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In 1985, the Coca-Cola Co. was watching young drinkers gravitate toward Pepsi's sweeter taste and cooler ads. So Coke concocted its own sweeter cola, blind-tested it against the competition and ...
Pity Max Headroom. We think of him today as an empty-headed relic of the 1980s—if we think of him at all. Well, allow me to refresh your Memorex: Max was a computer-enhanced “talking head ...
Max Headroom most recently made an appearance in the Adam Sandler-starring 1980s-themed comedy Pixels.The movie where Q*bert pees on the floor. While Max is certainly Matt Frewer’s signature ...
Attention, children of the 80s who remember Max Headroom: He’s finally coming to DVD. The iconic character, played briefly but brilliantly by Matt Frewer, was the star of a short-lived ...
In 'Max Headroom,' the future is now. August 12, 2010 More than ... But Headroom, a multi-platform brand and a CGI avatar before most of us knew such terms existed, ...
Max Headroom, video D.J. and talk-show host on British television in the 1980s, and later the colleague of Edison Carter, below, a character on an ABC series.
The New York Times has described Max Headroom–the ”computer-generated personality” whose image has electrified cable viewers in England and now the United States–as ”t… ...
The legitimate Max Headroom, a wisecracking, stuttering, computer-generated character, originated on British television in 1985. His own American prime-time television show, carried on ABC, was ...
Most people consider Max Headroom an artifact of the 1980s, the sort of personality that — like Teddy Ruxpin or Clara Peller of “Where’s the beef?” fame — most of us only pause to think ...
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