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"Breakeven", also titled "Breakeven (Falling to Pieces)" is a song by the Irish pop rock band The Script. It was released on 24 November 2008 as the third single from their first album, The Script (2008). The song peaked at number 10 in Ireland, number 21 in the United Kingdom, number 12 in the United States Billboard Hot 100 and number 3 in ...
The band's third single, "Breakeven", was released in Ireland and UK on 21 November 2008 and 29 December 2008 respectively. The single was an instant success on the Irish Singles Chart. After entering the chart at number 40, it spent one week before entering the top ten at number 10, giving the Script their third top ten single in Ireland.
The album went to number one in both Ireland and the United Kingdom. It also reached the top ten in Australia and Sweden, and peaked at number 19 on the US Top Heatseekers chart. The Script's debut single, " We Cry ", peaked in the top 10 of the Irish and Danish charts.
The Script is the debut album by Irish pop rock trio the Script, which was released in Ireland on 8 August 2008 and was released in the UK on 11 August 2008 by Phonogenic Records. [1] Following success in Ireland, the album was released elsewhere in Europe in September 2008.
Break-even is a point where any difference between plus or minus or equivalent changes. Break-even (or break even) may also refer to: Break-even point, the term in economics; Breakeven, the point in the fusion energy gain factor where input and output energy is equal "Breakeven" (song), a 2008 song by the Script
In mid-2024, private equity firm Apollo Global (NYSE: APO) invested $11 billion for a 49% stake in Intel's Ireland fab 34. However, Intel has scaled back the buildout, probably because of last ...
Kathy Ireland took a major gamble in finding her husband.. While on the MovieGuide Awards red carpet, Ireland explained that she "stalked" her husband, Dr. Greg Olsen, before officially meeting.
Potatoes in Ireland Potatoes are synonymous with Ireland, but that wasn’t always so. As part of the Columbian Exchange — in which food from the Americas was introduced to Europe and vice versa ...