Word: dubbings
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Engineering the sound effects, however, presents another challenge not found in more traditional theatre. "The actors go through the lines, and we dub in the sound effects later. That creates problems because we're still learning," said WHRB chief studio engineer Joseph J. Zorc...
Side one starts out with typical Clash politics. Complete with barking dogs, horns, and radio noise, the dub-disaster "Dictator" mocks United States support of murderous fascists "Howling from your radio/From my armourplated Cadillac/You'll hear what I say goes." "Dirty Punk" returns the band to days of old, profoundly empathizing with desires of the Punk culture in the streets: "Gonna get a great big car Gonna have some fun." "We Are the Clash," the third track, resorts to some of the most disgusting synthesizer misanthropy on the album. It attempts to assert that this, and not Jones's band...
Side two is as banal, both lyrically and musically, as side one. More grating guitars, more monotonous synth-pop, and more droning dub. "This is England" tries to incite some national spirit; "Three Card Trick" advocates teen rebellion: "You won't fall for that just like your mummy and your daddy did." "Play to Win," "Fingerpoppin," "North and South," and "Life is Wild" offer more of the same pathetic drivel that permeates the entire disk...
...organizations like the Government National Mortgage Association. That federal agency buys mortgages from lenders and then sells bonds and other securities that are backed by the debt. Now private lenders are snapping up everything from car loans to equipment leases and offering shares in them to investors. Anthony Dub, a managing director of the First Boston investment banking firm, plans to begin selling bank credit-card loans later this year. Known in Wall Street jargon as securitization, the rapidly spreading technique ensures that ! the original loanmakers have plenty of cash available to continue lending...
...chaos that the Sandinista economic measures have spread is one reason for the shortages that have allowed sardonic Nicaraguans to dub Managua "the capital of queues." So far as the Sandinistas are concerned, the problem is simply being called "distribution," meaning a chronic short supply of operating buses and trucks in the country due to a lack of imported spare parts. The government blames that shortage on the U.S. for leading a campaign to cut off Nicaragua's international credit at a time when the country is staggering beneath an estimated $3 billion in foreign debt...