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In early October, Ice Spice posted a snippet of a new song, "Bikini Bottom", on her social media platforms. The less-serious nature of the song's beat was compared by the public to background music in the American animated television series SpongeBob SquarePants, which the song gets its title from. The musician has cited the series' titular ...
In November 2013, Hotstylz released a diss track towards Eminem titled "Rap Fraud", where they sample several of his songs and criticize him for not crediting them. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] In January 2015, TMZ reported Hotstylz were suing Eminem and Shady Records for the amount of $8 million, for using the 25 second sample of "Lookin' Boy" on his song "Rap ...
"Squidward Nose" is a song by American rapper and singer Cupcakke. It was independently released on January 11, 2019. It was independently released on January 11, 2019. The song refers to the character Squidward Tentacles from the Nickelodeon TV series SpongeBob SquarePants .
SpongeBob, the title cheery yellow character, appears outside his pineapple-shaped home, while Mr. Krabs, SpongeBob’s cranky boss, is at the Krusty Krab restaurant he runs.
The song employs a notable sample of SpongeBob SquarePants saying "I'm ready!" from the eponymous animated television series' debut episode "Help Wanted".AJR explained that the inspiration for the song came when the band members were "talking one day and joked that David Guetta or Skrillex would sample SpongeBob kinda in like, an ironic way.
"up! (Beat The Pussy Up) " is the debut single by American hip hop recording artist LoveRance . The song originally featured guest vocals from rappers Iamsu! and Skipper; however, once being re-issued by Interscope Records , the label's executive Larry Jackson placed 50 Cent on the song's commercial remix to replace both rappers.
As part of the 25th anniversary of Nickelodeon’s “SpongeBob SquarePants” franchise, the new game “SpongeBob Simulator” will be available on Jan. 26 to Roblox’s 70 million-plus daily users.
Pitchfork ranked the song at number 27 in "The Top 500 of the Tracks of the 2000s". [2] The song was also listed at number 84 in Rolling Stone's best songs of the 2000s and at number 281 on their top 500 best songs of all time. [3] [4] Hip-hop writer Shea Serrano listed the song as the most important rap song of 2002 in his book The Rap ...