Dramatic Sony Cat

BRAVIA is an in-house brand owned by Sony which produces high-definition LCD televisions, projection TVs and front projectors, home cinemas and the “BRAVIA Home Theatre” range for its parent company Sony KK. The name is an acronym of “Best Resolution Audio Visual Integrated Architecture”.

[Dramatic Cat] is a popular Internet comedy viral video, [based on the earlier Dramatic Chipmunk]. The audio used in Dramatic Chipmunk is taken from the score of the 1974 Mel Brooks film Young Frankenstein, which was composed by two-time Oscar nominee (and longtime Brooks collaborator) John Morris, and orchestrated by Morris and EGOT recipient Jonathan Tunick.

Kyary Pamyu Pamyu weirds it up with PonPonPon

Kiriko Takemura (竹村 桐子 Takemura Kiriko, born January 29, 1993), better known as Kyary Pamyu Pamyu (きゃりーぱみゅぱみゅ Kyarī Pamyu Pamyu), is a model, blogger, and recording artist from the Harajuku district of Tokyo.

“PonPonPon” is a song by Japanese pop singer Kyary Pamyu Pamyu. When Kyary claps during the bridge, slices of bread appear because “pan” is the Japanese onomatopoeia for the sound of a clap, as well as the word for bread.The video was dubbed as “one of the craziest videos ever” by MTV’s Bigger Than the Buzz.

Kawaii (かわいい [kaw͍ai.i], Means, “lovable”, “cute”, or “adorable”) is the quality of cuteness in the context of Japanese culture.

Nintendo Color TV Game 15

Color TV Game (カラー テレビゲーム Karā Terebi Gēmu) is a series of home dedicated consoles created by Nintendo. There were five different consoles in the series, all developed and released in Japan. In 1978, Nintendo released the Color TV Game 15 (カラーテレビゲーム15 Karā Terebi Gēmu Jū Go).

Pong (marketed as PONG) is one of the earliest arcade video games; it is a tennis sports game featuring simple two-dimensional graphics. Many of the companies that produced their own versions of Pong eventually became well-known within the industry. Nintendo entered the video game market with clones of Home Pong.

Nintendo began to produce its own hardware in 1977, with the Color TV Game home video game consoles. Four versions of these consoles were produced, each including variations of a single game (for example, Color TV Game 6 featured six versions of Light Tennis).