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"My Favorite Memory" is a song written and recorded by American country music artist Merle Haggard, his twenty-fifth number-one single. It was released in September 1981 as the first single from the album Big City. The single stayed at number one for one week and spent a total of ten weeks on the country chart.
My Favorite Martian, which premiered in the fall of 1963, was the first of the "fantasy" situation comedies prevalent on American television in the mid-1960s featuring characters who could do extraordinary things, predating My Living Doll (1964–1965), Bewitched (1964–1972), and I Dream of Jeannie (1965–1970).
The S1000PB was a playback-only version that couldn't create new samples [4] The S1100 , released in 1990, was an expanded and enhanced version of the S1000 including effects and SCSI interface, original MSRP $4,999 [ 3 ]
On "Watch What Happens Live" Wednesday, "Sopranos" star Lorraine Bracco revealed some, uh, intimate moments she had with her late co-star, James Gandolfini. "Lorraine - favorite moment from ...
Thom Jurek of AllMusic believes the album "stands among his finest—and most lasting—recordings," adding, "Big City, both the cut and the album, revisits the seemingly eternal themes in Haggard's best work—the plight of the honest, decent working man amid the squalor, complication, and contradiction of urban life."
Interpolation is prevalent in many genres of popular music; early examples are the Beatles interpolating "La Marseillaise" and "She Loves You", among three other interpolations in the 1967 song "All You Need Is Love", [3] and Lyn Collins interpolating lyrics from the 5 Royales' "Think" in her similarly titled 1972 song "Think (About It)".
"My favorite memory of Grant is, every time an experiment went the way that it should have, Grant expressed so much joy with his face," Savage says. "The fact is that when you conduct an ...
My Favorite Martian is a 1999 American science fiction comedy film directed by Donald Petrie, written by Sherri Stoner and Deanna Oliver. The film is loosely based on the 1960s television series of the same name which starred Ray Walston , who also has a supporting role in the film.