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Cover songs can be hit or miss, they can either nail everything the original did and intersect it with their own style or have it fall flat. Here are 10 covers so different from the original it’s almost as if they’re not the same song any more. 10. Can You Feel the Love Tonight The [...]
Posted by Karl Smallwood on Friday, June 29, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, Games, Music, Television · Tagged Animaniacs, animaniacs song, Antoine Dodson, Basshunter, battle with lance, Can You Feel the Love Tonight, cartoon songs, celine dion, Cover Songs, Elton John, geeky songs, guiles song, guiles theme, internet meme, jurassic park song, Less Than Jake, metal, my heart will go on, odd covers, pokemon song, Tommy Johansson, video game songs, Weebl, weird cover songs, youtube, zanarkand
Eighteen is a special time in a person’s life. In most countries, 18-years-old is when an individual is legally considered an adult and can assume control over their actions and decisions. As we move into the 21st century, the age of maturity has risen. A 15-year-old boy living in the Middle Ages had greater responsibilities [...]
Posted by Bryan Johnson on Monday, September 19, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under History · Tagged Actor, advocate for AIDS research and public education, After You've Gone, AIDS, Akhenaten, Akhetaten, alabama, Alabama,United States, Alexander Severus, Allied Control Council, Antioch, artist, Aruba, BBC, Berlin, Berlin,Germany, Beths Grammar School, bishop, blood product, brain death, Britain, Britain's Got Talent, British Broadcasting Corporation, British Columbia, British Columbia,Canada, Caracalla, carpenter, Charles Carlton, Checkpoint Charlie, Chile, club Carlos'n Charlie, Colorado, Colorado,United States, Columbine High School, communist government, Cultural anthropology, denmark, Denver, Denver,Colorado,United States, Disappeared people, disease, disorder, Dylan Klebold, East Germany, Edmund, egypt, Elton John, Emaji, emperor, Eric Harris, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, Erich Schreiber, F-16, factor, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Flores Ramírez, Food and Drug Administration, France, gene therapy, George Herbert, Germany, Great Britain, Greta Van Susteren, Hamilton Heights High School, Harry Potter, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, head, Helmut Kulbeik, Hemophilia A, Henry Frederick, Henry Frederick Stuart, hereditary blood coagulation disorder, HIV, HIV/AIDS, Howard Carter, Ichinomiya Hospital, Ichinomiya Hospital in Japan, Inc., Indiana, Indiana,United States, injury, Ireland, ITV police, James M. Wilson, Jamie, Japan, Jesse Gelsinger, Joran van der Sloot, Jordan, Jordan van der Sloot, Julia Maesa, Julia Soaemias, Kansas, Kansas,United States, Karl Norman Bishop, Kent, Kevin, Kimberly Bergalis, King, King Arthur, Kinjirareta Mariko, Knowledge, Kokomo, Kokomo,Indiana,United States, lead researcher, Lima, Lima Superior Court, Lima,Lima Region,Peru, Littleton, Littleton,Colorado,United States, London, London,Greater London,United Kingdom, Magic Johnson, Malaria, manager, Marcus Belby, Marcus Opellius Macrinus, Mary, media coverage, Mercedes, Metro Bar, Michael Jackson, minor injuries, Mountain Brook, Mountain Brook High School, Mountain Brook,Alabama,United States, murder, musician, Natalee Holloway, New York, New York City, New York City,New York,United States, New York,United States, Nippon Television, Nippon Television Network Corporation, ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania,United States, peru, Peter Fechter, Peter-Fechter-Stelle memorial, pharaoh, Phil Donahue, phrase Yukko Syndrome, physician, Plattsburgh, Plattsburgh,New York,United States, pneumonia, Praetorian camp, Praetorian Guard, prince, Prince of Wales, prosecutor, queen, Queen of Scots, R&B musician, recently Filipino actor, reported missing in Lima, REpublic of Ireland, Rob Knox, Rolf Friedrich, Roman pantheon, Ronnie Caldwell, Rookie of the Year, Ryan White, Scotland, Second Presbyterian Church on Meridian Street in Indianapolis, services, severe disease, Singer, Sol Invictus, Soviet Union, spokesman for AIDS research, Stephany Tatiana Flores Ramírez, Sun Music, Sun Music Agency building, Sun Music building, teacher, teenage bricklayer, The Bill, the University of Pennsylvania, Third Legion, Tokyo, Tokyo,Japan, treatment for infants born with severe disease, Trevor McDonald, Trust, Tutankhamun, typhoid fever, U.S. Congress, United Kingdom, United States, University of Colorado, University of Pennsylvania, USA Today, wales, Wayne Harris, West Germany, Westminster Abbey, Wichita, Wichita,Kansas,United States, X-linked genetic disease, Yukiko Okada
Session players are the unsung stars of the music industry. As temporary members of big name bands, they step in during recording or touring to fill in the gaps in an act’s lineup, and often learn their parts in only a matter of hours. While front men and bandleaders might get the bulk of the [...]
Posted by Evan Andrews on Friday, July 1, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Music · Tagged American Federation of Musicians, Bass guitar, Billy Preston, Carol Kaye, Detroit, drummer, Elton John, Entertainment_Culture, Hal Blaine, James Burton, michigan, Motown, Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section, Muscle Shoals Sound Studio, Music, Musical collectives, musicians, scheduled session musician, Session musician, studio musician, The Funk Brothers, The Temptations, The Wrecking Crew, top 10 musicians, top 10 session, TopTenz, TopTenz.net, United States
Television is a ubiquitous part of any child’s young life and helps them to see another window to the world they wouldn’t see otherwise. All of us have those shows from our past that we loved unconditionally as kids and still carry with us into adulthood nostalgia. On the flipside, we also all have those [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Monday, April 4, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, Television · Tagged 2nd millennium, Bert, canada, cancer, CGI, Dave Osborne, David Hart, Eddie Valiant, Elton John, Entertainment, epileptic seizure, Ernie, grandfather wearing face paint, Hartley Hare, huge cartoon head, Jay Jay The Jet Plane, Jessica Rabbit, Jigsaw, Marionette, Mass media, Matthew Hayden, Noseybonk, pedophilia, Pipkins, Puppet, Puppetry, Roger Rabbit, Rupert Bear, Terrahawks, The Adventures of Rupert Bear, The Jet, United Kingdom, United States
The world is full of unique objects, creatures, and world events. Many foods are naturally radioactive and bananas contain a particularly high dose of radiation. The banana equivalent dose is a scale used to measure radiation exposure. The scale is based on the radiation levels humans receive by eating a single banana. In fact, bananas [...]
Posted by Bryan Johnson on Friday, March 4, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Animals, Bizarre, History · Tagged Alaskan Malamute, America, Americas, Anaheim, Andrew Carnegie, Apes, archeological site, Army, Australia, Austria, Austrian army, Balkans, banking, Bili Ape, Bili Forest, Bill Mazeroski, Billy Hunter, Blue Bayou Restaurant, boxer, BP CORPORATION NORTH AMERICA INC, brazil, Britain, British Science Weekly, Brooklin, Bryan Johnson, California, candidate, catcher, Catherine the Great, center fielder, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, chairman, CHEMICAL CO, Chemical Company, Chris Atkins, cincinnati reds, comedian, Congo, Cornelius Vanderbilt, corps commander, Dan Driessen, Danny Murtaugh, debris, Disneyland's Private Club, Dock Ellis, Edmund Schulman, Elton John, emperor, Eureka, Europe, facility producing chemicals, federal government, finance houses, Forest of Ancients, France, Galapagos Islands, GBP, general scientific opinion, George Gobel, german shepherd, Great Basin Bristlecone, Great Depression, greenland, Guy Mellgren, head, Henry Ford, Hitler, Hungary, important leader, injuries, Isabela, Isabela Island, Isabela province, Island of Pinta, Italy, Jack Russell Terrier, Joe Morgan, John D. Rockefeller, Johnny Bench, Joseph ii, Joseph Vagvolgyi, Karánsebes, Lilly Belle, Lombardy, Los Angeles, Louisiana, Maine, Maine Museum, Maine State Museum, Major League, manager, Marcus Licinius Crassus, Matty Alou, Meramec River, Michael Taylor, miscarriages, Missouri, Nathan Mayer Rothschild, National League, New Orleans, Newfoundland, Niger, North America, Northeastern Pharmaceutical, Northeastern Pharmaceutical Co, oil, Olaf Kyrre, Ottoman army, Parisian hotel, Paul McCartney, Penobscot Bay, Pete Rose, Peter Pritchard, Philippines, Pinta, Pinta Island, Pittsburgh Pirates, player, Prague zoo, president, presidential caboose car, primate specialist, Private Club, professional baseball player, Province of Rome, radiation, representative, Republic of the Congo, Richard Nixon, Romania, rome, ronald reagan, ruler, Russell Bliss, Sahara Desert, San Diego Padres, second baseman, serious injury, Shelly Williams, Smithsonian, soil, St. Louis, Standard Oil Company, starting pitcher, texas rangers, the Times, THE TIMES HERALD COMPANY, The Walt Disney Company, the World Series, Thoroughbred, Time Magazine, Times Beach, Tom Harlan, Tony Perez, toxic oil, truck driver, United Kingdom, United States, University of Amsterdam, USD, White Mountains, Wolf Volcano, Yi script
Surpassing “The Flintstones” more than 13 years ago as the longest animated sitcoms and the longest running animated program, “The Simpsons” has also become a hallmark for American television. In the nearly 20 seasons, “The Simpsons” has created a few of its own hallmarks such as the couch gag, the chalkboard gag and guest stars. [...]
Posted by William O'Dell on Tuesday, August 12, 2008 at 12:02 am
Filed under Art, Television · Tagged Actors, Aerosmith, animation, Bart, Beatles, cartoon, comedy, dustin hoffman, Elizabeth Taylor, Elton John, flaming moe, george takei, guest stars, Homer, J.K. Rowling, John Lennon, Kelsey Grammer, leonard nimoy, Lisa, Maggie, Marge, Meryl Streep, Michael Jackson, mr sulu, Mr. Spock, Paul McCartney, Ringo, Ringo Star, Simpsons, Springfield, Star Trek, Stephen King, televsion, tv