I knew how big this was, this is a national SAG-AFTRA commercial. “Not only can it get you out there again, but it can, if you hit the charts again and you’re going to be on tour, right? So for us, it was just a chance to, you know, make that happen. Now a voice actor and motivational speaker who’s done everything from DJing in strip clubs to building websites for clients, he saw another chance to get his music work back in the fray and make dollars. “That was the easiest decision we probably ever had,” Glenn said this week. They saw the success of Salt-N-Pepa’s Geico work and it made perfect sense. So when the artists were approached by Martin Agency, the advertising group that works with the Geico insurance company, they weren’t worried about becoming just another cog in the nostalgia machine that seems to fuel all content these days. It’s an original party rap song that has seen some things. We’re talking about a song that begat an actual Addams Family remix, all while fighting off not just a song of an extremely similar name and theme, but also survived a pretty serious multi-decade lawsuit that almost ended the whole run, after the New Orleans Saints began playing it regularly in the Superdome after touchdowns. I know every word and always will whether I want to or not. This joint was just another one of those songs, but everyone from little league knew the words all the way on down to the Sunday school kids I had zero desire to hang out with. In the nine-trey, as we liked to call it at the time, I listened to all sorts of ridiculous rap music. You might have called it corny, they called it positive partying. Glenn and Steve Gibson, the rap duo from Atlanta, the track that won the 1994 Razzie Award for Worst Original Song has definitely provided them with the last laugh, as well as laughs for plenty of other families for generations to come. At this point, it’s far more than just a chart topper from back in the day – when you had to listen to the radio to hear your favorite songs.īut for D.C. If you’ve really been paying attention, you know it’s seen quite a few spins on the Disney Channel and KidzBop circuit as well. If you want to look more closely at the selection, one could qualify it as a Jock Jam, too. For some, 1993’s “Whoomp! (There It is)” by Tag Team is most easily described as a one-hit wonder.
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