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View Full Version : Japan's Biggest Pop Star Right Now Is a Hologram



singular_me
3rd April 2015, 08:37 PM
could the entire universe be an hologram onto itself comprised of smaller ones at different levels of perfection, earth being one of them and where humans are about to create their own holographic reality.... Matrix did you say?


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QuANDlrTHyI

more
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lMBt_yfGKpU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NsbZT9bJ1s4

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Japan's Biggest Pop Star Right Now Is a Hologram
SEOUL, South Korea — Even by the standards of pop stars, Hatsune Miku is eccentric and protean, her mystique elusive.

Her eyes are too round and blue to be real. She can be buxom or boyish, and almost painfully sultry — all in a droid-ish, understated way.

She dons a school uniform, with thigh-high power boots and a flared ultra-micro miniskirt. Her pig-tailed turquoise hair is so long that she risks tripping over it as she dances lithely in front of her adoring, sell-out crowds. In a saccharine soprano — reminiscent of a castrated Mouseketeer — her lyrics soar over the roars and ovations of glowstick-wielding teenage audiences..............
http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/japans-biggest-pop-star-right-now-hologram-n76506



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FoTd918zhZc


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2uOmQmM1mg4

singular_me
4th April 2015, 04:25 AM
so surreel.... banning holograms...

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Friday, April 3rd, 2015

Well over a year since its last showing, “Hatsune Miku × Tomita Isao – Symphony IHATOV” will also be premiering in Beijing, China at the Meet in Beijing Arts Festival on May 20th, 2015 at the Century Theater. Symphony IHATOV began its first show on November 23rd, 2012 in Tokyo, and was met with positive success, leading to 4 more performances the following year in Iwate, Osaka, Shibuya and Aichi.

The news is particularly surprising to Hatsune Miku fans in China, due to apparent bans/restrictions that would make a live Hatsune Miku concert event difficult, or nearly impossible*. Friends from China didn’t even believe me at first. But under the guise of a symphonic orchestra, they probably wouldn’t suspect a “Japanese Pop Idol” in their midst.

*Current Chinese laws ban Japanese animation with the following themes: Homosexuality, sexual, Porn, Violence, Dark-Side Heroic, and Anti-government. Many Hatsune Miku songs can fall into these categories. For this reason, many Chinese fans find the possibility of a live Hatsune Miku concert in mainland China to be nearly impossible.....

http://www.mikufan.com/hatsune-miku-x-tomita-isao-symphony-ihatov-to-be-held-in-beijing-on-may-20th/