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Skeeter (performed by Drew Massey, voiced by Bill Bellamy) - Skeeter is the namesake character of the series, a puppet whose life changed when he moved from Georgia to New York City to live with his cousin Bobby. He is loud-mouthed, impulsive, and reckless, but also affable, confident, good-hearted and charismatic.
A remix of the song was used as the theme song of American children's sitcom Cousin Skeeter. Although the term "steelo" had already been used by hip hop duo Mobb Deep in their song " Hit It from the Back " (1993), [ 3 ] the popularity of "Steelo" caused the slang word to become widespread, being added to various online dictionaries under the ...
In 2007, the song was included as part of the Nihon no Uta Hyakusen, a list of the 100 most well-known folk songs in Japan. It is one of nine songs from foreign countries included on the list. It was selected by the Agency of Cultural Affairs and the National Congress of Parents and Teachers Associations of Japan.
the first link was a mistake and i have removed it. the second link is a list of childrens sonfs and contains a version of this song. sure the lyrics arent identical, but it has the same "knock it off" concept and this article already acknowledges that this song has variable lyrics. hope that helps.
The following is a discography of songs with production and writing credits from American woman rapper Missy ... Cousin Skeeter. 00. 702 – "Cousin Skeeter (Theme)"
In order to impress Nicole, Skeeter sneaks the kids into a space shuttle which has the four crash-land on the planet, Tunica. But the four find out that the Tunican plot is to take over Earth by replacing every teenager with a Tunican clone. Skeeter's personality gets the kids out of jail and into battle with the evil Tunicans.
She was a series regular on Cousin Skeeter (1998–2001) and New Kids on the Planet (1999–2000). [2] Notably, she played the role of Felisha in the 1995 film Friday, which garnered internet attention much later for the phrase "Bye, Felicia".
The song was released as a single officially in June 1967. "What Does It Take (To Keep a Man Like You Satisfied)" reached a peak of number five on the Billboard Magazine Hot Country Singles chart later that year. The single became Davis' first top-ten country hit in three years since 1964's "Gonna Get Along Without You Now" reached number eight.