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"Duncan and Brady" is a typical "bad man" murder ballad, such as "Frankie and Johnny" or "Stagger Lee". [2] The song begins with Brady, a policeman, riding around in an electric car, with a "mean look in his eye", looking to "shoot somebody just to see him die". [1] He walks into a bar, which Duncan is tending, and arrests him. [1]
The song was inspired by the videotaped confession to police that Robert Chambers made the morning after the death of Jennifer Levin. [3] It is a part of the Killers' alleged "Murder Trilogy", three songs detailing the murder of a girl named Jenny, [4] the other two being "Midnight Show" and "Leave the Bourbon on the Shelf".
And they found their favorite things. Then the Magic Windmill Spins and the Teletubbies watch some children learning about the number 1. Inside the Home Hill, it is time for Teletubbies to sleep in their beds, and the voice trumpet rises up singing them a good to sleep song to the Teletubbies, After a moment later, Po is gone.
How to Get Away with Murder; Masters of Sex (2013–present) NCIS: New Orleans; New Girl (2013–present) Once Upon a Time; Reign (2013–present) Resurrection (2014–2015) The Simpsons (1997–present) Suburgatory (2011–present) The Walking Dead (2010–present) Canada. The Next Steps; UK. Alan Carr: Chatty Man; Amazing Hotels; Deadly 60 ...
This is a list of songs about or referencing killers. The songs are divided into groups by the last name of the killer the song is about or mentions. This is a dynamic list of songs and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.
("I Love You" (closing song) – Lee Bernstein; performed by the cast. Barney Miller – Jack Elliott and Allyn Ferguson; The Baron – Edwin Astley; Bat Masterson – Bill Lee; Batman ("Batman Theme") – Neal Hefti; Battlestar Galactica – Glen A. Larson and Stu Phillips; Battlestar Galactica (2004) – Bear McCreary; Bay City Blues – Mike ...
Law & Order debuted in 1990, but its inclusion of John Munch connected it to Homicide: Life on the Street, which in turn connected it to the earlier show, St. Elsewhere, and thus the Tommy Westphall Universe. Munch also connects it to the X-Files universe, The Beat, Arrested Development, and The Wire. The Cosby Show and A Different World: The ...
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