Membership is free, secure and easy. You will require an account to build your own soundboard or buy sound tracks.! Justfill out the account information below. All fields are required, VERIFICATION EMAILwill be sent to address. All unverified accounts are deleted within 72 hours.
Cash Cab Sound Effects
He must quiz his passengers, control the lights and sounds in the cab, listen to the director in his ear piece and maneuver the minivan, which is equipped with seven high-definition cameras and is worth more than 250,000, through traffic.
Apr 22, 2012 Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube. Share Cash Cab: Related Boards: Cash Cab v2. 17 Tracks 3203 Views. Japanese Sex School. Sound effects from the s. Membership is free, secure and easy. You will require an account to build your own soundboard or buy sound tracks.! Just fill out the account information below. All fields are.
"Paper Planes" is a song written and recorded by British hip hop artist M.I.A. for her second studio album, Kala (2007). Produced and co-written by her and Diplo, the song features an interpolation of English rock band the Clash's 1982 song "Straight to Hell", leading to its members being credited as co-writers. A downtempo alternative hip hop track combining African folk music elements, the song has a less dance-oriented sound compared to other songs on the album. Its lyrics, inspired by M.I.A.'s own problems obtaining a visa to work in the USA, satirise American perceptions of immigrants from Third World nations.
M.I.A. began work on "Paper Planes" with American producer Diplo and English DJ Switch in London.[11] The track's downtempo production sets it apart from the rest of Kala, which features dense electronic sounds.[7][12] Diplo came up with the idea of sampling English rock band the Clash's 1982 song "Straight to Hell" and produced the instrumental track with assistance from Switch.[11][13] As a result, all members of the Clash were credited as co-writers.[13] M.I.A. said that she recorded her vocals without paying much attention to her singing and finished the song in one take.[11] She drew inspiration for the lyrics from her own troubles gaining a work permit to the US, complaining that the issue was probably "them thinking that I might sic to fly a plane into the Trade Center".[11] From her frustration with US immigration policy, M.I.A. developed "Paper Planes" as a satire of American perception of immigrants from war-torn countries.[1][10]
M.I.A. invited street kids she came across in Brixton to sing the song's chorus.[14] After regaining entry to the US, M.I.A. finalised the track at her home in Bedford-Stuyvesant, a Brooklyn neighbourhood with a high concentration of African Americans, in mid-2007.[11][15] She recalled that her time living there prompted her to think, "People don't really feel like immigrants or refugees contribute to culture in any way".[11] She added the sound effects of gunshots and a cash register to the chorus.[11] Saying these sounds symbolise stereotypes of immigrants, M.I.A. refused to elaborate and wanted listeners to interpret the song for themselves noting, "America is so obsessed with money, I'm sure they'll get it".[11] She told The Daily Beast that the gunshots embodied political refugees' experiences in war-torn areas, which she described as "a part of our culture as an everyday thing".[10] Revisiting the song in 2013, M.I.A. expressed to Rolling Stone that "Paper Planes" was "a really Baltimore/Brooklyn song for me", partly inspired by her immersion in New York and Baltimore street culture.[16]
"Paper Planes" received widespread acclaim from contemporary publications. The Stranger's Eric Grandy selected the song as Kala's highlight, calling it the album's "most exciting synthesis of the political and the pop, a playful dig into the real, dirty business of rump shaking".[23] Andy Kellman of AllMusic,[41] Michael Hubbard of musicOMH,[30] Jon Pareles of Blender[42] and Emma Warren of The Observer named it a standout on the well-received Kala.[43] Stylus Magazine's Ewen McGarvey described the song as "narcotic, gorgeous".[44] Alex Miller from NME commented that "Paper Planes" was Kala's only radio-friendly track, but still reflected M.I.A. as "the inheritor of true rebel music in an era of corporate punks".[45] The Houston Chronicle's Joey Guerra complimented the song's gunshot and cash register sounds that showcased M.I.A.'s "stunning international flow" and joked that the US should "immediately extend an open-door policy" to welcome the artist.[46] BBC Radio 1's Fraser McAlpine awarded the song a five-out-of-five-stars rating, labelling it a "clever song" that demands listeners pay attention.[25]
Director Bernard Gourley, known for his work with hip hop artists, directed the music video for "Paper Planes".[68] Shot in Bedford-Stuyvesant, it depicts M.I.A. as an undercover dealer.[15][68] Initially planning to record the video in a factory on the border of Ecuador, M.I.A. was unable to do so because she was touring the US and had only one day off to shoot it.[69] The visual begins with several paper planes flying over Brooklyn Bridge, shot in black-and-white. Throughout the clip, coloured scenes show M.I.A. singing and dancing along streets in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighbourhood, selling food from a van to locals, and dealing valuables such as chains, watches and cash. Nigerian rapper Afrikan Boy portrays M.I.A.'s food vending partner, and Mike D & Ad-Rock from the hip hop group Beastie Boys make a cameo appearance as their buyers.[70] The video ends with a black-and-white scene of paper planes flying over a neighbourhood.
M.I.A. performed "Paper Planes" live on US television for the first time on the CBS talk show Late Show with David Letterman on 13 September 2007. The song's cannabis reference and gunshot sounds were censored. This took M.I.A. aback, and she was visibly surprised because what was broadcast live was different from her soundcheck for the show.[69] She thanked the show's host David Letterman for letting her "into the American mainstream" at the Austin City Limits festival a few days after her Letterman appearance, where she also performed the song.[78][79] M.I.A. frequently performed "Paper Planes" as the encore song on her Kala Tour, which ran from May to December 2007.[80][81][82] She also added the song to the set list of its extension, the People vs. Money Tour, which visited North America during the first half of 2008.[83][84][85] As part of the tour, M.I.A. performed at the 2008 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on 26 April.[84] During her performance of "Paper Planes", she called on fans to dance with her on stage resulting in a mass rush to the stage by concertgoers and a standoff with security.[86] Rolling Stone's Jenny Eliscu dubbed M.I.A.'s gig at Coachella "one of this weekend's most buzzed about performances".[87]
"Paper Planes" was used in the theatrical trailer for the 2008 stoner comedy Pineapple Express, directed by David Gordon Green, and starring Seth Rogen and James Franco.[168] This catapulted the song to mainstream success in the US.[169] The Los Angeles Times described its incorporation in the trailer as "the most impressive use of M.I.A.'s 'Paper Planes' ever".[170] "Paper Planes" and the DFA remix appear on the soundtrack to Danny Boyle's drama Slumdog Millionaire, released in 2008 after Pineapple Express.[171] Boyle admired M.I.A. and the song before the Pineapple Express trailer, and hailed "Paper Planes" as one of the crucial songs in conveying the film's content.[172] Both Pineapple Express and Slumdog Millionaire proved popular at the box office and buoyed the single's mainstream success.[105][158] The video game Far Cry 3 (2012) begins with "Paper Planes" used in the opening cinematic sequence.[173] The song was featured on the season 2 premiere of the television series, The Last Man on Earth.[174] Black Dresses' 2017 debut single is a 7-minute long cover of "Paper Planes" on a 3-track EP also featuring Laura Les and 99jakes.
In April 2014, NCUA issued a Letter to Credit Unions (14-CU-06) Taxi Medallion Lending, which enclosed new guidance to examiners evaluating credit unions engaged in taxi medallion lending. Credit unions were also encouraged to review the supervisory guidance, which outlines certain sound practices for providing these types of member business loans.
No. As stated in the guidance, 1.25X is the recommended DSCR to qualify a borrower for a taxi medallion loan. A DSCR is established to ensure there is sufficient cash flow from operations so that a borrower can continue to make debt repayments in the event of an adverse change in business operations.
NCUA guidance directs examiners to confirm that a credit union bases its minimum DSCR on traditional cash flow measures that reflect all influences on cash flow from operations, including any transfers of cash from the borrower to other entities, shareholders, owners or principals, and unfunded capital expenditures.
Global cash flow analysis is used to evaluate the cash flows of a group of entities that are tied to one or more loans, and it can be useful in evaluating the value of a personal guarantee by the principal(s). In order for such a guarantee to be effective, the principal(s) must have sufficient financial resources or net worth at risk.1 Global cash flow analysis helps determine the value of any personal guarantee.
76. The failure to obtain written representations from management, including management's refusal to furnish them, constitutes a limitation on the scope of the audit. As discussed further in paragraph C3, when the scope of the audit is limited, the auditor should either withdraw from the engagement or disclaim an opinion. Further, the auditor should evaluate the effects of management's refusal on his or her ability to rely on other representations, including those obtained in the audit of the company's financial statements. 2ff7e9595c
Comments