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Learn about the origin, meaning and impact of the famous line from Gone with the Wind, spoken by Rhett Butler (Clark Gable) to Scarlett O'Hara (Vivien Leigh). Find out how the word "damn" was allowed by the censors and how Marlon Brando criticized Gable's delivery.
Don't Stop is a pop rock song by Fleetwood Mac, written by Christine McVie and released in 1977. It was used as the theme music for Bill Clinton's presidential campaign and became one of the band's most enduring hits.
Learn about the 1980 R&B hit by Yarbrough and Peoples, which reached number one on the US R&B chart and number 7 in the UK. Find out the chart history, music video, samples and covers of this song.
50 Years – Don't Stop is Fleetwood Mac's most recent career-spanning collection. It features liner notes by veteran music writer David Wild. [4] The Belfast Telegraph said of the album, "The 50-track compilation is the sound of a band pulling themselves apart, and putting themselves back together, over the course of half a century."
A 1946 American Christmas drama film directed by Frank Capra and starring James Stewart as George Bailey, a man who contemplates suicide on Christmas Eve. The film shows how George's life affects the people around him and how an angel shows him what the world would be like without him.
A rockabilly song by Creedence Clearwater Revival from 1969, written by John Fogerty. It criticizes the hippie generation for ignoring the hard work of common laborers and praising the starving and praying people.
Learn about the history and variations of "Baby, Please Don't Go", a traditional blues song popularized by Delta blues musician Big Joe Williams in 1935. The song became a blues and rock standard, covered by many artists such as Muddy Waters, Them, AC/DC, and Aerosmith.
A song by Simple Minds from the 1985 film The Breakfast Club. It was a hit in the US and Canada, and became a 1980s anthem.