According to the Eating Well website, a crunchy operator would offer more health benefits than a smooth operator, though the differences are negligible.
According to the unofficial USS New Jersey website, the "50 foot long with a two-ton anchor" line is a gross underestimation. Battleship chains are really 1.080 feet long with a fifteen-ton anchor.
Each chain link weighs over 100 pounds.
Battleship anchors be heavy.
For another Georgia Satellites cover, Sawyer Brown's version of "Keep Your Hands to Yourself" can be found here.
I wish 1-800-FLOWERS had an option to send dead flowers by the US Mail.... because $40.00 for live tulips? Screw all of that noise.
Over Chris's right shoulder, we can see the very Delco Miller Lite ad with the Eagles logo.
Go Birds.
For more Stones covers, The Concretes version of "Miss You" can be found here, and Rage Against the Machine's version of "Street Fighting Man" can be found here.
As the musicians are all high school students, they derive their name from a short-lived television series that last aired over a decade before any of the ensemble were conceived.
For another Janet cover, the Warmen version of "Black Cat" can be found here.
Well, that's only partly true. When Banda AL9 traveled back to the mid 1950's and attended a school dance in Porto Alegre, they filled in on guitar when one of the musicians hurt his hand.
Upon hearing the shredding on electric guitar, the injured musician phoned Chuck Berry and said,
"Chuck, é Marvin. Seu primo, Marvin Berry. Sabe aquele novo som que você está procurando? Bem, ouça isso!"
I didn't even know that Chuck Berry spoke Portuguese.
Or, maybe they're "Midsommar" vibes. Hard to tell sometimes. That Ozark backdrop is definitely Midsommar.
Here, they bring their tight harmonies, a ukulele, and a DOBRO(!) aboard for their version of "The Way I Am," the 2006 platinum indie folk single from New York City singer/songwriter Ingrid Michaelson.
Quick word of advice for the dobro player: if anyone in the Petersen family asks for you to put on a bear suit, don't.
The song is the aftermath of losing the things that we all too often take for granted, like a romantic relationship, or women's bodily autonomy, or affordable health care, or LGBTQ rights, or standards for education, or Social Security benefits, or a sense of decorum in the Oval Office, or, you know.... stuff.
This footage was from a show last night in Glenolden, PA. As the wreath behind the band signifies, it's ALWAYS Christmas in Delco, Pennsylvania.
If you have trouble reading the "Upcoming Events" sign to their left because of my excessively dirty iPhone lens, the band was billed as Ashley Caranci and Chris.
Poor Justin, the human metronome on the box drum, got left off of the marquee. Again.
For more Clapton covers, the Love Runs Blind version of "Wonderful Tonight" can be found here, and the Autumn Boukadakis version of "Lay Down Sally" can be found here.
For more Tears for Fears covers, the Japanese Breakfast version of "Head Over Heels" can be found here, and Lorde's version of "Everybody Wants to Rule the World" can be found here.
I was surprised that the crowd was singing along to this completely unfamiliar tune, then looked up the original version. Nearly 2 billion streams. Huh. Ain't that something.
Though not specified in the video description, the Pizza Hut in the background and the pedestrians carrying bright yellow bags from The Lego Store lead me to believe that this footage was shot on the Northeast corner of Leicester Square.
For more Miley covers, Sondre Lerche's version of "Wrecking Ball" can be found here, and Tokyo Police Club's version of "Party in the USA" can be found here.
For a cover by Miley, her version of "Head Like a Hole" can be found here.
For more Counting Crows covers, Little Hurricane's version of "A Long December" can be found here, and Waterflow's version of "Anna Begins" can be found here.