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Post by adamrocks on Oct 20, 2016 13:51:26 GMT -5
Escorpio scorpiobert 15m15 minutes ago "Adam Lambert in a showstopping cameo as Eddie, the Ex Delivery Boy" TV review | 'Rocky Horror Picture Show' shar.es/1EKbb8TV review | 'Rocky Horror Picture Show': It's time to do the 'Time Warp' again
Laverne Cox and Adam Lambert in "The Rocky Horrpr Picture Show," which airs at 8 tonight on Fox By David Wiegand San Francisco Chronicle • Thursday October 20, 2016 5:00 AM
Adam mention:
"Cox not only plays the central character of Dr. Frank N Furter, but she also nearly takes complete ownership of the production, and would succeed if it weren’t for terrific work by the other cast members: Reeve Carney as handyman Riff Raff, Victoria Justice as the virginal Janet Weiss and Ryan McCartan as the virginal Brad Majors, Annaleigh Ashford as a blue-tongued groupie Columbia, Staz Nair as the mad doctor’s hunky creation Rocky Horror, Christina Milian as the sexy, trampy Domestic and Adam Lambert in a showstopping cameo as Eddie, the Ex Delivery Boy."
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Post by skaschep on Oct 20, 2016 13:51:28 GMT -5
warnerbrospromo Tonight's the night and we're FREAKING OUT! #AdamLambert is #Eddie in #RockyHorrorPictureShow on Fox! 💋🤘😱 #rockyhorror #glamberts #Adam #event #getthelook #singer #songwriter #performer #actor #xfactor #xfactorau #glamnation #tunein www.instagram.com/p/BLy1iEMBxCz/
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Post by cheriemelissa on Oct 20, 2016 13:56:44 GMT -5
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Post by sizzling63 on Oct 20, 2016 13:58:01 GMT -5
I'm gonna sound like a wierdo, but is it possible that someone's voice, specifically someone's singing voice, triggeres the same hormones in the brains that make us feel like we're in love? I think it's totally possible. I discovered that for myself in 2009 ("love" is a very complex feeling and not one dimensional, I think)
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Post by skaschep on Oct 20, 2016 13:58:13 GMT -5
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Post by adamrocks on Oct 20, 2016 13:59:42 GMT -5
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Post by skaschep on Oct 20, 2016 14:01:27 GMT -5
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Post by cassie on Oct 20, 2016 14:02:05 GMT -5
I'm gonna sound like a wierdo, but is it possible that someone's voice, specifically someone's singing voice, triggeres the same hormones in the brains that make us feel like we're in love? There are other "weirdos" like you, it seems. There have been studies about listeners' brain responses to music. www.bbc.com/news/health-12135590Dopamine increases in response to other stimuli such as food and money. It is known to produce a feel-good state in response to certain tangible stimulants - from eating sweets to taking cocaine. Dopamine is also associated with less tangible stimuli - such as being in love. In this study, levels of dopamine were found to be up to 9% higher when volunteers were listening to music they enjoyed. The report authors say it's significant in proving that humans obtain pleasure from music - an abstract reward - that is comparable with the pleasure obtained from more basic biological stimuli. Music psychologist, Dr Vicky Williamson from Goldsmiths College, University of London welcomed the paper. She said the research didn't answer why music was so important to humans - but proved that it was. "This paper shows that music is inextricably linked with our deepest reward systems."Why Adam's voice, in particular, produces this feel good response I can only speculate on. Factors that I imagine are involved include: 1. What types of music and voices you listened to in your formative years growing up, which programmed the brain to seek out familiar or similar sounding music/voices 2. The frequencies and harmonics that produce a natural sympathetic vibration in your body 3. Pleasurable past experiences with Adam where your brain produced pleasure hormones because of his looks, his personality, his life story, his appearance on TV, the thrill of going to a live concert and sharing that experience with friends and strangers in the audience. Those get tied to the sounds you heard, so you are conditioned to respond with the release of hormones when you hear that particular voice 4. The fact that the harmonics and frequency responses, the resonance in Adam's voice are of such a balance, purity, clarity, consistency that your brain LIKES the sound. By this I mean, Adam was trained to produce a sound that has been highly desirable in singers for hundreds and hundreds of years. Why do classical singers train to produce this type of sound? Because it has worked with audiences around the globe for centuries. There has to be something intrinsic in that type of voice that is pleasurable, just like we find certain aromas and tastes pleasurable. What do y'all think?
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Post by adamrocks on Oct 20, 2016 14:04:39 GMT -5
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Post by devilwoman on Oct 20, 2016 14:09:11 GMT -5
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