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On August 3, Disney Channel premiere the music video of "Fashion Is My Kryptonite". [3] The song was also included in the Walmart deluxe edition of Shake It Up: Live 2 Dance soundtrack. [3] On August 4, Thorne and Zendaya were interviewed by Radio Disney and talked about the production of the EP. [4] "
On August 21, 2012, the extended edition "Shake It Up: Made In Japan" was released with three new songs and a music video. "Fashion Is My Kryptonite" was released on July 20, 2012, as a promotional single with an accompanying music video, which was released on August 3, 2012. The soundtrack was the best-selling soundtrack of the year.
Shake It Up: Live 2 Dance is the second soundtrack for the Disney Channel Original Series Shake It Up. It was released on March 20, 2012. It was released on March 20, 2012. The soundtrack lists songs featured on the show's second season (2011–2012).
"Watch Me" was a single released from the soundtrack Shake It Up: Break It Down (2011), for the television series Shake It Up on Disney Channel. It was first heard on the series' first episode under the original Margaret Durante version, which premiered on November 7, 2010, in North America, seven months before the single's actual release.
The young stars of Shake It Up are all grown up!. The Disney Channel series, which ran from 2010 to 2013, featured Bella Thorne and Zendaya in their breakout roles as aspiring dancers CeCe Jones ...
Disney Channel Games: 2006–08: Pass the Plate: 2007–14: Studio DC: Almost Live: 2008: Disney's Friends for Change Games: 2011: Make Your Mark Ultimate Dance-Off, Shake It Up Edition / Make Your Mark, Shake It Up Dance-Off: 2011–12: SNAP! 2012: High School Musical: 10th Anniversary: 2016: Under the Sea: A Descendants Short Story: 2018
After mounting glitzy presentations to advertisers at a stately Lincoln Center auditorium for decades as part of the TV industry’s annual upfronts, Disney now plans a big break with Madison ...
Disney Channel took In Concert off the air in late 2001, as well as with music videos, citing the inability to receive a stake in revenue from the artists' CD sales and lack of exclusivity for the videos [11] [12] However, they still aired music videos from songs featured in Disney's feature films and from artists played on Radio Disney [13] and signed to Disney's in-house record companies ...