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Hayworth was born in High Point, North Carolina.His grandfather, Ray Hayworth, was a Major League Baseball catcher from 1926 to 1945. [3] Hayworth received a bachelor's degree in speech communications and political science from North Carolina State University in Raleigh in 1980, where he was student body president during his senior year.
In late 2023, the song gained a viral resurgence on the video app TikTok after a trend named the "Ceiling Challenge" was created. As a result, more than 57,000 videos were made using the song. The trend caused the song to peak at number 40 on the Billboard Hot 100 in January 2024, two years after its original release. [1]
Hayworth is a surname, and may refer to: Donald Hayworth (1898–1982), U.S. Representative from Michigan; J. D. Hayworth; Nan Hayworth, U.S. Representative for New York; Ray Hayworth; Rita Hayworth (1918–1987), an iconic American film actress and dancer; Volga Hayworth; Tyler Hayworth, College Football Player, 2012-2016 Wake Forest ...
Jealous One's Envy is the second solo studio album by American rapper Fat Joe, who had previously released his first album under the name 'Fat Joe da Gangsta'. It was released on October 24, 1995, via Relativity Records. Production was handled by Domingo, Diamond D, Joe Fatal, L.E.S., DJ Premier, and Fat Joe himself.
"Her Town Too" is a song written by James Taylor, JD Souther, and Waddy Wachtel, first released as a duet between Taylor and Souther on Taylor's 1981 album Dad Loves His Work. "Her Town Too" was later released on the 2000 compilation album Greatest Hits Volume 2 . [ 1 ]
The Biggest Loser is an American competition reality show that initially ran on NBC for 17 seasons from 2004 to 2016 before moving to USA Network in 2020. [3] The show features obese or overweight contestants competing to win a cash prize by losing the highest percentage of weight relative to their initial weight.
"You're Only Lonely" is a 1979 single by JD Souther from his album You're Only Lonely. [3] It was Souther's only top ten pop hit, peaking at number seven on the Billboard Hot 100 for the weeks of December 15, 22 and 29, 1979 and spent five weeks at number one on the Adult Contemporary chart.
The song was covered by Roots Reggae and dub artists in the 1970s : in 1972, Sioux Records released two versions of the song, by Jackie Rowland and another by Funky Brown, and later, in 1977, Lee "Scratch" Perry released at least two vocal and dub versions of the record, recorded at the Black Ark Studios and attributed to The African ...