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screens

n. (plural of screen English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: screen)

Wikipedia
Screens (Mint Chicks album)

Screens is the third studio album from Portland, Oregon-based "troublegum" group The Mint Chicks and thus far the only Mint Chicks release not to feature bassist Michael Logie. It was released on March 16, 2009 in New Zealand, The Mint Chicks' homeland on Flying Nun Records. It was mixed in Portland, Oregon by the Nielson brothers and Jacob Portrait, with additional mixing by Chris Nielson in Auckland, New Zealand.

The album's first single was "I Can't Stop Being Foolish". Sam Peacocke, the New Zealand music award winning director responsible for the band's videos for "Walking Off a Cliff Again" and "Crazy? Yes! Dumb? No!" filmed a new video for the single, which hit number 1 on the bFM chart on February 4, 2009 and stayed at this position for 2 weeks.

On December 25, 2008, an EP called Mintunes was offered for free download on The Mint Chicks' website including 8-bit versions of four songs to appear on Screens, including the then-unreleased "Red, White or Blue" and "Screens".

On December 20, 2008, a video for "Enemies" made by band member Ruban Neilson appeared on The Mint Chicks' website, YouTube and Vimeo. On January 1, 2009, a similar video for the track "Life Will Get Better Some Day" created by Kody Neilson was released on YouTube.

On February 20, 2009, New Zealand on Air released a list of songs granted funding for a video, among which was The Mint Chicks' track "Don't Sell Your Brain Out, Baby". The song was added by bFM on May 4, 2009 and went to number one on the bFM top ten on May 6, the fifth bFM number-one from Screens.

Usage examples of "screens".

Benzi and his comrades had volunteered for Platform duty, knowing that nearly everyone on the Islands would be gathering by their screens to witness the awesome events below.

We have screens, of course, and a lot of recorded materials, but teachers can guide and motivate the students.

The room where she worked here was filled with screens, consoles, and small platforms that served as desks.

The rest of the Council was seated on cushions, their pocket screens on the low table in front of them.

The two pilots by each entrance stared at their pocket screens, checking the names.

A neat row of simple houses, with plumbing and light but no screens, now stood in the hollow near the dining hall and the two dormitories where the patrol lived.

Those not in the hall would be watching on other screens at their posts.

She had been in the Administrative Center, monitoring several channels on the screens, when a message came from an Administrator on Island Two.

We could put in some screens, with images representing some of the things that were done to us here.

On the screens, human faces and metal forms of various sizes and shapes rapidly came and went.

Carefully he sat up, his gaze taking in the wide bed he lay on, the drawers along the walls to left and right, the emergency control console that filled the end wall, and, beside the bed, the communications screens that could put him in touch with any part of the ship by snapping a switch.

The booth he was in had its circuitry within its walls, and its multiple screens curved and joined over the inside surface of the booth.

The battle transceiver, on the planet, had its circuitry inside, and its screens shaped and joined on its outside surface.

In the outside-view screens, they saw the Nemesis vanish in a blaze of radiance, and then, while their hearts were still in their throats, come out of it again.

Finally the telescopic screens picked up the spaceport, a huge oval amphitheater excavated out of a valley between two jagged mountain ranges.