- published: 17 Mar 2007
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Fullspot is an Italian fashion brand of watches and accessories.
Fullspot was founded in 2009 and its products were first exhibited at the Milan International Exhibition in 2010. Fullspot can be found in over 50 countries worldwide. After releasing the O clock, Fullspot released a pocket watch, the O chive and a range of bags, the O bag. They opened their first branded store in 2011 in Venice.
Every product made by Fullspot to date has had an 'O' in front of the product. This comes from the first of Fullspot's products which was named the 'O Clock' much like the usual way of expressing the time in English. The company kept the 'O' as a way of identifying its products much like the 'i' in Apple products.
Fullspot developed the O clock in 2010, a watch with a silicone strap and interchangeable faces. The original face of the watch, now called 'O clock Classic' consisted of a plain white face without numbers. The face can be removed from the strap allowing the colour of the strap or face to be changed. There were originally 15 straps but this has grown to 29 which are still in production. Fullspot’s watch packaging takes inspiration from the tin can, a cylindrical tin with a ring pull. O clock developed into a series with the Tone on Tone range consisting of 21 watch face colours to mix and match with 21 straps making a total of 441 possible combinations with Tone on Tone. Other O clock ranges include Camouflage, 80’ clock, Disney, Gold & Silver, Mirror, Numbers, Flower Power and Safari.
Nine O'Clock is a Romanian English-language newspaper. Founded in 1991, it consisted only of 4 pages when it was launched, but has since then grown significantly in size and influence. Its main target audience is foreign residents, businessmen living in Romania and English-speaking Romanians.
The newspaper consists mainly of sections related to politics, business, sports, culture, Romania-related news and weather.
The Nine O'Clock News may refer to:
9 is the year 9 AD.
9 (number) is the natural number following 8 and preceding 10.
9, nine, 9th, or ninth may also refer to:
On the Road is a novel by American writer Jack Kerouac, based on the travels of Kerouac and his friends across America. It is considered a defining work of the postwar Beat and Counterculture generations, with its protagonists living life against a backdrop of jazz, poetry, and drug use. The novel, published in 1957, is a roman à clef, with many key figures in the Beat movement, such as William S. Burroughs (Old Bull Lee), Allen Ginsberg (Carlo Marx) and Neal Cassady (Dean Moriarty) represented by characters in the book, including Kerouac himself as the narrator Sal Paradise.
The idea for On the Road, Kerouac's second novel, was formed during the late 1940s in a series of notebooks, and then typed out on a continuous reel of paper during three weeks in April 1951. It was first published by Viking Press in 1957. After several film proposals dating from 1957, the book was finally made into a film, On the Road (2012), produced by Francis Ford Coppola and directed by Walter Salles.
Not the 9 o'clock news
Not the nine O'Clock news episode 1981 uncut
Not The Nine O'Clock News - Gerald the gorilla
Not the nine o clock news : does god exist?
Funny Police Sketches
BBC 9 O'Clock News & Weather - 26th June 1985
BBC Nine O'Clock News - c1985
Not The Nine O'Clock News - HiFi Shop
Darts
I Like Trucking (with Rowan Atkinson) — Not The Nine O'Clock News
An episode i recorded at the time complete - a few un-pc items on here Not much chance of a dvd release - so enjoy - Mel Smith what a great performer !
From "The Best Of Not The Nine O'Clock News (Vol.1)"
not the nine o clock news, i dont own this, all rights belong to the bbc
Classic sketches about the police from Not the Nine o' Clock News and Alas Smith and Jones
The 9 O'Clock News with Julia Somerville followed by weather with Bill Giles
BBC Nine O'Clock News with the graphics and set introduced in 1985. The graphics were designed by Andy Davy, and realised by video company CAL Video, who also made the first set of titles for the BBC's Six O'Clock News in 1984. This look was relatively short-lived, being replaced on Hallowe'en 1988 with a brand new set of titles and studio set.
This is right up our street for us Bassheads
A skit from the British show "Not the Nine O'Clock News". With Rowan Atkinson (commentator), Mel Smith, Griff Rhys-Jones.
I LIKE TRUCKING! I like trucking, I like trucking, I like trucking and I like to truck. I like trucking, I like trucking, If you don't like trucking, tough luck. On the road, you must be brave and tireless, On the road, you can listen to the wireless, On the road, you eat café food with pride, You can throw it up outside. The greatest kick in trucking comes from knocking down a biker, Or swinging round a roundabout and picking up a hiker, You're chatting up that piece of skirt who's sitting by your side, Then pop the crucial question - a ride for a ride? I like trucking, I like trucking, I like trucking and I like to truck. I like trucking, I like trucking, If you don't like trucking, tough luck. Perhaps the greatest laugh of all, that makes this life worthwhile, Is waving on the car ...
I was miles away
thinking about something yesterday
something I’m doing more each day
all the time
is it a message
is it a sign
is it the time to draw a line
how do I know
it doesn’t feel natural
feels too slow
if I don’t know then who else will
it’s getting to the point it makes me ill
and I don’t know if I can turn a page
yeah
It feels so wrong the pressures on
I can’t ignore it any longer
I turn my clock to face against the wall
This’ll be a phase that’s all
Only my expectant eyes
looking for diamonds in the skies
The only one looking for this prize
White in a sea of black
I’m gonna go I wont come back
I spike myself I kick and scream
I drag my feet
I won’t come clean
I check my weight and fall upon the page
yeah
It feels so wrong the pressures on
I can’t ignore it any longer
I turn my clock to face against the wall
This’ll be a phase that’s all
I drag my feet
I check my weight
I turn my clock to face against the wall
Oh, if I don’t hear then I ask you
but everybody’s singing the same old tune
I dig my heels
I will not learn the words
oh yeah
it feels so wrong the pressures on
I can’t ignore it any longer
I turn my clock to face against the wall