The style was later popularized by hip-hop artists in the 1990s.
However, its use would only be popularized later on.
It was later popularized by the power trio Cream.
The movie On the Waterfront would later popularize this viewpoint.
The gib-term itself was later popularized by Quake and is short for the word giblets.
Gene Sheldon later popularized this role for Disney in the late 1950s.
The ideas behind the 1973 New Jersey policy were later popularized in 1982, when a popular magazine published the broken windows theory of crime.
It was later popularized by wide receiver Robert Brooks.
The genre was popularized by Dune II three years later in 1992.
It was later popularized by a song of the same name in Stephen Sondheim's Company.