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#Disruptor Records/Columbia
thelensofyashunews · 4 months
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The Chainsmokers Promise No Hard Feelings On New EP, Out Now
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Today, GRAMMY® Award-winning and chart-topping artist/producer duo The Chainsmokers proudly present their brand new No Hard Feelings EP, out now via DISRUPTOR/Columbia Records. With No Hard Feelings, Alex and Drew made a conscious decision to hyper focus on the dancefloor and leveled up once again with a set of 6 club-ready anthems. Throughout the project, they conjure the high-octane energy of their early days with a keen sense of refinement and experience.
Celebrating the new EP, the guys have released official videos for new tracks “Bad Advice” with Elio, “Tennis Court” and “Green Lights (demo)”, all of which bring them back to the snowy mountain landscape. Plus, a special lyric video for new single “No Shade at Pitti” also arrives today.
The Chainsmokers set the scene for No Hard Feelings with “Addicted” (with Zerb and Ink), which has over 37 Million streams to date and currently sits at #5 on the Dance Airplay chart. They followed with the release of “Friday” with GRAMMY® nominated R&B singer and songwriter Fridayy, which UPROXX said “feels like waking up on a Friday morning and remembering it’s Friday”, and added that “The Chainsmokers still know how to make a banger.”
On the single “No Shade At Pitti,” neon keys chime above the murmur of a warbling bassline and nostalgic verses before a frenetic dancefloor-ready beat takes hold. On the other end of the spectrum, guitars and smoky keys simmer beneath the surface of the buoyant “Bad Advice”, which features ethereal vocals from Canadian pop artist Elio.Glitchy claps and a glistening loop volley across “Tennis Court”, while warm lo-fi electro tones glow through emotionally charged verses on “Green Lights.”
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Welcome to The Chainsmokers’ next era with No Hard Feelings. Stay tuned for more very soon!
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creatiview · 2 years
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[ad_1] People who eat more highly processed foods such as ice cream, fast food and salty snacks could face an increased risk of cancer, especially ovarian cancer and breast cancer, researchers have found. A study of more than 197,000 U.K. adults ages 40 to 69 was published this week by the Lancet, a peer-reviewed medical journal. The authors said this is one of the biggest sample sizes ever used to research the effects on health of ultraprocessed foods. Ultraprocessed foods are items such as soda, sausages, salty snacks and microwavable meals that are produced in a highly industrialized environment. Those foods contain high amounts of sugar, fat and sodium and are low in essential nutrients such as fiber and vitamins.  But the lack of nutrients is not the only issue: In order to prolong their shelf life, highly processed food often contains additives such as flavor enhancers and sweeteners as well as industrial chemicals, some of which are introduced during the production process and some that leach into the food from packaging.  Some of those additives, known as endocrine disruptors, affect the human body’s endocrine or hormonal system, which can lead to obesity and to a higher risk of hormone-sensitive cancers, such as breast and ovarian cancers, said Jeanine Genkinger, associate professor of epidemiology at the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University in New York. Genkinger was not involved in the study.Chemicals in food Phthalates, chemicals that are found in some types of food packaging and some fast-food products, are also a type of endocrine disruptor. “The chemicals get into food mainly through packaging and food handling equipment, like cellophane, paper and paperboard, and plastic in contact with food,” according to the Environmental Defense Fund, a nonprofit environmental advocacy organization. “While used in many consumer products, prescription drugs and medical devices, food is a major source of exposure to phthalates.” Between 2009 and 2012, the participants self-reported their food intake using a “web-based 24-hour recall” conducted five times between 2009 and 2012, and the researchers monitored their health through January 2021. The researchers calculated participants’ consumption of ultraprocessed food as a percentage of their total food intake.  Over the years, the authors observed that every 10-percentage-point increase in consumption of ultraprocessed foods was associated with an increased risk of cancer overall, as well as with higher mortality rates from ovarian cancer and breast cancer.  But not everyone has the same cancer risks, Genkinger said. Lower-income people and people who don’t have access to fresh food are often the most vulnerable. Studies show that lower-income households purchase fewer healthy foods than higher-income households do and also buy more sugary drinks and snacks and fewer vegetables and fiber-rich foods.Food deserts One reason: In the U.S., one in five Black households is located in a “food desert” — an area where it’s difficult to buy affordable or good-quality fresh food — according to a report published by the consulting firm McKinsey & Co.in 2021.  Last year, President Joe Biden spoke about the need to eliminate food deserts, defined as areas — predominantly low- and moderate-income communities — where people have to travel miles to purchase fresh produce and other healthy foods. The White House pledged grant and loan funding to encourage grocery stores to open in these areas. As food prices have been rising — in some cases at a record pace — it has become even more difficult for lower-income households to purchase foods high in nutritional quality, Simone A. French, professor of epidemiology and community Health at the School of Public Health of the University of Minnesota, said in an email to MarketWatch.  And because the higher consumption of processed foods can lead to long-term health issues, Genkinger said, “individuals who are more vulnerable or disadvantaged are going to be more vulnerable.
” But, she noted, “ultraprocessed foods [are] cheaper and easier to prepare.” The Lancet study adds to a growing body of research focused on the effects of eating processed foods on health. One 2022 study concluded that higher consumption of ultraprocessed foods could lead to cognitive decline. The average consumption of ultraprocessed foods among the study’s participants was close to 23% of total food intake. During the follow-up period, 15,921 individuals developed cancer and 4,009 cancer-related deaths occurred.  According to a separate analysis of 99 peer-reviewed studies covering more than 1.3 million people, reported in 2021, ultraprocessed foods made up more than 50% of people’s diets, on average, in both the U.S. and the U.K., far higher than the 23% reported by the U.K. participants in the Lancet survey. [ad_2] Source link
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radiomax · 2 years
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Thursday 1/12/23 9pm ET: Feature LP: Chainsmokers - Sick Boy (2018)
Thursday 1/12/23 9pm ET: Feature LP: Chainsmokers – Sick Boy (2018)
Sick Boy is the second studio album by American DJ and production duo The Chainsmokers. It was released on December 14, 2018, via Disruptor and Columbia Records. The album features collaborations with French DJ Aazar and fellow American DJ NGHTMRE as well as co-production from Sly, Chris Lyon, and Shaun Frank, and writing credits from frequent co-writer Emily Warren, Kate Morgan, Drew Love of…
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beyonde · 7 years
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svtfoe actor!au
a/n : i ship moontoffee but i will write moon!actress and toffee!actor first other svtfoe cast is later btw my actor!river was gay and ofc this au star was his ex-girlfriend 
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name : troy(toffee) leonardo remiel sanchez
korean name : lee yeong-jae(이영재)
age : 45 
races : germany,columbian and italian,canadian,korean
religion : catholic
born :  1977  december 2 on Valencia in spain but raised in  Daejeon on korean
careers : actor - songwriter - music producer - singer coach - singer - model
btw he is singer like backstreet boys or justin timberlake or you can say 20s and he was still in his sing career and his debut debut “boyfriends” album,ofc his hits albums “ btw he dating his co-star from svtfoe it was actress moon and btw his actor debut on “ eyes of dawn” on kdrama series and “smart guys” on disney channel and he continue acting “euphoria” and “star’s vs forces of evil” ,“venom”,”goblin”,”good doctor” and his most hit show was “kingdom” on kdrama netflix series and most hits movies was “parasite” and he is oscar nominated and emmy winner,daesang nominated and  he is currently lives with moon on los angeles, btw he was producer for taylor swift and justin bieber,camila cabelo btw he was songwriter for bts and baekyun,txt,justin bieber and he even sing disney ost btw he was really in good terms with cast of svtfoe and he was grammy nominates and mtv music award winner, he was pretty well-known in global for his character in “eyes of dawn” and “svtfoe” btw he was debut as actor when he was 19 year old and his age when he was debut as singer when he was 15 year old before his acting career that all information btw he was ex-trainee in yg label btw he love creating music or song btw he was a-list celebrity and highest paid artist
label : island record - awesome ent(agents) - sony music publishing - disruptor record 
personality : tough,serious,chaotic and tender,funny, mood swings,caring, kind,mature,patience,calm,protective,flirty,polite,intelligient,lil cocky ,wise,introvert,sarcastic,loyal,lil annoying
intruments : vocal - guitar - piano - saxophone - bass
partner : moon olivia angelica taylor(girlfriend)
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name : moon olivia angelica
age : 27
races : european,british and germany,dutch
religion : christian
born : 1995 november 10 on toronto canada but she raised in Chicago on american
careers : actress - model - film executive producer - songwriter - singer 
label :  Monster Talent Management Inc( agents)-  Columbia Records  -  Polydor Records
btw she was played as moon in svtfoe and her real hair is bright brown and she was singer under columbia record and polydor record and her debut at she was 17 year old as singer under columbia record btw her debut albums “we found love” and her song blew up “closer” in albums “romancitized” , and then her latest albums “and she was producing hits show like “riverdale” and “boy meet world,etc and she was grammy nominates and emmy nominates, she was debut as actor under monster talent management inc when she was 7 year old and she was debut in “mickey mouse club” and until now she was continue acting careers like “anne with e” and “ riverdale,”svtfoe” and etc, she was songwriter for selena gomez,zedd ,rihanna and nicki minaj btw she was a-list celebrity because she was emmy nominates and gold globe winner,grammy nominates,mtv winner that all for the formation btw her and troy realtionship being known as on and off relationship
personality : funny,brave and caring,kind,serious,cunning, patient,cold,introvert,sarcastic,loyal,intelligient,messy,mature,strict
instruments : viola - piano - guitar - vocal
partner : troy(toffee) leonardo remiel sanchez(boyfriend) 
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jenroses · 4 years
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So this is some backstory I wrote a few years back about the apocalypse. Four years later, I think I may have been overly optimistic about how long it would take for things to fall apart. 
~~~  The apocalypse wasn’t fast, and it wasn’t easy. Parts were dramatic and rapid, say, when the United States dissolved into chaos in 2020 and six new nations emerged from the rubble. The Pacific States of America became the progressive destination of choice, between California’s wealth and the Pacific Northwest’s natural bubbles of relative safety between the mountain ranges. Canada followed a few years later into disaster, with French Canada going its own way and British Columbia joining the Pacific States. The continent was re-shaped again by rising sea levels and sinking earth falling into the empty aquifers and the remains of fracking operations. 
The biggest issues early on were in the Confederacy, The Republic of Texas, and the Great Plains Republic. Rampant deregulation combined with widespread corruption resulted in the complete loss of vast areas to poisons both visible and invisible. 
Chaos in North America bred chaos elsewhere. A brief nuclear exchange in 2038 left vast parts of the Middle East, East Asia and the Indian Subcontinent uninhabitable. Washington DC and Moscow were hit, but as neither were particularly politically powerful by that point, the political fallout was less than the actual nuclear fallout of the 8 bombs. The EMPs from strikes in Israel, India, Pakistan, North Korea, China and Tripoli took out communications and governments alike. In the resulting chaos, many nuclear materials were “liberated” and attacks with “dirty” bombs became common in many areas of the world. 
Texas did not fall to bombs or to the poisons or to war, but to the increasingly tight focus of the sun through God’s magnifying glass, with temperatures soaring beyond the capacity of failing machines to compensate. Between the floods, hurricanes, and summer temperatures upwards of 150° F, without a larger federal infrastructure, civilization in the Lone Star quickly stopped working, and those who relied on the grid were forced to flee ever-climbing temperatures. California, being a large and wealthy state and later the cornerstone of the new Pacific Union, managed fairly well at first. Two dams were built to try to protect the Bay and the Sacramento Valley from rising seas, but the Golden Wall fell to sabotage before it could be completed, and Vay-deo dam, as the locals called it, cracked in the Big One, causing one of the largest, most rapid floods in history in what was already a time of great floods. Los Angeles didn’t fall into the Pacific, the Pacific fell into Los Angeles in creeping, inexorable inches, but the heat and drought and weather sent people north long before a large section of the metropolitan area was submerged. A dirty bomb in Hollywood in 2045 sent anyone who was still in the area, north.
The Northeast crumbled under the weight of too many people and not enough resources. The flooding of New York was an afterthought compared to the bombing of Washington, which didn’t do anywhere near as much damage as the civil uprisings of the 2020s. Pockets of well-armed wealth remained, tiny Corporation States which promised survival in exchange for freedom once it was obvious that the federal government was not coming back.
Refugees were everywhere, fleeing the food shortages, the fallout, the rising waters. In 2048, rampant use of greenhouse gasses, combined with ever rising ocean temperatures and acidity combined to cause massive slips of land ice into the ocean in both hemispheres. The seas had already risen more than predicted, but the catastrophic shift of ice from land to sea brought sea level an average of 33 inches higher worldwide. In some places, the net effect was closer to 40 inches. The impact on water circulation was severe, and Europe plunged into an ice age. The surge stopped, even subsided a bit as storms dropped record amounts of moisture into the mountains in a winter that would not quit, but the damage was done, and the lowlands were abandoned. The death toll was unimaginable. 
It was 2050 before things were stable enough for the PSA to do more than triage the daily catastrophes. New technologies had been developed on the fly to deal with immediate problems. Domes and filters to protect from fallout. Desalination to give the mountains near the Bay Area water, and then water reclamation everywhere as people stopped trusting anything that came from the sky. Mechanical pollinators helped keep people fed. Every home had a garden, indoors or out, on a wall if need be where space was limited, shelving systems with tiny twinkling LEDs and recirculating water. 
By then, the birth rate in what had once been the United States had declined from around four million babies per year to four thousand, and of those four thousand children, eighty percent were born early. Fully half of those births were within the PSA.
It was when they realized that the pregnancy rate across the continent was likely close to two million that it became clear that something was fundamentally wrong with humanity’s ability to sustain pregnancy. Individual tragedies became a countrywide fear and then a worldwide terror.
The bees were mostly gone by then, the few remaining hives living in research facilities in Oregon, Washington and British Columbia. 
Animal births faltered and stopped, but by that point the science of meat meant the vast majority of animal protein in the PSA was vat grown, indoors, no brain, no bones, no ethical backlash. Refugees came looking for food, but fewer and fewer children accompanied them. 
Concerted efforts sprang up at universities around the world, but as each fell, their best and brightest converged on the last functioning, tech-capable democracy in the world. 
The internet was no longer reliable enough for worldwide communication due to lack of maintenance of infrastructure and widespread sabotage, but the tech corridor of I5 and the data centers survived, and the PSA sent out drones with food, communication equipment and emergency supplies. Carbohydrates, protein, fats, vitamins and minerals, harvested and reassembled from dumps and compressed into shelf-stable bricks, accompanied durable, simple water purifiers, basic survival supplies, and informational pamphlets - pictorial as fewer and fewer people in the rest of the world knew how to read. 
The earliest iteration was called Project Dove, and the mission was to get as much information about humanity in other parts of the world as possible. Some of the drones were shot down. Some made contact and returned. A few simply vanished without a trace. The birth data that did come back was terrifying. Starvation in many areas was too widespread and rapid for the drops of supplies to make even a dent, but in the places closest to the PSA, they were a lifeline, and not always happily received. They had included information on birth control in the drops, because of the high rate of maternal death in unsuccessful pregnancies. What they did not do was put contraceptives in the food. But despite their adamant statements to the contrary, they could not shake the rumor.
Food Not Bombs, the second iteration of the humanitarian project, became not a nice pacifist organization but the only foreign policy that worked. Nutrient drops from the PSA, sent by drone, happened regularly across all territories that might be able to still threaten the PSA with terrorist attacks, and irregularly anywhere the PSA wanted information.The rhetoric against the PSA across the rest of North America was fierce, and fueled splintered and uncoordinated attacks by civilians, but after the Independent State of Exxon-Mobil was cut off completely from these drops for 12 weeks following their last incursion, no established government made any official attempt to wage war on the PSA.
The last year babies survived past infancy, anywhere in the world that the researchers could contact, was in 2059. 200 children were born within the domes of the PSA and nowhere else, where early doming and fanatic attention to clean food supplies kept the novel endocrine disruptors out longer than in most places. Their parents came from all over the world. However, a terrorist attack by religious zealots caused widespread contamination in the middle of 2059, and no more babies were born after that; though many pregnancies were documented, most failed in the first 30 days, and none survived past 15 weeks. Families with children banded together in several clusters, so that their children could take advantage of the wealth of expertise at the universities. But as the population of young people dwindled, first daycares shut down, then elementary schools, and families tightened their clustering so that the remaining children could be educated together. The Last Generation grew up with the knowledge that either they would figure out how to fix humanity’s problems, or that humanity would end with them.
Rapid transit built in the ‘30s still functioned from Eugene to Vancouver, and Seattle’s industry persisted even when families with children fled south to higher ground and less upheaval. Half of Portland was underwater, but the larger metropolitan area survived with varying levels of liveability. 
The University of Oregon ended up being the last fully functioning school by default, with enough agriculture and infrastructure to make it livable and just enough isolation to make it hard to get to for those without means. It was one of the oldest system of domes on the West Coast. 
It wasn’t invulnerable. The Jefferson Dissent, which began half an hour south of Eugene and ended in the mountains of Northern California, sent occasional raids until wildfires obliterated much of the area in the Great Draught. 
Parts of the school lay in disuse and disrepair, but groups of research scientists had colonized parts of campus that would otherwise have fallen by the wayside. A large team of scientists worked on nanotech and microtech in conjunction with the biology department, modeling tiny machines after viruses, bacteria and insects. 
In Portland and Seattle, competing teams of fertility specialists worked on the problem of the crashing population rate, but it was not until the agricultural specialists in Corvallis pitched in that they started making real progress at extrauterine gestation.
They found the problem quickly, once they understood the magnitude of the issue. Without the political chaos of the 2020s, they might have picked up on it ten or fifteen years earlier, when it was still fixable. But by the time it was determined that complex endocrine disruptors, wind- and water-borne, had spread worldwide in storms and floods and in the food supply, their epigenetic and generational effects were beyond easy remedies. Pregnancies might happen, but more things went wrong. In the war between placenta and endometrium, the endometrium had found a potent ally. Autoimmune disorders were endemic. And the last straw was a new disruptor, one which managed to interfere with the shift to placental support. 
Anyone who became pregnant died where medical support and birth control were inadequate. The resulting demographic shift did not help the political situation. The PSA became a refuge for people with uteruses. More conservative nearby nations screamed about the Godless heathens stealing their women. Within the PSA, gender was seen broadly as a social construct, though there were enough different religious and cultural groups with different ideas that the notions of binary gender were not completely obliterated.  
“God’s punishment,” the religious called the deaths during pregnancy. Science was blamed. Scientists were blamed. The last green places were blamed. In the transformed labs and classrooms of the last universities, frantic efforts were made to counteract the toxins in the environment, to find some way, any way for the human race to survive past the last generation. 
The population aged.
Suicide rates skyrocketed early, and surged even further when the fertility collapse was made known.
Animals started to be born that had been gestated from stored cells in vats, restoring extinct species from scratch, but the human puzzle was a tougher nut to crack. Fetuses could be grown, to a point. A few even made it to scrawny, translucent viability, but the children did not survive long, even with the highest tech support. 
Some changes were made to the tanks, with a regular program of stimulation, vibration, and auditory recordings. And a small cohort of infants were born, to cautious but joyful researchers. But the children did not adapt well, once born, and while they lived, the behavior issues and profoundly antisocial behavior they exhibited pointed to some deep flaw in the underlying gestational program. Babies screamed when held, preferring mechanical soothers. Language development was minimal, with babies averse to unfamiliar voices. Development was stunted and consistently unusual from child to child. They did not form attachments to the people who desperately wanted them.
At first, the researchers thought it was autism, but when autistic adults who specialized in the care of autistic children were brought in, it became clear that something different was going on. 
Brain scans were done which found profound abnormalities in many parts of the brain, abnormalities which were uniform across the cohort. 
As the children got bigger, slowly, they began to lash out, and it became obvious that the extrauterine gestational process was not going to be the answer as it stood.
The resulting scandal was huge, and an ethical oversight committee that had been bypassed on the grounds of emergency was reinstated. Meanwhile, The Babylon Cooperative worked frantically to salvage the human race, as the planet deteriorated around them. 
It became clear that cleaning the Earth would be a much longer-scale process than humanity could survive. The rest of the planets in the solar system were even worse. There was a Mars colony, a desperate, abandoned group of settlers too old to reproduce, the planned resupply missions scrapped when the world fell apart. 
No one wanted to say it, but there was a strong possibility that by the time the fertility problem was solved, there would be no one left to raise the resulting children.
Computing progressed, even in the chaos, in part due to breakthroughs in biosynth. DNA was a compact and complex data storage medium, and its structure could be used and mimicked to create self-replicating devices that stored their complete process in tiny spaces, scavenging what they needed from the materials around them. When the problem of controlling growth was solved, a research team made an excursion to an old dump, dropped a gluey ball of nano- and microtech on top of the trash, pointed a strong light source at the area to be salvaged, and waited.
Nanobugs were developed which could selectively break down molecular bonds. Microbugs were created to analyze, sort, inventory and group raw materials, and when that process was finished, they could then assemble into larger devices that continued the process of refinement and reconstruction. The self-replicating technology meant that a properly programmed bug could be placed on, for example, an old office building, or a pile of rubble, climb to the highest point, and digest it into a thousand more of itself, then consume the spawned bugs and create larger, more complex machines out of the result, eventually creating new structures in place of the old, from materials on site.
The end result was a pile of sugarplastic bubbles filled with raw materials and isolated waste products, which were set aside for more study, and along the edges, new gluey balls for other dumps. The remaining machines waited for further instructions.  
Someone asked if they had to be so sticky, and if they needed to have an artificial light source. “Not in an undomed dump,” the lead scientist said. “Plenty of bright light out there.”
The “genetic” programming was altered, and the next generation looked more like large pillbugs than badly drawn jellyfish. When the researchers built in the ability to power themselves from the waste heat of the molecular breakdown process, they could even work underground.
The raw material distribution included so many rare elements and complex hydrocarbons that as soon as word got out, and a few of the “pilebugs,” as they came to be called, were stolen, whole new resource battles broke out where there was not tight social control.
Control tightened everywhere. 
Biological interfaces with microscopic sensors and transmitters allowed many researchers to streamline their efforts with direct neural-computer wireless interfaces. Gone was the larger worldwide web, but enough had been saved, and the PSA had dedicated much of its resources to maintaining connectivity up and down the coast. Seattle was the hub, with redundant data backup of much of the cloud everywhere they had enough locals and infrastructure to support it. Redundant archives became a cultural obsession of a dying world. A hardcopy repository was started, in case civilization collapsed beyond help and humanity somehow survived.
The pilebug programming was a closely held secret, because of the potential for harm.  Backwards engineering was impossible for those without the Co-op’s resources. 
Within the PSA, the Babylon Cooperative became a dominant power. There were only a few people who truly understood how the bugs worked at a core level. It was clear that the potential applications were huge, but there just weren’t enough people who comprehended them well enough to make use of the tools to their best effect in the available time. Training the remaining young people became the driving goal of the Pacific States. 
As the PSA stabilized, it became clear that the entire population was suffering widespread psychological trauma. Efforts were made to train people to cope with the resulting stresses in productive ways, with varying success. Community beautification efforts were promoted as therapeutic.
Within the research clusters, neurodiversity was seen as an asset. New ways of thinking were prized, quirks and coping mechanisms supported, special interests encouraged. “Think outside the box” became “There is no box. The survival of humanity depends on new ideas.”
Skin-based links to the net abounded, traceries of gold at the temples and key points on the head for those who used it the most, headsets for more casual users. With the development of ever smaller and more powerful transmitters, it became clear that mental states could be influenced, if not controlled, and those without links grew increasingly suspicious of those with. Thus, “old-fashioned” data inputs did not die out, but the speed gains of working with a direct connection were obvious to those in the Co-op.
A wider culture of inclusion—motto, “We need everyone”—made for eclectic neighborhoods around the University, but farther from the research clusters, old tendencies for humans to sort themselves into distrustful subcultures persisted. As the years passed and no children played in the streets, nihilism and social unrest grew. As it became easier to rebuild and more people returned to school to learn about the newest technologies, the University grew, and changed, and became more isolated. Most people who came into the University were there to join the research projects, and only those trained for specific purposes in the larger nation ever left. 
In 2077, the last freshman class, about 80 students, gathered at the University of Oregon. The classes ahead of them were still attending, but what had, in its heyday, been a campus with 20,000 students was now a campus with 1500 researchers, 2000 educators and about 4000 students.
The speed of the population crash showed nowhere more than here. 2% of the student body were freshmen. 6% sophomores. 10% were juniors and 15% were seniors. The rest were grad and community education students of varying ages. There was no tuition. There was also no real salary, but the University, as the seat of power for the Babylon Cooperative, was already self-sufficient enough and powerful enough in the region to trade for whatever was needed. A monetary system still existed, of sorts—the robust local and regional networks also allowed for sophisticated tracking of barter of resources, skills and labor, but the social support networks that had come out of the Fall had matured well where they were allowed to thrive. 
Where the science was tolerated, housing could be grown, and with greenhouses built into the designs, food grown within the housing. Even computing resources could be grown. 
The science was not tolerated widely. Even within the PSA, dissent came and went in waves. Never monolithic, when crisis gave way to chronic, old divides resurfaced. As the population aged and skepticism about possible scientific solutions grew, rumors and rivalries brought political change.  
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aprokopage · 4 years
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The Chainsmokers, Aazar - Siren (Lyric Video)
The Chainsmokers, Aazar – Siren (Lyric Video)
The Chainsmokers & Aazar “Siren” out now: http://smarturl.it/TCSSiren
Amazon Music: http://smarturl.it/TCSSiren/az Apple Music: http://smarturl.it/TCSSiren/applemusic iTunes: http://smarturl.it/TCSSiren/itunes Spotify: http://smarturl.it/TCSSiren/spotify YouTube Music: http://smarturl.it/TCSSiren/youtubemusic
Follow The Chainsmokers: http://www.youtube.com/thechainsmokers http://www.twitter.com/the…
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crank11news-blog · 5 years
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The Chainsmokers's 'World War Joy...Call You Mine': This is we know so far
The Chainsmokers’s ‘World War Joy…Call You Mine’: This is we know so far
31-May-2019: ‘World War Joy…Call You Mine’, single by The Chainsmokers Record Label: Disruptor Records/Columbia. The Chainsmokers’s forty-sixth single was just released on label Disruptor Records/Columbia and can now be streamed on Spotify. The single has no rating on Last.FM, indicating it’s not all that popular (or just to soon to tell). (more…)
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ustribunenews-blog · 5 years
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'World War Joy...Call You Mine' released by The Chainsmokers
‘World War Joy…Call You Mine’ released by The Chainsmokers
31-May-2019: ‘World War Joy…Call You Mine’, single by The Chainsmokers Label: Disruptor Records/Columbia.
The forty-sixth single by The Chainsmokers is titled ‘World War Joy…Call You Mine’ and was just released on label Disruptor Records/Columbia and is now available on Spotify. The single has no rating on Last.FM, indicating it is not too popular or needs some time to get played.
(more…)
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davidbzup · 6 years
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The Chainsmokers - You Owe Me
The Chainsmokers – You Owe Me
The Chainsmokers – You Owe Me
“You Owe Me” Out Now: http://smarturl.it/YouOweMe
Directed by Rory Kramer Pre-Production Producer – Matt Komo
Follow The Chainsmokers: http://www.youtube.com/thechainsmokers http://www.twitter.com/thechainsmokers http://www.facebook.com/thechainsmokers http://www.instagram.com/thechainsmokers http://www.soundcloud.com/thechainsmokers
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saltytronglu-blog · 7 years
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The Chainsmokers & Coldplay - Something Just Like This (Lyric)
The Chainsmokers & Coldplay – Something Just Like This (Lyric)
The Chainsmokers debut album ‘Memories… Do Not Open’ is out now! Buy & Stream: http://smarturl.it/TCSMemories Physical CD: http://smarturl.it/TCSMemoriesCD Vinyl LP: http://smarturl.it/TCSMemoriesVinyl
DIRECTOR: James Zwadlo // (Instagram: jzwadlo) PRODUCERS: Ariyan Samarbaksh & James Zwadlo
Post: EDITORS – James Zwadlo COMPOSITING –…
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glitteryuongbi-blog · 7 years
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The Chainsmokers - You Owe Me (Special 1 Hour) (Lyric Video)
The Chainsmokers – You Owe Me (Special 1 Hour) (Lyric Video)
The Chainsmokers – You Owe Me (Special 1 Hour) (Lyric Video)
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musicrhino · 8 years
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New #MusicVideo has been published on http://musicrhino.com/video/the-chainsmokers-paris-lyric/
The Chainsmokers - Paris (Lyric)
#Dance, #DisruptorRecordsColumbia, #Paris, #TheChainsmokers
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spinstrackingsystem · 2 years
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Top40 Artists Rise To The Top
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The Chainsmokers are back at Top40 after a little break and are starting right where they left us and that’s with another big radio hit. “High” (Disruptor/Columbia) is the single that is setting the format on fire and it’s one of their best to date. Radio is lucky to have them back where they belong. Imagine Dragons have a strong new entry at the format & make no mistake about that. The single “Enemy” (KidinaKorner/Interscope) taken from the League Of Legends proves to us once again why they are one of the best bands out in radio these days. With a project this big you can only imagine how high this one will go. Tiesto has joined forces with Ava Max to bring us a real gem during this first quarter. “The Motto” (Atlantic) is the jam that I’m talking about and it’s getting a big response from our panel of music and program directors. This one you need to pay very special attention to. Altego is taking Britney Spears & Ginuwine out for a spin. It’s a take on “Toxic” (RCA) and it’s turned out to be a nice pairing. We’ll see how it all works out in the coming weeks but so far so very good for this re-boot of sorts. Iann Dior Iann Dior is making some pretty big moves and the Top40 format. “Let You” (Capitol) is the single that is really pulling in some rather impressive numbers. I think you might find this one to your immediate liking. Daisy The Great & AJR are quiet the combination. The single “Record Player” (S-Curve/Hollywood) Read the full article
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90363462 · 2 years
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TV 
MTV VMAs 2022: See the full list of winners
By Marianne Garvey, CNN 
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(CNN)The MTV Video Music Awards are being presented on Sunday.
See below for a full list of nominees with the winners indicated in bold.
congratulations to all of tonight’s winners
VIDEO OF THE YEAR
See more
Doja Cat -- "Woman" -- Kemosabe Records / RCA Records
Drake ft. Future & Young Thug -- "Way 2 Sexy" -- OVO/Republic
Ed Sheeran -- "Shivers" -- Atlantic Records
Harry Styles -- "As It Was" -- Columbia Records
Lil Nas X, Jack Harlow -- "INDUSTRY BABY" -- Columbia Records
Olivia Rodrigo -- "brutal" -- Geffen Records
Taylor Swift -- "All Too Well" (10 Minute Version) (Taylor's Version) -- Republic Records *WINNER
ARTIST OF THE YEAR
Bad Bunny -- Rimas Entertainment *WINNER
Drake -- OVO/Republic
Ed Sheeran -- Atlantic Records
Harry Styles -- Columbia Records
Jack Harlow -- Generation Now / Atlantic Records 
Lil Nas X -- Columbia Records
Lizzo -- Atlantic Records 
SONG OF THE YEAR
Adele -- "Easy On Me" -- Columbia Records
Billie Eilish -- "Happier Than Ever" -- Darkroom / Interscope Records *WINNER
Doja Cat -- "Woman" -- Kemosabe Records / RCA Records
Elton John & Dua Lipa -- "Cold Heart (PNAU Remix)" -- EMI / Interscope Records 
Lizzo -- "About Damn Time" -- Atlantic Records 
The Kid LAROI & Justin Bieber -- "STAY" -- Columbia Records
BEST NEW ARTIST
Baby Keem -- Columbia Records
Dove Cameron -- Disruptor Records / Columbia Records *WINNER
GAYLE -- Atlantic Records / Arthouse Records
Latto -- Streamcut / RCA Records
Måneskin -- Arista Records
SEVENTEEN -- PLEDIS Entertainment/Geffen Records 
PUSH PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR
September 2021: Griff -- "One Night" -- Warner Records
October 2021: Remi Wolf -- "Sexy Villain" -- Island Records
November 2021: Nessa Barrett -- "i hope ur miserable until ur dead" -- Warner Records 
December 2021: SEVENTEEN -- "Rock With You" -- PLEDIS Entertainment / Geffen Records *WINNER
January 2021: Mae Muller -- "Better Days" -- Capitol Records UK
February 2022: GAYLE -- "abcdefu" -- Atlantic Records / Arthouse Records
March 2022: Sheneesa -- "R U That" -- Rich Immigrants / Interscope Records
April 2022: Omar Apollo -- "Tamagotchi" -- Warner Records
May 2022: Wet Leg -- "Chaise Longue" -- Domino Recording Company
June 2022: Muni Long -- "Baby Boo" -- Supergiant Records LLC / Def Jam Recording
July 2022: Doechii -- "Persuasive" -- Top Dog Entertainment / Capitol Records 
BEST COLLABORATION
Drake ft. Future & Young Thug -- "Way 2 Sexy" -- OVO/Republic
Elton John & Dua Lipa -- "Cold Heart (PNAU Remix)" -- EMI / Interscope Records
Lil Nas X, Jack Harlow -- "INDUSTRY BABY" -- Columbia Records *WINNER
Megan Thee Stallion & Dua Lipa -- "Sweetest Pie" -- 300 Entertainment
Post Malone & The Weeknd -- "One Right Now" -- Mercury Records / Republic Records 
ROSALÍA ft. The Weeknd -- "LA FAMA" -- Columbia Records
The Kid LAROI & Justin Bieber -- "STAY" -- Columbia Records 
BEST POP
Billie Eilish -- "Happier Than Ever" -- Darkroom / Interscope Records 
Doja Cat -- "Woman" -- Kemosabe Records / RCA Records
Ed Sheeran -- "Shivers" -- Atlantic Records
Harry Styles -- "As It Was" -- Columbia Records *WINNER
Lizzo -- "About Damn Time" -- Atlantic Records
Olivia Rodrigo -- "traitor" -- Geffen Records 
BEST HIP-HOP
Eminem & Snoop Dogg -- "From The D 2 The LBC" -- Shady / Aftermath / Interscope Records 
Future ft. Drake, Tems -- "WAIT FOR U" -- Freebandz / Epic Records
Kendrick Lamar -- "N95" -- pgLang / Top Dawg Entertainment / Aftermath / Interscope Records 
Latto -- "Big Energy" -- Streamcut / RCA Records
Nicki Minaj ft. Lil Baby -- "Do We Have A Problem?" -- Young Money / Cash Money / Republic Records*WINNER
Pusha T -- "Diet Coke" -- G.O.O.D. Music / Def Jam 
BEST ROCK
Foo Fighters -- "Love Dies Young" -- RCA Records
Jack White -- "Taking Me Back" -- Third Man Records
Muse -- "Won't Stand Down" -- Warner Records
Red Hot Chili Peppers -- "Black Summer" -- Warner Records *WINNER
Shinedown -- "Planet Zero" -- Elektra Music Group
Three Days Grace -- "So Called Life" -- RCA Records 
BEST ALTERNATIVE
Avril Lavigne ft. blackbear - "Love It When You Hate Me" - Elektra Music Group / DTA Records
Imagine Dragons x JID -- "Enemy" -- KIDinaKORNER / Interscope Records
Machine Gun Kelly ft. WILLOW -- "emo girl" -- Bad Boy / Interscope Records
Måneskin -- "I WANNA BE YOUR SLAVE" -- Arista Records *WINNER
Panic! At The Disco -- "Viva Las Vengeance" -- Fueled By Ramen / Elektra Music Group 
Twenty One Pilots -- "Saturday" -- Fueled By Ramen / Elektra Music Group
WILLOW, Avril Lavigne ft. Travis Barker -- "G R O W" -- MSFTSMusic / Roc Nation Records
BEST LATIN
Anitta -- "Envolver" -- Warner Records *WINNER
Bad Bunny -- "Tití Me Preguntó" -- Rimas Entertainment
Becky G X KAROL G -- "MAMIII" -- Kemosabe Records / Sony Music Latin / RCA Records 
Daddy Yankee -- "REMIX" -- Republic Records
Farruko -- "Pepas" -- Sony Music US Latin
J Balvin & Skrillex -- "In Da Getto" -- Sueños Globales, LLC /Universal Music Latino / Asylum Records UK 
BEST R&B
Alicia Keys -- "City of Gods (Part II)" -- AKW
Chlöe -- "Have Mercy" -- Parkwood Entertainment / Columbia Records
H.E.R. -- "For Anyone" -- RCA Records
Normani ft. Cardi B -- "Wild Side" -- Keep Cool/RCA Records
Summer Walker, SZA & Cardi B -- "No Love (Extended Version)" -- LVRN / Interscope Records 
The Weeknd -- "Out Of Time" -- XO / Republic Records *WINNER
BEST K-POP
BTS -- "Yet To Come (The Most Beautiful Moment)" -- BIGHIT Music / Geffen Records 
ITZY -- "LOCO" -- JYP Entertainment
LISA -- "LALISA" -- YG Entertainment / Interscope Records *WINNER
SEVENTEEN -- "HOT" -- PLEDIS Entertainment/Geffen Records
Stray Kids -- "MANIAC" -- JYP Entertainment
TWICE -- "The Feels" -- JYP Entertainment
VIDEO FOR GOOD
Kendrick Lamar -- "The Heart Part 5" -- pgLang / Top Dawg Entertainment / Aftermath / Interscope Records
Latto -- "P*ssy" -- Streamcut / RCA Records
Lizzo -- "About Damn Time" -- Atlantic Records *WINNER
Rina Sawayama -- "This Hell" -- Dirty Hit
Stromae -- "Fils de joie" -- Mosaert Label / The Darkroom / Interscope Records 
BEST METAVERSE PERFORMANCE
BLACKPINK The Virtual | PUBG -- YG Entertainment / Interscope Records *WINNER
BTS | Minecraft -- BIGHIT Music / Geffen Records
Charli XCX | Roblox -- Atlantic Records
Justin Bieber -- An Interactive Virtual Experience | Wave -- Def Jam
Rift Tour ft. Ariana Grande | Fortnite -- Republic Records
Twenty One Pilots Concert Experience | Roblox -- Fueled By Ramen / Elektra Music Group 
BEST LONGFORM VIDEO
Billie Eilish -- Happier Than Ever: A Love Letter to Los Angeles -- Darkroom / Interscope Records 
Foo Fighters -- Studio 666 -- RCA Records
Kacey Musgraves -- star-crossed -- Interscope Records / MCA Nashville
Madonna -- Madame X - Interscope Records
Olivia Rodrigo -- driving home 2 u -- Geffen Records
Taylor Swift -- "All Too Well" (10 Minute Version) (Taylor's Version) -- Republic Records *WINNER
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Baby Keem & Kendrick Lamar -- "family ties" -- Columbia Records
Camila Cabello ft. Ed Sheeran -- "Bam Bam" -- Epic Records
Harry Styles -- "As It Was" -- Columbia Records *WINNER
Kendrick Lamar -- "N95" -- pgLang / Top Dawg Entertainment / Aftermath / Interscope Records 
Normani ft. Cardi B -- "Wild Side" -- Keep Cool / RCA Records
Taylor Swift -- "All Too Well" (10 Minute Version) (Taylor's Version) -- Republic Records 
BEST DIRECTION
Baby Keem & Kendrick Lamar -- "family ties" -- Columbia Records
Billie Eilish -- "Happier Than Ever" -- Darkroom / Interscope Records
Ed Sheeran -- "Shivers" -- Atlantic Records 
Harry Styles -- "As It Was" -- Columbia Records
Lil Nas X, Jack Harlow -- "INDUSTRY BABY" -- Columbia Records
Taylor Swift -- "All Too Well" (10 Minute Version) (Taylor's Version) -- Republic Records *WINNER
BEST ART DIRECTION
Adele -- "Oh My God" -- Columbia Records
Doja Cat -- "Get Into It (Yuh)" -- Kemosabe Records / RCA Records
Drake ft. Future & Young Thug -- "Way 2 Sexy" -- OVO / Republic Records 
Kacey Musgraves -- "simple times" -- Interscope Records / MCA Nashville 
Lil Nas X, Jack Harlow -- "INDUSTRY BABY" -- Columbia Records *WINNER
Megan Thee Stallion ft. Dua Lipa -- "Sweetest Pie" -- 300 Entertainment 
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
Billie Eilish -- "Happier Than Ever" -- Darkroom / Interscope Records
Coldplay X BTS -- "My Universe" -- Atlantic Records
Kendrick Lamar -- "The Heart Part 5" -- pgLang/Top Dawg Entertainment/Aftermath/Interscope Records
Lil Nas X, Jack Harlow -- "INDUSTRY BABY" -- Columbia Records *WINNER
Megan Thee Stallion & Dua Lipa -- "Sweetest Pie" -- 300 Entertainment
The Kid LAROI & Justin Bieber -- "STAY" -- Columbia Records
BEST CHOREOGRAPHY
BTS -- "Permission to Dance" -- BIGHIT Music/Geffen Records
Doja Cat -- "Woman" -- Kemosabe Records / RCA Records *WINNER
FKA twigs ft. The Weeknd -- "Tears In The Club" -- Atlantic Records 
Harry Styles -- "As It Was" -- Columbia Records
Lil Nas X, Jack Harlow -- "INDUSTRY BABY" -- Columbia Records 
Normani ft. Cardi B -- "Wild Side" -- Keep Cool / RCA Records 
BEST EDITING 
Baby Keem & Kendrick Lamar -- "family ties" -- Columbia Records
Doja Cat -- "Get Into It (Yuh)" -- Kemosabe Records / RCA Records
Olivia Rodrigo -- "brutal" -- Geffen Records
ROSALÍA -- "SAOKO" -- Columbia Records *WINNER
Taylor Swift -- "All Too Well" (10 Minute Version) (Taylor's Version) -- Republic Records 
The Weeknd -- "Take My Breath" -- XO / Republic Records 
GROUP OF THE YEAR
BLACKPINK
BTS *WINNER
City Girls
Foo Fighters
Imagine Dragons
Måneskin
Red Hot Chili Peppers
Silk Sonic
SONG OF THE SUMMER
Bad Bunny & Chencho Corleone -- "Me Porto Bonito"
Beyoncé -- "Break My Soul"
Charlie Puth -- "Left And Right (feat. Jung Kook of BTS)"
Doja Cat -- "Vegas (From the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Elvis)"
Future ft. Drake, Tems -- "Wait For U"
Harry Styles -- "Late Night Talking"
Jack Harlow -- "First Class" *WINNER
Kane Brown -- "Grand"
Latto x Mariah Carey -- "Big Energy (Remix) ft. DJ Khaled"
Lizzo -- "About Damn Time"
Marshmello x Khalid -- "Numb"
Nicki Minaj -- "Super Freaky Girl"
Nicky Youre, dazy -- "Sunroof"
Post Malone with Doja Cat -- "I Like You (A Happier Song)"
Rosalía -- "Bizcochito"
Steve Lacy -- "Bad Habit"
ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Adele -- "30'
Bad Bunny -- "Un Verano Sin Ti"
Billie Eilish -- "Happier Than Ever"
Drake -- "Certified Lover Boy"
Harry Styles -- "Harry's House" *WINNER
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crank11news-blog · 6 years
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The Chainsmokers announce their 46th single Who Do You Love (with 5 Seconds of Summer)
The Chainsmokers announce their 46th single Who Do You Love (with 5 Seconds of Summer)
07-Feb-2019: ‘Who Do You Love (with 5 Seconds of Summer)’, single by The Chainsmokers Released on Label: Disruptor Records/Columbia. electronic • pop • House • electro house • dance The forty-sixth single by The Chainsmokers is titled ‘Who Do You Love (with 5 Seconds of Summer)’ and was just released on label Disruptor Records/Columbia and is now available on Spotify. The single is not rated on…
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