Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Sometimes, the show features an animated cartoon called "Fatman", which is about Weird Al as a fat superhero. At the end of the show, there is a commercial parody being shown followed by a band performing a song. Sometimes, Al reviews today's lesson before closing out the show.
"Fat" is a song by "Weird Al" Yankovic. It is a parody of "Bad" by Michael Jackson and is Yankovic's second parody of a Jackson song, the first being "Eat It", a parody of Jackson's "Beat It". "Fat" is the first song on Yankovic's Even Worse album. The video won a Grammy Award for Best Concept Music Video in 1988. [1]
"The Weird Al Show Theme" The Weird Al Show (1997) Running with Scissors (1999) Original "What Is Life" George Fest (2016) originally by George Harrison "Whatever You Like" Internet Leaks digital EP (2008) Alpocalypse (2011) Parody of "Whatever You Like" by T.I. "When I Was Your Age" Off the Deep End (1992) Permanent Record: Al in the Box (1994)
The Weird Al Star Fund was a campaign started by Yankovic's fans to get him a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Their mission was to "solicit, collect, and raise the necessary money, and to compile the information needed for the application to nominate "Weird Al" Yankovic for a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame". [227]
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
The song begins with Al talking about a traumatic childhood, living "in a box under the stairs in the corner of a basement half a block down the street from Jerry's Bait Shop (You know the place)" and being force-fed sauerkraut by his mother for his own health until he turned 26½ years old.
Way back in 1980 it seems “Weird Al Yankovic” had a premonition. Having recently seen “The Empire Strikes Back,” he penned a song from the point of view of protagonist Luke Skywalker as ...
According to the liner notes of The Ultimate Video Collection, the song represents "Al's motto in life". [3] The song is a style parody of the band Devo, whose reaction to the pastiche was positive. [4] [5] Yankovic said "Right after I finished 'Dare to Be Stupid', I went over to Mark Mothersbaugh's house and played it for him. He seemed to ...