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  2. Bad Lip Reading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bad_Lip_Reading

    The "Bad Lip Reader" behind the channel is an anonymous music and video producer from Texas. [5] The first Bad Lip Reading video released was a spoof of Rebecca Black's song "Friday", titled "Gang Fight". [6] New music and lyrics were matched to Black's video to make it appear as though she were singing about gang warfare.

  3. “What Made The Popular Kid At School The Unpopular Kid?” (65 ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/made-popular-kid-school...

    The football player tried to get Beans to try some party drug or other. Beans, being a good kid, declined. The football player did not like this answer and spiked Beans' drink.

  4. Fab Morvan Says Milli Vanilli Was ‘Sacrificed’ After Lip ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/fab-morvan-says-milli...

    Despite owning the fact that he and Pilatus were lip-syncing during their live performances and were not the ones singing on their records, Morvan, now 58, feels the duo was “sacrificed.”

  5. Super Bowl XXXVII halftime show - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Bowl_XXXVII_halftime...

    Ahead of the show, the producers promised that there would not be lip syncing. [4] Speculation arose following the show that Twain lip synced her part of the performance. The show's sound producer, Paul Liszewski, claimed that Twain had sung live, but that her backing band and Twain's backing vocals were prerecorded. [4]

  6. The Star Spangled Banner (Whitney Houston recording)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Star_Spangled_Banner...

    Liz Smith of Newsday, after the controversy about Houston's lip-syncing at Super Bowl XXV, wrote that "anyone out there who still doubts Whitney's ability to vocally conquer 'The Star Spangled Banner' without technical help should tune in to HBO," praising Houston's Super Bowl performance highly as mentioned above. [21]

  7. Lip-readers caution fans against reading too much into viral ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/lip-readers-caution...

    Tisius pointed to the popular NFL’s bad lip-reading videos as an example of “how easy it is to misread what people are saying” when you are 100% relying on lip-reading. “It’s fun to play ...

  8. How this Kansas City Chiefs fan became a TikTok superstar ...

    www.aol.com/kansas-city-chiefs-fan-became...

    She promotes “blood facials.” Smoothies. Coach purses. And, especially now, the Kansas City Chiefs. She’ll appear at Arrowhead today.

  9. Keenan Cahill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keenan_Cahill

    Keenan Cahill (March 20, 1995 – December 29, 2022) was an American YouTuber and Internet celebrity who gained fame in the early 2010s for his viral videos in which he lip synced to popular songs. He went on to become a singer-songwriter and also did video collaborations with various other well known celebrities.