Era Istrefi Dzimšanas diena, dzimšanas datums

Era Istrefi

Era Istrefi (dzimusi 1994. gada 4. jūlijā Prištinā) ir Kosovas dziedātāja un dziesmu autore.

Viņas tēvs Nezirs Istrefi bija žurnālists, bet māte Suzana Tahirsilaja bija dziedātāja, kura 2004. gadā pēc Nezira nāves pameta darbu izklaides industrijā. Eras māsa Nora Istrefi arī ir dziedātāja.

Viņa ir izlaidusi vairākus singlus gan savā dzimtajā albāņu valodā, gan arī angļu valodā. Pirmais viņas singls, Mani Për Money, tika izlaists 2013. gadā. 2015. gada 30. decembrī tika izlaista dziesma BonBon, kas ieguva plašu popularitāti arī starptautiski, iekļūstot Vācijas, Francijas, Austrijas un vairāku citu valstu mūzikas topos. Šī dziesma pārsvarā ir rakstīta albāņu valodā ar dažām frāzēm angļu valodā. Tās oficiālais video portālā YouTube ir ieguvis vairāk par 600 miljoniem skatījumu. 2016. gada 27. jūlijā tika izlaista šīs dziesmas versija angļu valodā. Pēc šī singla panākumiem, viņa noslēdza līgumus ar ierakstu kompānijām Sony Music Entertainment un Ultra Music. Viņa, kopā ar Nicky Jam un Villu Smitu piedalījās dziesmā Live It Up, kas tika izvēlēta par 2018. gada FIFA Pasaules kausa oficiālo dziesmu.

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Dzimšanas diena, dzimšanas datums
pirmdiena, 1994. gada 4. jūlijs
Dzimšanas vieta
Priština
Vecums
31
Zodiaks

1994. gada 4. jūlijs bija pirmdiena zem zvaigznes zīmes . Tā bija 184 diena gadā. ASV prezidents bija William J. (Bill) Clinton.

Ja esat dzimis šajā dienā, jums ir 31 gadi. Jūsu pēdējā dzimšanas diena bija piektdiena, 2025. gada 4. jūlijs, pirms 75 dienām. Jūsu nākamā dzimšanas diena ir sestdiena, 2026. gada 4. jūlijs pēc 289 dienām. Jūs esat dzīvojis 11 398 dienas jeb aptuveni 273 558 stundas, vai aptuveni 16 413 518 minūtes vai aptuveni 984 811 080 sekundes.

Daži cilvēki, kuri dalās šajā dzimšanas dienā:

4th of July 1994 News

Ziņas, kas parādījās New York Times pirmajā lapā 1994. gada 4. jūlijs

THE MEDIA BUSINESS: Press Notes; The Daily News moves up the pricing ladder, but is The Post ready to come down?

Date: 04 July 1994

By William Glaberson

William Glaberson

YOUR move, Mr. Murdoch. That, anyway, is the feeling in newspaper circles after The Daily Newsincreased its daily cover price by 10 cents, to 50 cents, last week. The action appeared to be something of a "put up or shut up" dare to Mr. Murdoch's New York Post to cut its price from 50 cents, as that newspaper has been quietly threatening for months.

Full Article

Giuliani and Reporters: Disparate Views of Mayor's Image

Date: 04 July 1994

By William Glaberson

William Glaberson

Out of public view, Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani and much of the New York City press corps are engaged in a struggle over how the Mayor and his young administration will be covered and portrayed by the news media. Even in the age of talk-show politics, any Mayor's relationship with broadcast and print journalists can be important because their portrait helps shape public perception. And in the first six months of his term, articles and broadcast reports about the administration have generally portrayed him as a hands-on administrator with a strong grasp of city government details.

Full Article

The Summer's Top Crime Drama, Continued

Date: 04 July 1994

By Walter Goodman

Walter Goodman

On display in the opening days of the summer season's hit television crime mini-series, along with pictures of that 15-inch hunting knife, those splashes of blood on the walkway and O. J. Simpson's head of hair, is the nexus of money, celebrity and power that is driving both the conduct of his case and its treatment by television. The orgy of coverage, already notable in the history of a medium that goes in for orgies, and with plenty more promised, exposes a collusion between television professionals and courtroom professionals that is flattering to neither. Having gotten past a risibly tedious inventory of evidence (Q. "Item No. 1 contains two bindles of hair?" A. "It contains two swatches. But 1C contains a bindle"), the preliminary hearing makes a terrific show.

Full Article

At Home Abroad; Down the Tabloid Slope

Date: 04 July 1994

By Anthony Lewis

Anthony Lewis

The Sun, Britain's largest-selling daily, denounced Prince Charles last week for his admission on television that he was not faithful to his wife after their marriage broke up. "We are now knee deep in a constitutional crisis," the tabloid said in an editorial. "Many people" found the story "too shocking to stomach." On the page opposite that moral lecture was a large topless photo of a young woman, and next to it an illustrated feature on nude fishing.

Full Article

The Mayor on His Image

Date: 04 July 1994

In an interview about his relationship with reporters, Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani showed a keen interest in the evolution of his image and uneasiness about what he said was the stereotype of him as tough. Here are excerpts. On his portrayal by the press: "I think there is a tendency to play to stereotype. So that nobody thinks that I'm paranoid, it cuts in either direction: I think that, you know, if the prior Mayor played tennis, that was exaggerated and made a great deal of. If somebody thinks that I've gotten angry, that's going to be exaggerated." On what the press plays up: "Even if I were to be angry, which, you know, happens: the President's gotten angry, Mayor Dinkins got angry sometimes. If I got angry, that would be a much bigger event and would be played up much more than if somebody else got angry." On getting his message across: "Sometimes you do deliberately plan to get your message out. Usually those are things you plan in advance and you work very hard to get your message out. . . . Now the press might regard that as manipulation; that's part of communicating. As much as you can, you want to frame the debate. In fact, the greatest success you can have, is not so much determining all the answers, but at least framing the debate: Get the questions asked in the right way." On whether the press is fair: "When they interpret it in the way in which I believe I communicated, I think they did it fairly. When they don't, I think they probably did it unfairly."

Full Article

Welbilt to Buy Lincoln

Date: 05 July 1994

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

The Welbilt Corporation said last week that it had agreed to acquire Lincoln Foodservice Products Inc. of Fort Wayne, Ind., for $15.60 a share, or about $50 million. Both Welbilt and Lincoln make commercial food service cooking equipment and supplies.

Full Article

Loss on Station's Sale

Date: 04 July 1994

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

The Heritage Media Corporation said that it would report a loss of about $1.6 million, or 9 cents a share, in the second quarter of 1994 from the sale of its smallest television station. Heritage, based here, said on Friday that it planned to sell KDLT-TV in Sioux Falls, S.D., to the Red River Broadcast Corporation for undisclosed terms.

Full Article

Spain's Push On Cellular

Date: 05 July 1994

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Spain's Cabinet has adopted a legislative framework to permit competition in mobile phone services. Telefonica de Espana S.A. holds the only existing license to operate a cellular phone system using the G.S.M. -- Global System for Mobile Communications -- technology, which is fast becoming the international standard.

Full Article

Daimler Raising Funds

Date: 04 July 1994

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

Daimler-Benz A.G.'s global rights offering has been "extremely successful," Deutsche Bank A.G., the leading underwriter of the sale, said. Daimler, Germany's largest industrial group and maker of Mercedes-Benz cars, last month announced it would sell 4.66 million new shares at 640 deutsche marks, about $401, each. That was about 10 percent below analysts' price expectations at the time. If fully subscribed, the one-for-10 offer, which began June 20 and expires on Tuesday, will raise about 3 billion German marks, the largest capital increase in postwar Germany. The company said it needed the funds to help finance expansion.

Full Article

Intel Plans 2 Price Cuts

Date: 04 July 1994

By Bloomberg News

Bloomberg News

The Intel Corporation will break with its usual practice and cut prices on its 486 and Pentium chips twice in its third quarter, an Intel official said last week. The chip maker traditionally shaves prices just once each quarter, on the first day of the period. This time it will announce initial cuts on Tuesday -- the first day of its new quarter -- and make a second round of cuts on Aug. 1, the company official said.

Full Article