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Colin Tilley directed an accompanying video for the song, which was released on August 19, 2014. Following the video's release, it broke the 24-hour streaming record on Vevo by accumulating 19.6 million views in its first day of release. In 2021, "Anaconda" became the first music video for a solo female rap song to hit 1 billion views.
The song's accompanying music video was briefly banned by MTV. [2] Mix-a-Lot defended the song as being empowering to curvaceous women who were being shown skinny models as an ideal for beauty. "Baby Got Back" topped the US Billboard Hot 100, and spent five weeks atop the chart. It was the second best-selling song in the US in 1992.
In 2014, rapper Nicki Minaj released the single "Anaconda", [24] which prominently featured samples from "Baby Got Back". Sir Mix-a-Lot praised both the artist and the song, calling it the "new and improved version" of "Baby Got Back". [25] In March 2016, Sir Mix-a-Lot collaborated with TNT and LK on the track and video, "Streets Don't Love Me ...
The album's second single, "Anaconda", peaked at number two on the Hot 100 while further singles, "Only" and "Truffle Butter", peaked within the top 20 on the chart. In 2014, Minaj shared lead credit on the single "Bang Bang" with Jessie J and Ariana Grande. The song scored Minaj her first number one in the UK and peaked at number three in the US.
"Anaconda" (stylized as "ANACONDA *o* ~~") is a song by Brazilian singer Luísa Sonza and American singer Mariah Angeliq, recorded for Sonza's second studio album, Doce 22 (2021). It was released as the album's fourth single on 9 December 2021, through Universal Music Brasil .
[9] [7] It was created and produced by YouTube and Portal A Interactive, [9] and features Rebecca Black, whose music video of her song "Friday" had gone viral in March of that year, as the host. [ 9 ] [ 11 ] Like in 2010, it featured another top-ten most-popular videos of the year on YouTube.
A video shared online shows the scale of these 20-foot-long (6.1-meter-long) reptiles as one of the researchers, Dutch biologist Freek Vonk, swims alongside a giant 200-kilo (441-pound) specimen.
Nothing in article deals with text of song. DGtal 10:13, 1 September 2014 (UTC) I came here to try and find out. I'm hoping it's a parody of most types of, shall we say... 'certain music videos'? groovygower 17:29, 1 September 2014 (UTC) I think (original "research") its more like a basic sexploitation song.