Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
For Slick, "White Rabbit" "is about following your curiosity. The White Rabbit is your curiosity". [17] For her and others in the 1960s, drugs were a part of mind expansion and social experimentation. With its enigmatic lyrics, "White Rabbit" became one of the first songs to sneak drug references passing censorship on the radio.
The White Rabbit appeared as a banished fairy tale creature in the original Broadway musical Shrek (based on the 2001 film) played by Noah Rivera. The White Rabbit was portrayed by Edward Staudenmayer in Frank Wildhorn's musical Wonderland. In the show, he is portrayed as a panicky character with a sarcastic sense of humour.
Egypt Central's song "White Rabbit" (2011) was released on the same-titled studio album. [30] [38] AKB48's B-side song, "First Rabbit" (2012), which is later also performed by JKT48. [30] Anson Seabra's song "Welcome to Wonderland" (2018) makes references to Wonderland through a narrator acting as a tour guide for their lover, in a dream ...
In 2005, "White Rabbit" was featured in a delicate drug-related scene in Atom Egoyan's movie Where the Truth Lies. "White Rabbit" played in the background on the popular hit TV series Blossom during the episode where Blossom's Dad had a nightmare that Blossom and her friend Six were in her bedroom smoking a joint.
In March, a mother was horrified to find a pedophile symbol on a toy she bought for her daughter. Although the symbol was not intentionally placed on the toy by the company who manufactured the ...
But unlike Alice, following this white rabbit will not lead you on a fruitless chase. This one is Miffy, a Dutch children’s character who’s recently amassed a huge young-adult fandom stateside ...
A whitey or white-out (sometimes greening or green-out) is a drug slang term for when a recreational drug user, as a direct or indirect result of drug use (usually cannabis), begins to feel faint and vomits. [1]
The title was taken from a line in the 1967 Grace Slick-penned Jefferson Airplane song "White Rabbit" [7] [13] ("go ask Alice/ when she's ten feet tall"); the lyrics in turn reference scenes in Lewis Carroll's 1865 novel Alice's Adventures In Wonderland, in which the title character Alice eats and drinks various substances, including a mushroom, that make her grow larger or smaller.