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You Can't See Me is the debut and only studio album by WWE's wrestler John Cena and his cousin, Tha Trademarc. It was released on May 10, 2005, by WWE Music Group and Columbia Records . The album features guest appearances from Esoteric and Bumpy Knuckles , who are featured on several songs throughout the album.
Cena recorded the song in 2004 for his debut studio album, You Can't See Me. The song was released on March 17, 2005, as the lead single from the album on Columbia and WWE Music Group. The song was released as a single on the iTunes Store on June 20, 2011. [1] The song is widely known as being part of the Internet meme "Unexpected John Cena".
He first came to prominence when he and his younger first cousin, WWE wrestler John Cena, collaborated on the 2005 album You Can't See Me, including Cena's entrance theme "The Time Is Now". He also appeared in the music videos of the songs, "Bad Bad Man" and "Right Now" with Cena. Prior to the album, Trademarc appeared on Cena's first WWE DVD ...
"John Cena" is a song by South African rapper Sho Madjozi. It was made about the WWE professional wrestler John Cena . It was released as a single through Flourish & Multiply Records on 27 September 2019, after being performed on the global music platform, COLORS , uploaded on 15 August 2019.
A series of tour cancellations and changes by big-name artists has sparked questions about whether the post-pandemic live music boom could be cooling. Why some major artists are suddenly canceling ...
It should only contain pages that are John Cena albums or lists of John Cena albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about John Cena albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Music website AllMusic categorised WWE Originals as "contemporary pop/rock" and rap rock, with writer Johnny Loftus identifying styles such as "soft-focus piano pop", dance-pop and hip hop on the album. [1] Slam! Wrestling's John Powell also identified the genres of electronic and power ballad on the collection, [2] while Billboard magazine ...
The clips, noted by one writer to symbolize frustration of fans of WWE regarding American wrestler John Cena's over-publicity, depict a snippet of a popular film, TV series, song or other form of media that gets interrupted by Cena's entrance video, as an announcer yells "And his name is John Cena!", or simply "John Cena!", [4] and his theme ...