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The duo thought that only their family and friends would watch it, but the video went viral — with more than 18.7 million views on YouTube to-date. The video was even spoofed in a 2014 episode ...
The Holderness Family of “X-Mas Jammies” fame is back with a mash-up of Adele’s “Hello,” Drake’s “Hotline Bling” and Silento’s “Watch Me (Whip/Nae)” that perfectly ...
On broadcast television, the Holderness Family have appeared on The Today Show, Fox & Friends, Good Morning America, CNN, HLN, CBS This Morning, and multiple times on Right This Minute. Their full-length specials include The Holderness Family on UPTV, The 12 Foods of Christmas on The Food Network, and The Greatest Holiday Video Countdown on The CW.
Content creators Kim and Penn Holderness, who soared to internet fame in 2013 with their "Xmas Jammies" video, are on a mission to change the way people think about attention deficit hyperactivity ...
William Henry and Sarah Holderness House, also known as the Holderness-Paschal-Page House, is a historic plantation house located near Yanceyville, Caswell County, North Carolina. It was built about 1855, and is a two-story, Greek Revival style frame dwelling. It consists of a three-bay, hip roofed, main block flanked by one-story, one-bay side ...
Holderness is an English surname, relating to the peninsula of Holderness in Yorkshire. Notable people with the surname include: Fay Holderness (1881–1963), American actress; George Holderness (1913–1987), British Anglican bishop; Graham Holderness (born 1947), English writer and critic; Henry Holderness (1889–1974), New Zealand cricketer
First to cross the finish line! Spoiler alert: Kim and Penn Holderness were crowned the winning team during The Amazing Race season 33 finale, which aired on Wednesday, March 2. ‘The Amazing ...
The Holderness Free Library is the public library of Holderness, New Hampshire.It is located at 866 US Route 3, at its junction with New Hampshire Route 113.The architecturally eclectic building it presently occupies was built in 1909 to a design by Boston architects Fox & Gale, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.