Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Oh Japan (Our Time Is Now)" (stylized as "Oh Japan ~Our Time Is Now~") is the only single by Japan-based supergroup Tak Matsumoto Group, released on March 31, 2004. [1] It was used as the theme song for TV Asahi Network Sports 2004. [2] The single debuted at number 3 on the Oricon Singles Chart and was the 95th best-selling single of 2004.
Solid Gold – Theme song performed by Dionne Warwick (Seasons 1 and 4) and Marilyn McCoo (Seasons 2–3, 5–8) Some Mothers Do 'Ave Em – Ronnie Hazlehurst; The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour ("The Beat Goes On") – Sonny Bono and Cher; Sonny with a Chance ("So Far, So Great") – Demi Lovato; The Sooty Show – Alan Braden
"Apt." was the first song by a K-pop female soloist to top Australia's ARIA Singles Chart and the first Western song to top the Billboard Japan Hot 100 in over a decade. The song also topped the charts in over thirty other countries, including Austria, Germany, Indonesia, New Zealand, the Philippines and Switzerland.
NHK World TV started broadcasting services for North America and Europe in 1995. On April 1, 1998, then-called NHK World Television started broadcasting. Today's NHK World-Japan is a current affairs and cultural channel that broadcasts internationally via satellite and cable TV. Programming is produced in English only. It began as a news ...
Happiness (Arashi song) Happy Christmas/Heiwa/Miracle; Harmony (Beni Arashiro song) Hasu no Hana; Hatenai Sora; Hatsukoi Cider / Deep Mind; Heart/You; The Heat (Musica Fiesta) Heaven/Squall; Hello (Masaharu Fukuyama song) Hello, Again (Mukashi kara Aru Basho) Hero (Mariah Carey song) Hi no Ataru Sakamichi; Hiiragi (song) Hikari (Mai Hoshimura ...
“Japan” is the second single from Famous Dex's debut album, Dex Meets Dexter.Famous Dex first premiered the song June 2017 on Instagram. [2] The song gained massive popularity online due to the viral lyric video featuring Famous Dex on green screen visuals, and Internet dance sensation Roy Purdy creating a dance challenge to the song.
The bulk of the song was written by John Phillips and concerns his daughter Mackenzie Phillips's honeymoon experiences. She and her new husband, both serious substance abusers, flew to Guam and when the money and drugs ran out, she made a late-night phone call to her father begging him to send money or drugs, preferably both; when he asked where she was, the reply was "somewhere near Japan".
The song inspired a trend called the "U.S.A. game", where people would sing, "C'mon, baby, America" (a line from the chorus) followed by a factual statement about the United States while keeping in rhythm. [9] The success of "U.S.A." led Okayama Prefecture to creating an advertisement featuring a parody of the song to attract tourists and ...