Eyemonkeysound.swf
(humor - Movie begins)
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You have arrived to watch Eyemonkeysound.swf whitch is tagged as flash, humor, Movie begins. 99% of users should see Eyemonkeysound.swf in full screen. You can also download Eyemonkeysound.swf free when clicking the size: 921.80 KB at the top of page (left side of tags "humor - Movie begins"). To get more specify tags than "(humor, Movie begins)", please check and leave a comment. You can also find sources of this flash from the comments. It's the plece where you can discuss about this flash.
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Tags ( humor - Movie begins ) for Eyemonkeysound.swf :
Eyemonkeysound.swf is tagged to be humorous. It can be adult humor, funny jokes, funny video or even dirty jokes. Well.. In any case it is humor flash. The idea of this is that you just enjoy what you see. Humour can occur when sudden relief occurs from a tense situation "humourific" as formerly applied in comedy referred to the interpretation of the sublime and the ridiculous. In this context, humour is often a subjective experience as it depends on a special mood or perspective from its audience to be effective. Throughout history comedy has been used as a form of entertainment all over the world, whether in the courts of the Western kings or the villages of the far east. Both a social etiquette and a certain intelligence can be displayed through forms of wit and sarcasm.
Eyemonkeysound.swf is tagged to be from a movie. By the mid-1920s, the evolution of a handful of American production companies into wealthy film industry conglomerates that owned their own studios, distribution divisions, and theaters, and contracted with performers and other filmmaking personnel, led to the sometimes confusing equation of "studio" with "production company" in industry slang. Five large companies, 20th Century-Fox, MGM, Paramount, RKO, and Warner Bros., came to be known as the "Big Five," the "majors," or "the Studios" in trade publications such as Variety, and their management structures and practices collectively came to be known as the "studio system."
Although they owned few or no theaters to guarantee sales of their films, Universal Pictures, Columbia Pictures, and United Artists also fell under these rubrics, making a total of eight generally recognized "major studios". United Artists, although its controlling partners owned not one but two production studios during the Golden Age, had an often tenuous hold on the title of "major" and operated mainly as a backer and distributor of independently produced films.
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