Samantha.
That’s it. That’s my ask.
"Sammie, so happy to see you...!"
He's missed Samantha, since they haven't been able to talk in a while. He hopes she's alright, though...and still blushes at the sight of her.

seen from T1

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Uruguay
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Australia
seen from China

seen from Croatia

seen from T1

seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from T1

seen from China

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Argentina
Samantha.
That’s it. That’s my ask.
"Sammie, so happy to see you...!"
He's missed Samantha, since they haven't been able to talk in a while. He hopes she's alright, though...and still blushes at the sight of her.
The Flaming Lips: Two Blobs Fucking stereo mixdown
The Flaming Lips: Two Blobs Fucking Stereo Mixdown by Brandon Douglas
The Flaming Lips recently released a twelve track song through different Youtube videos called "Two Blobs Fucking". This is a stereo mixdown of those twelve tracks. I tried not to alter it too much. I panned it quite a bit to give it more separation, and I had to turn down all the levels at the "machine" part in the middle (if I hadn't it was a mess). For the original tracks in all their glory head here: http://www.youtube.com/flaminglipsfree
The Flaming Lips are a band of taste in my opinion. They do not have a sound that most people might readily listen to and appreciate (hence the lack of their appearance on a majority of radio stations). I think it cannot be denied that they are artist's artists (not record label artist) and are a group of highly creative individuals.
Constantly pulling apart, stripping down, converging together sounds, equipment, and environments, The Flaming Lips have added a new experiment to their repertoire.
1996- Parking Lot
1997- Boombox
2011- Two Blobs Fucking (12 smart-phones, 12 iPads, 12 computers, 12 friends, or CheckThis)
Two Blobs Fucking works by playing 12 various pieces simultaneously. You can create the song using 12 smart phones [I would think if they were the same brand it might make playback more even], 12 iPads, 12 computers, or if you are sitting at home and don't know 12 people with all those items then CheckThis has you covered. Make sure you give all 12 videos time to fully load...then sit back and enjoy The Flaming Lips.
"In order to play the new Flaming Lips song "Two Blobs," you need to get 12 friends together and all download one YouTube video each. Then you all press "play" simultaneously, and (fingers crossed) a full song will emerge from the separate parts."
But after internet journos struggled to get to get the process to work, Salon compiled the tracks into the video linked here.
"Twenty years ago, it would have been easy to get some friends together and simultaneously press "play" on your cassettes. Ironically, it's this new technology of iPhones and YouTube that hinder the process by creating small differences in load time and playback speed. Then again, 20 years ago we wouldn't have been able to download the songs, put them into a movie editor, and then play all 12 tracks simultaneously, like: Ha-ha! Technology still beats art!"