Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Studio 666 is a 2022 American comedy horror film directed by B. J. McDonnell from a screenplay by Jeff Buhler and Rebecca Hughes, based on a story by Dave Grohl, who stars, alongside his Foo Fighters bandmates Nate Mendel, Pat Smear, Taylor Hawkins, Chris Shiflett, and Rami Jaffee, portraying fictionalized version of themselves.
The video was directed by The Malloys, and served as a tie-in to the song's appearance in the film Me, Myself & Irene.It mainly features Dave Grohl playing a character who has a "multiple personality" disorder (just like Charlie Baileygates/Hank, Jim Carrey's character in the film) while taking his girlfriend to see the movie at a drive-in.
The Foo Fighters' eleventh studio album, But Here We Are, was released on June 2, featuring the lead single "Rescued". A press release described the album as a "brutally honest and emotionally raw response to everything Foo Fighters endured over the last year".
“Breakout” also turned into breakout performance for Josh Freese, who replaced longtime Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins, who died while on tour on March 25, 2022, in Bogotá, Colombia.
Foo Fighters weren’t having it with former President Donald Trump introducing Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to the song “My Hero” at a Friday campaign rally in Glendale, Arizona.. Just hours after ...
Foo Fighters' ninth album, Concrete and Gold, was released on September 15, 2017 and became the band's second #1 album in the United States. Medicine at Midnight is the tenth studio album by American rock band Foo Fighters. Originally scheduled for 2020, the album was delayed to February 5, 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Foo Fighters, Greg Kurstin "Big Me" † Foo Fighters: Barrett Jones, Dave Grohl "Breakout" † There Is Nothing Left to Lose: Adam Kasper, Foo Fighters "Bridge Burning" † Wasting Light: Butch Vig "Burn Away" One by One: Nick Raskulinecz, Foo Fighters "But Here We Are" But Here We Are: Foo Fighters, Greg Kurstin "But, Honestly" Echoes, Silence ...
The video, directed by Phil Harder, shows the band in a remake of the Apollo 11 Moon mission and incorporates heavy use of NASA stock footage. They experience zero-gravity in the space capsule (where they conduct experiments and perform the song with instruments), land on the Moon, plant a Foo Fighters flag, and return to Earth where they are welcomed back as heroes during a ticker-tape parade.