Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The music video won the 2007 Grammy Award for Best Short Form Music Video and the 2006 YouTube awards for Most Creative Video. The video was ranked No. 9 on "The Must List" in the August 18, 2006, issue of Entertainment Weekly: "The votes have been tallied, and this year's award for Best Use of Treadmills in an Alt-Pop Music Video goes to ...
On August 31, 2006, OK Go appeared live at the 2006 MTV Video Music Awards performing their treadmill routine for "Here It Goes Again". On November 7, 2006, OK Go released a deluxe limited edition CD/DVD of the album Oh No. The DVD contains their music videos (dancing and playing instruments), a video of 180 fans performing the "A Million Ways ...
PureWow Editors select every item that appears on this page,, and the company may earn compensation through affiliate links within the story You can learn more about that process here. Yahoo Inc ...
“I’m a 70s rock music junkie and the (former) band Looking Glass had a hit song called ‘Brandy,’” Bruce, 61, tells TODAY.com. Realizing he could easily change the lyrics to describe the ...
The Taylor Swift "Eras Tour" treadmill workout challenge requires you to run and walk the 3-hour setlist while singing out loud. A personal trainer reviews it.
On 7 November 2006, OK Go released a deluxe limited edition CD/DVD of the album. The DVD contains their official music videos, a video from 180 fans doing the "A Million Ways" dance for a YouTube contest, previously unseen footage, and a behind-the-scenes look of their treadmill rehearsals for the video and for the VMAs.
OK Go music videos – several of the band's award-winning videos incorporate unique concepts, such as dancing on treadmills in "Here It Goes Again", [162] a giant Rube Goldberg machine in "This Too Shall Pass", [163] [164] and a choreographed one-shot routine using over a dozen trained dogs in "White Knuckles". [165]
The video was named both "Video of the Year" and "Best Rock Video" at the 3rd annual UK Music Video Awards. [28] In May 2010, after the band split with EMI, the single debuted at number 39 on the Billboard Alternative Songs chart, their first appearance on the chart since "Here It Goes Again" in 2006. The song eventually peaked at number 36.