Music In My Shoes

E89 Ozzy Osbourne's Final Encore and Weird Science

Episode 89

Ozzy Osbourne's triumphant final performance and sudden passing just 17 days later highlights his remarkable journey from heavy metal pioneer to beloved cultural icon. We explore his legacy while reminiscing about forgotten musical gems that transport us back to specific moments in time.

• Ozzy's final concert "Back to the Beginning" in Birmingham featured major bands like Metallica and Guns N' Roses paying tribute
• Black Sabbath was a pioneer of heavy metal with classics like "Paranoid" and "Iron Man"
• Ozzy was fired from Black Sabbath in 1979 before launching a successful solo career
• The Osbournes reality show (2002-2005) introduced Ozzy to a new generation as a lovable family man
• 40th Anniversary of "Weird Science." So... What would you little maniacs like to do first?
• Martha and the Muffins' "Echo Beach" (1980) remains a beloved summer anthem despite limited commercial success
• New Order's "Perfect Kiss" peaked at #5 on Billboard Dance Club Songs chart in July 1985
• Smoking Popes' "Need You Around" gained popularity through the Clueless soundtrack
• Stone Temple Pilots' "Sour Girl" is surprisingly their only song to make the Billboard Hot 100

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Speaker 1:

He's got the feeling in his toe-toe.

Speaker 2:

He's got the feeling and it's out there growing. Hey everybody, this is Jim Boge and you're listening to Music In my Shoes. That was Vic Thrill kicking off episode 89. As always, I'm thrilled to be here with you. Let's learn something new or remember something old.

Speaker 2:

Four episodes ago we spoke about Black Sabbath and Ozzy Osbourne getting ready to perform their final show with an event in Birmingham, england, named Back to the Beginning, and it ended up being a great tribute to Ozzy you know, who had Parkinson's disease. He also had several spinal surgeries because he had some issues with his back. Multiple bands played, you know, for the whole day Anthrax, alice in Chains, pantera, slayer, guns N' Roses and Metallica and they mixed in some Black Sabbath or Ozzy Osbourne songs along with a few of their own and basically it was, you know, the first bands got the least amount of time and you know, by the time you got to Metallica, who came on right before Ozzy, you know they had the most time. So Ozzy's sitting in a chair, you know, a throne, and you know that was by design and I think they did a really good job with this by putting out there that you know Ozzy can't sing a lot of songs. Ozzy's going to be in a chair, he's not going to be walking around, and it kind of set the expectations up for people to know and I think by doing that this made it a total success. I thought he sounded good, I thought he did a really good job under all the circumstances.

Speaker 2:

So as he played his Ozzy because he did Ozzy then he did Black Sabbath I don't know, mr Crowley, suicide Solution, not a song about suicide being a solution, just for the record Uh-huh, my Mom Coming Home and, of course, crazy Train With Black Sabbath, war Pigs, nib, iron man and, of course, paranoid. Yes, so I thought it was a triumphant end to an illustrious career. I mean, I really am like, what would I say his career is? And I think this it definitely an illustrious career had its ups, its downs and its craziness. I mean I think that kind of sums up, you know, the nickel explanation of Ozzy. And then, 17 days later, ozzy dies at 76 years old and while we all knew he was ill, I was not expecting this quick for him to be gone. It kind of took me by surprise, especially after watching these videos and seeing him up there, and it just didn't correlate to me that 17 days later he would be gone.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, it's kind of surprising.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's almost mind boggling. Yeah, it's kind of surprising, yeah, it's almost mind-boggling. So you know I texted Matt Hughes, who was our guest on the episode that we were talking about, you know, getting ready for the big Back to the Beginning show, and you know to think that I was the one that told him that Randy Rhoades, the guitarist for Ozzy Osbourne, had died the day that it happened, back in March of 1982, and that now we're texting the night that Ozzy dies, you know, 42 years later. To me that's mind-boggling, Like I could never have imagined that and I know I say that often on the show, but I can't grasp things from a long time ago that here all these years later, still connected with a bunch of people that I knew and grew up with, and to go through the text thing, kind of like we did with the talk the night that, you know, I spoke to Matt about Randy Rhoads dying, it's just like wow, like it really really is, and at the other point, it really illustrates how quickly time goes by, you know.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

It goes very, very quickly. So you know he was glad that they got to do the final show, that that really was Ozzy's wishes and they pulled it off. And again, I just think that it was great. I thought they did a great, great job. Listen, you know you might want to check out that episode with Matt. He talks about jamming with some of the members of Black Sabbath along with a bunch of other people, and that's episode 85, if you get an opportunity to yeah definitely so.

Speaker 2:

Black Sabbath formed in 1968. They took the name Black Sabbath in 1969. Ozzy Osbourne, tony Iommi, geezer Butler and Bill Ward the original members I guess kind of the classic version of Black Sabbath. Original members I guess kind of the classic version of Black Sabbath and they really were at the forefront of creating heavy metal music. I'm not saying they were the first to anything, you know we've talked about that before but as far as creating it and making it popular, they definitely were at the forefront.

Speaker 2:

Paranoid Iron man, electric, funeral Into the Void I mean there's just a ton of songs that we could talk about. When it comes to Black Sabbath, believe it or not, excessive alcohol and drug use led to his firing from the band in 1979. And his debut solo album, blizzard of Oz. And his debut solo album Blizzard of Oz was released in September 1980 over in the UK and March of 81 in the US and it had the song Crazy Train, jimmy. I'd say it's his most popular song. I'm not saying that it's people's favorite song, but in I think it's a lot of people's favorite song though.

Speaker 2:

It's a great song. I mean a great song, I mean a great song. More people know that song. You know Chipper Jones of the Atlanta Braves when he did his walk-up song, you know when he would come up it would be Crazy Train. You know it's something that's known. I mean little kids know it, you know.

Speaker 1:

It's just, it's one of those musical riffs that you hear the beginning of that song and you know like it sets a tone, right, you know, oh yeah definitely.

Speaker 2:

It definitely sets a tone. I agree with you a hundred percent on that. That's probably why they use that song. If you think about it?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, no, it's, uh, it sounds very intense.

Speaker 2:

So Flying High again, mr Crowley Shot in the Dark, I don't know. You know just a few of the Ozzy songs. I mean he's got a ton. My favorite Black Sabbath and I've mentioned this before is Changes, which is probably the most unlike Black Sabbath song that they do. But I love the words and I just like this different side of them. I love that song. We've talked about that before and I would have to say no More Tears is my favorite Ozzy song and I remember the first time I heard it in my car and I heard it on you know some rock station here in Atlanta.

Speaker 2:

I was not expecting it to be as good as it was at a time when, you know, like hard rock music to me wasn't that good, and that song came out and it blew me away. I just thought it was fantastic. Love it. So ups downs alcohol. Fantastic. Love it, so ups downs. Alcohol. Drugs, craziness, biting doves and a bat urinating on the Alamo, a national historic landmark, and other controversies. Okay, that is Ozzy. I mean, he didn't even try and hide from it, it is what it is, you know. So in May of 1984, ozzy plays a show in Jacksonville, florida, and it made the local TV news. City officials who quietly viewed the show later labeled the concert and Ozzy Osbourne obscene scene. They vowed to never again let the controversial singer perform here, saying he offers no social value to this city.

Speaker 2:

All right, yeah, 1984. So Ozzy and Sharon Sharon being his wife end up with their own reality TV show with two of their children, kelly and Jack, and their oldest daughter, amy, wanted no part of it. I can understand why she had a career that she was trying to do and didn't want there to be conflicts with it. So the Osbournes was on MTV 2002 to 2005, and I only watched the first season. I watched the whole thing every week or whenever it came out, but I never watched another season and I really don't even know why. To be honest, I liked it. I thought it was good, I thought it was funny. Was something set up? Yeah, I think all reality TV there's something set up, but some of it just was funny.

Speaker 2:

So the theme song was the Pat Boone version of Crazy Train kind of jazzy big band. Pat Boone was their next door neighbor when they had moved. I think it was. I don't know if it was Beverly Hills or Bel Air, I don't remember exactly but he actually in the beginning was, was their next-door neighbor. They ended up moving and Pat Boone, you know, I saw yesterday. He talked about Ozzie and said that they got along well and he thinks it's because he was the only neighbor that didn't call the police on the Osworns. So they seemed to get you know, seemed to get along well.

Speaker 2:

It's a low bar yeah, a very low bar. So in my favorite episode Ozzy's about to go on tour and the band and the stage crew, sharon and Ozzy, watch the pyrotechnics that are going to be used on the stage for the tour and there's a cannon and there's bubbles and you know just all kinds of stuff and you can kind of see Ozzy reacting. You know some of it might be too loud or you know, you just can see that. Look on his face and his response to Sharon is bubbles. Come on, sharon, I'm Ozzy Osbourne, the Prince of Darkness. Now there's some F-bombs dropped in there, I'll be honest with you. And later he wants the tour itinerary to see if he's playing back-to-back shows, because he doesn't want to do that at all. And Sharon at first avoids him and avoids the question but finally says there's a show tomorrow and then a show in Albuquerque the next day.

Speaker 1:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker 2:

And Ozzy says I can't do it, it'll blow out my voice, it's one day on, one day off and insists he's not doing it. The next scene is he's on stage at an arena with the crowd screaming and he says hello, albuquerque, how you doing? You know Sharon always got the last word in, but I loved that episode. It was just funny Because you can understand. You know Sharon always got the last word in, but I loved that episode. It was just funny because you can understand. You know, at one point he's like you know, if you could get me to do nine straight days, you would. And she's like you've never done that in your life. He's like, yeah, you'll find a way to do it. You know, like that's what I liked about the show that you know I don't think that was set up. That was them actually talking and I enjoyed that part.

Speaker 2:

So in 2002, also when it first started shortly afterwards at the White House Correspondents Dinner, george W Bush, who was president at the time, is speaking. Laura and I are honored to be here tonight. Thanks for the invitation. What a fantastic audience we have tonight Washington power brokers, celebrities, hollywood stars, ozzy Osbourne and the crowd goes wild. But he doesn't say Ozzy Osbourne. He says Ozzy Osbourne and you know the crowd's going wild and Ozzy Osbourne, and you know the crowd's going wild and Ozzy's smiling.

Speaker 2:

And then you know I've seen the video and I can't remember he either gets up on a chair or the table, I can't tell and he is like putting his arms up to the crowd and he's blowing kisses. And President Bush says, okay, ozzy, kind of a pause might have been a mistake, meaning that it was a hint, that Ozzy was stealing the spotlight from him, you know, and it's just funny. So then he says the thing about Ozzy is he's made a lot of big hit recordings. So you know, this is a president that had someone write something for him, because no one talks about Ozzy Osbourne and goes the thing about Ozzy, he's had a lot of big hit recordings. You think you're talking about Pat Boone at this point, you know. And he goes party with the animals Sabbath, bloody Sabbath facing hell, black skies, bloodbath in paradise, and Bush, facing Hell, black Skies, bloodbath in Paradise. And Bush continues with Ozzy mom loves your stuff. Crowd goes wild. Ozzy stands up again, blows more kisses, and you know those are the things that make you like Ozzy Osbourne, you know, I mean it's just funny stuff and he knew how to ham it up. You know he's a character I tried to think of like what, what, what kind of word?

Speaker 2:

You know he's a character when you look at everything about him, you know back in his alcohol and drug, you know days, you know I remember in the 80s thinking the guy was a character. They'd interview him and he was just squirt guns coming out to the reporters or whatever. He just kind of like a character. So I've seen so many tributes to him, you know. But this one that I read really says so much. We at the Alamo are saddened to hear of the passing of legendary musician Ozzy Osbourne. His relationship with the Alamo was initiated by a deeply disrespectful incident in 1982. This act profoundly and rightfully upset many who hold the site sacred. As I mentioned earlier, he urinated at the Alamo.

Speaker 2:

You said on the Alamo. He did on the Alamo, like that's, you know, and it's a sacred place for a bunch of people in.

Speaker 2:

Texas. It's where, in San Antonio, texas, and that was fighting for the independence of the state of Texas, and I understand why people would be upset. I do Back to you know their post that they put out. However, redemption and reconciliation eventually became part of his history as well. In 1992, ozzie personally apologized to then-Mayor Nelson Wolf and expressed genuine remorse for his actions. Decades later, in 2015, he revisited the Alamo grounds to learn and appreciate the site's profound history, openly demonstrating humility and understanding. At the Alamo, we honor history in all its complexities. Today, we acknowledge Ozzy Osbourne's journey from regret to reconciliation at the historic site and we extend our condolences to his family, friends and fans around the world. May he rest in peace. And I think that's just amazing. I think it is the best tribute that anyone could give, considering it started with a really bad thing a long time ago and they said so much yeah, not too bad for a guy that Jacksonville, Florida city officials once said he offered no social value.

Speaker 1:

Did they ever apologize to him for that?

Speaker 2:

No.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I hope they're thinking about it now From my heart and from my hand. Why don't people understand my intentions? Why Don't People Understand my Intentions? Weird Science by Oingo Boingo was WLIR Screamer of the Week first week of August 1985, and peaked at number 45 on Billboard Hot 100 on October 12, 1985. From the movie that was released of Weird Science, imagine that having a song Weird Science from a movie named Weird Science, so kind of in a nutshell, a couple of nerdy high school guys, gary and Wyatt, with Gary being played by Anthony Michael Hall. They're not very popular. While watching the movie Frankenstein, gary comes up with the idea to make a girl, not like from body parts in Frankenstein, but by feeding pictures into a computer and designing so that they can have what they think is. They put in a picture of Albert Einstein because they wanted the brains and they put in Beethoven because they wanted the musical ability, houdini. I'm not really sure why they put Houdini, but they put all different kinds of things in.

Speaker 1:

She could do magic.

Speaker 2:

Maybe, maybe, and of all people, david Lee Roth of Van Halen. They put him in. I don't know, maybe to be the ham of everything and of all people, david Lee Roth of Van Halen. They put him in, you know. I don't know, maybe to be the ham of everything, but you know it was all connected to a Barbie doll with wires and electrodes and they tapped into a government facility for more power. And then things are going crazy in the room where they have this all going on. And then, when everything calms down, lisa, played by Kelly LeBrock, appears and says so what do you little maniacs like to do? First? I love that line, jimmy. I think that is so funny. Like that's the first word she speaks in the entire movie. So she knows she was created by them and they kind of talk about it.

Speaker 2:

Lisa was originally played by a model who only lasted a couple of days, didn't really do anything else in the business, and they went back to Kelly LeBrock, who was on a beach in France, and convinced her that they really wanted her for the part after getting this person. That didn't work out. It's your typical teenage movie of trying to be popular. Lisa decides to have a party at Wyatt's house during a dance scene Killing Jokes, 80s is playing and I love that song 80s. It came out in 1984. And it just is one of those songs that it's just rocking and rolling. It kind of gets you in the mood and stuff and it's kind of funny. When the song Come as you Are by Nirvana came out, I almost was like I've heard this song before, I think I've heard it. And then all of a sudden I was like, ah, someone mentioned to me that listen the 80s and I was like, oh, I get it, I do get it, yeah me too.

Speaker 2:

So Bill Paxton's in the movie and he plays Wyatt's brother, chet. Robert Downey Jr he's one of the film's bullies in it. And Jimmy, did you know that, robert Downey Jr, he's one of the film's bullies in it. And Jimmy, did you know that Robert Downey Jr is considered one of the worst cast members of Saturday Night Live?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he didn't do very well on Saturday Night Live.

Speaker 2:

No, he was on one season, 1985, 1986. He got on right after this movie came out and he was with Anthony Michael Hall.

Speaker 1:

He was on the show also Was Julia Louis-Dreyfus on at the same time. I believe she was she wasn't a good cast member either.

Speaker 2:

No, they struggled with live sketch comedy. They could do where you rehearse your lines and doing a movie, doing film, but live sketch comedy just wasn't their thing. A lot of people think that he was the worst cast member and I actually looked it up and a lot of people, a lot of different polls, a lot of different things they do think he is the all-time worst cast member. Let's revisit some more music in my shoes. I know it's out of fashion and a trifle uncool, but I can't help it. I'm a romantic fool.

Speaker 2:

It's a habit of mine to watch the sun go down On Echo Beach. I watch the sun go down Martha and the Muffins, echo Beach. I believe this song was released in early 1980, but it's a summer song and a beach song, so I thought it'd be perfect for now. I first heard it in 1982 on WLIR and I don't think many people have ever heard this song. I looked at your voice like you're trying to figure out what song this is. Yeah, I don't know if it was played. I think it was played in Canada and then WLIR. Okay, I don't know if it was played.

Speaker 2:

I think it was played in Canada and then WLIR. I don't know if anybody else ever played it, but it's a super catchy song. You can find it on YouTube See the video. I remember the video. They must have played it on MTV at some point, because I do remember the video.

Speaker 1:

There was a scarcity of music videos at one point. So I'm sure if they had a video out in those early MTV days it got played.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that must be it. I remember seeing it but I still like it. It's still catchy, I still like singing the song and I'm sure people out there have songs that they know from 40 years ago or however long that they really like that not many other people have ever heard of them. Do you have any songs like that, jimmy?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so there was a 1977 song by a one-hit wonder named Dean Friedman and I'm probably using the word hit a little bit liberally there, but I think it might have gone to number 40 on the charts or something called Ariel, and look it up, it's a fun song.

Speaker 2:

I've never heard it. Yeah, yeah, you know what? Jimmy Echo Beach didn't hit any charts, it didn't hit anything. I think it was only played, like I said, in Canada. It did real well because they were Canadian, right WLAR, they played it. I didn't hear much anywhere else and I still know it and I've already forgotten who you said sang it.

Speaker 1:

Dean Friedman. Dean Friedman, I mean, how can you forget that name? It's got to be a stage name, right?

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, that's a stage name that you chose to change, whatever your name was, to become dean freeman. But I'm gonna check this song out and and let you know what I think of ariel. So echo beach. You know, if we get back to echo beach from nine to five, I have to spend my time at work. My job is very boring. I'm an office. The only thing that helps me pass the time away is knowing I'll be back at Echo Beach someday. Like I said, it's catchy. And speaking of catchy, tick, tick, tick. It's Minute with Jimmy. It's time for Minute with Jimmy. Minute with Jimmy. Minute with Jimmy. It's time for Minute with Jimmy. Minute with Jimmy Minute with Jimmy.

Speaker 1:

So back in 1980, july 25th 1980, an album came out. It ended up being the first album I ever bought. I was going into the sixth grade when this album came out, and one of the greatest albums of all time. Back in Black by ACDC Very nice, jimmy. So you know bon scott had passed away. They had recorded the tracks for this album and they had named the songs, but they didn't have any lyrics or vocals, and so malcolm and angus young gave the basic tracks to brian johnson, the singer, and he had never written a song before. So he was a pretty established singer musician, but he'd never actually written his own stuff. So the first song that he just sits down and writes is called you Shook Me All Night Long. The next song he writes is Back in Black. The next song he writes is Hell's Bells and the next one is Shoot to Thrill. He pretty much came out of the gate writing some pretty good songs.

Speaker 2:

That's pretty impressive. I mean, those are a good group of songs. The whole album is fantastic. So let me ask you, jimmy, it's the first album that you bought. What was that experience like for you? Because I'm assuming up to that point you know you got albums for um your birthday, christmas or whatever.

Speaker 1:

I might've gotten K-Tel Rock 80 for Christmas that year, like Christmas 79, maybe, or something, I don't know. I don't know whether it came after or before that, um, but I don't really count that. You know, this is like an album by a band, so I had never owned an album. My brother had a lot of great records and that's what I would listen to and I'd buy singles now and then, but I'd never bought my own album.

Speaker 2:

For me. I remember it took me forever to pick which album I was going to buy, because you know, I don't remember. You know some albums were $3.99, you know some were $4.99, $5.00, whatever. And I'm like I don't have a lot of money and it doesn't come easy. I need to make the best choice that I can make, and I would just I'd spend hours there literally looking for something, and I remember people always like can I help you, can I help you? And I'm like, no, I'm going to, you know, find what I want. I don't know what it is, but when I see it then I'll know it. And that was, you know. So for me, going out to buy and even from when I first was a young kid, buying them, it was like an adventure. It was this long period. It wasn't like, oh yeah, I'm going to go buy this album and I'll be home. No, I didn't know really what I was going to go buy. It just was like I got to find the perfect thing.

Speaker 1:

This one. I think I just loved so many songs on it that I didn't want to go buy a bunch of singles. I knew that I really liked four or five songs on it, so I was just going to go ahead and buy the whole album, which then you end up discovering a lot more songs than than the singles correct.

Speaker 2:

That was a good choice. I like that, jimmy every song on that album is is solid it is without a doubt, and it's one of the best-selling albums of all time, and I think it's Angus's best guitar solo.

Speaker 1:

I think think you Shook Me All Night Long. As popular and kind of poppy or whatever as that song might be, I think that's my favorite guitar solo he ever did. He's done some incredible guitar solos, but that song you can sing that solo, you can hear it in your head, you know where it's going, it gives you a feeling, it takes you through on a journey. It's a perfect guitar solo.

Speaker 2:

Now we know why you bought the album. It all makes sense now. Yep, I like it, jimmy. That was Minute with Jimmy, minute with Jimmy. May 13th 1985, new Order's Perfect Kiss peaked at number five on Billboard Dance Club Songs July 27th 1985. So five years and two days after Back in Black comes out, new Order's Perfect Kiss is number five on Billboard's Dance Club Songs. And it's kind of funny. As time goes on they add all these different charts from what they originally had, so you almost can find almost any song on some sort of chart, you know, but you know dance club songs.

Speaker 2:

It kind of made sense because I was going to a place called Spit, a dance club in Levittown, new York, heard it many times there, loved it, you know. I knew from the start this friend of mine would fall apart, pretending not to see his guilt. I said let's go out and have some fun, and that is part of the song and it's. It's kind of funny because I can't tell you how many times where someone's like, yeah, I don't really want to go out, or, oh, my girlfriend broke up with me, or this has happened, everything. Like hey, let's go to spit, let's go out and have some fun, like that was almost my answer to so many things, because it just was the super cool place to go to and when you you were outside it was in this big parking lot. You could see the high school that I went to. You know, if you looked one way, you could see the division deli where we would go and get food and you know all kinds of stuff over here. And you looked over here and then you know it was uh, tri-county flea market that you, so you'd see all the stuff. But then you go inside it's like a whole nother world, even though you just crossed the door. You know, and it was just really, really cool, just a cool place to be and to hear songs like that and so many songs, you know, dancing, having fun with friends and going there.

Speaker 2:

For many years I enjoyed it Definitely like the Perfect Kiss by New Order. Let's move up to July 1995. Smoking Popeses Need you Around? Love this song, absolutely love this song. I loved it from the first time that I heard it and they re-released it. It was an indie song. They re-released it on.

Speaker 1:

Capital Records.

Speaker 2:

Born to Quit and the Clueless soundtrack, which I think the Clueless soundtrack is really what got a lot of people to actually like it, because they see the movie and they can hear it in the movie and you know drums, guitar chords. If I could see into your heart then what would I know just where to start? Because I'm lost and I need to be found. Crazy as it sounds, I need you around. I just love it. Like every verse is just freaking cool in this song. Love it.

Speaker 1:

And it has a really heavy guitar kind of a music track and the vocalist he almost has a Morrissey kind of a sound to him, you know, a really velvety kind of tone to his voice. So it's an interesting counterplay between the two.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and the vocals to me are recorded kind of low, much lower than what the music is. So it's, you know, as you're listening, it's almost the vocals are going against the music and the music's going against the vocals, but in a way that it sounds really cool. You know, I just love it. I think it's a great song. Peaked at number 35 on Billboard's Modern Rock tracks Stone Temple Pilots, sour Girl. Peaked at number 78 on Billboard Hot 100, july 29th 2000. And, believe it or not, this is the only STP song to make the Billboard Hot 100. What? Yes, Wow, is that not crazy? That is, yeah, a song written about singer Scott Weiland's first wife, and she turned away. What was she looking at? She was a sour girl the day that she met me. Hey, what are you looking at? She was a happy girl the day that she left me. And it makes sense when he says it's about his first wife that left him you know, the video had, along with the band, and then some Teletubby-looking things.

Speaker 2:

I'm not really sure what they were, but it had Sarah Michelle Gellar who was in Buffy the Vampire Slayer I know what you did last summer, what else she was in, oh, cruel Intentions and those are all kind of popular right around the time of this video. I have to say it's my favorite Stone Temple Pilots song. I like it. Like I said, the video. I'm not sure what the Teletubby things are. I don't know what they're called, but it's. You know, it's definitely cool. And speaking of cool, you can reach us at musicinmyshoes at gmailcom. Please like and follow the Music in my Shoes Facebook and Instagram pages. Don't forget to spread the word if you like the podcast. That's it for Episode 89 of Music in my Shoes. I'd like to thank Jimmy Guthrie, show producer and owner of Arcade 160 Studios located right here in Atlanta, georgia, and Vic Thrill for our podcast music. This is Jim Boge, and I hope you learned something new or remembered something old. We'll meet again on our next episode. Until then, live life and keep the music playing, sharon. Thank you.

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