with h
- Take on Me was a video by A-Ha which is a mixture between live action and animation. The animated parts use a large amount of rotoscoping, and attempt to simulate moving pencil sketches. It was directed by Steve Barron and was first released in 1985. The video utilizes reflexivity extensively. It often draws attention to its animated form, with its frequent reversions to live-action imagery. This succeeds in giving the video a very novel aspect, and helps to captivate the audience for the duration of the video.
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