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The song helped inspire Yarrow to found the non-profit organization Operation Respect, promoting tolerance and civility programs in education. The organization distributes curriculum programs under the "Don't Laugh At Me" name. [10] In conjunction with this program, the song has been made into a children's book including an afterword by Yarrow ...
Seskin is the co-writer of “Don’t Laugh At Me”, the song that was the impetus for the Operation Respect program and organization, co-founded by Peter Yarrow. [ 18 ] Operation Respect, a non-profit education and advocacy organization dedicated to advancing the social and emotional growth of children and youth, was founded in 1999 by Peter ...
The song's accompanying music video premiered on June 13, 2008. Directed by Joseph Kahn, it portrays the Pussycat Dolls in a traffic jam on Hollywood Boulevard. It was complimented for its dance breakdown, and was nominated in five categories at the 2008 MTV Video Music Awards, the most of that ceremony, and went on to win Best Dance Video.
This song has a good dose of sad sad: "So I'll dance with your ghost in the living room/And I'll play the piano alone/But I'm too scared to delete all our videos/'Cause it's real once everyone ...
Based on confessional songwriting, [7] the lyrics of "Never Grow Up" address Swift's reflection on her childhood. [6] [13] [14] In the first verse, she takes on the perspective of a mother talking to a baby: "Your little eyelids flutter cause you're dreaming / So I tuck you in, turn on your favorite night light". Swift asks the baby to "never ...
"Growin' Up" is a song by American musician Bruce Springsteen from his 1973 album Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J.. It is a moderately paced tune, concerning an adolescence as a rebellious New Jersey teen, with lyrics [4] written in the first-person. The lyrics feature a chorus that is progressively modified as the song continues, with the ...
"Grown Men Don't Cry" is a song written by Tom Douglas and Steve Seskin and recorded by American country music artist Tim McGraw. It was released in March 2001 as the first single from McGraw's 2001 album Set This Circus Down .
"Come Back When You Grow Up" was a comeback for the 24 year-old Vee, and it reached No.3 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1967. [3] and No.2 in Canada. [4] It was ranked No.15 on Billboard magazine's Top Hot 100 songs of 1967 [5] and No.29 in Canada. [6]