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In the United States, the 1884 song "The Equal-Rights Banner" was sung to the tune of the US national anthem by American activists for women's voting rights. [1] "The March of the Women" and "The Women's Marseillaise" were sung by British suffragettes as anthems of the women's suffrage movement in the 1900s–1910s.
The song's music video consists of short clips in which Amanda channels women working in various professions, loosely following the song's lyrics. The video begins with the singer as a Paleolithic woman from the Stone Age, and then pictures her as a busy professional in a modern office, a politician, a boxer, a housewife with kids, an aviator, a painter, and a prostitute, among others.
Since Lady Gaga's "Bad Romance" in 2009, every video that has reached the top of the "most-viewed YouTube videos" list has been a music video. In November 2005, a Nike advertisement featuring Brazilian football player Ronaldinho became the first video to reach 1,000,000 views. [1] The billion-view mark was first passed by Gangnam Style in ...
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
A full music video was released on December 13, 2013, as a bonus video on the Visual disc of Beyoncé's fifth studio album Beyoncé (2013). [21] Also directed by British director Jake Nava, the video features Beyoncé as a "gum-chewing beauty-queen" reminiscing on her trophy-winning pageant past, using CGI technology to sing the song as younger ...
"Girls Like You" topped YouTube's 2018 Songs of the Summer list globally, and ranked third in the United States. [39] It is also Vevo's most viewed video of 2018, and at third on YouTube's Top 10 music videos of 2018, respectively. [40] [41] The video was named the 23rd-most iconic pop music video of the 2010s by PopSugar. [42]
Here's the best modern and new Christmas music to refresh your holiday playlist in 2024, featuring hits from Justin Bieber, Taylor Swift, Sabrina Carpenter, and more.
A music video was produced for Khan's version of "I'm Every Woman" at a time when the value of promotional films was increasing. The video, which features five dancing Chakas dressed in various outfits to represent "every woman", was made a few years before the onset of mainstream coverage of "music promos" through such outlets as MTV, VH1, and BET.