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"Baba O'Riley" was used as the theme song for the television series CSI: NY (2004–2013), with each CSI series using a Who song as its theme. [14] The song was also used in the One Tree Hill episode "Pictures of You" (season 4, episode 13).
The Blanks in TV show Scrubs perform part of the song in the 2007 season 7 episode "My Identity Crisis". An abbreviated version of the song was performed during the halftime show of Super Bowl XLIV. [17] Louis C.K. sings along to the song in "Country Drive", a 2011 season 2 episode of Louie. [18]
Solid Gold – Theme song performed by Dionne Warwick (Seasons 1 and 4) and Marilyn McCoo (Seasons 2–3, 5–8) Some Mothers Do 'Ave Em – Ronnie Hazlehurst; The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour ("The Beat Goes On") – Sonny Bono and Cher; Sonny with a Chance ("So Far, So Great") – Demi Lovato; The Sooty Show – Alan Braden
The song received an Emmy Award nomination in 1983 for Outstanding Achievement in Music and Lyrics. [4] In a 2011 Readers Poll in Rolling Stone magazine, "Where Everybody Knows Your Name" was voted the best television theme of all time. In 2013, the editors of TV Guide magazine named "Where Everybody Knows Your Name" the greatest TV theme of ...
"Boom Boom" is a song written by American blues singer and guitarist John Lee Hooker and recorded October 26, 1961. Although it became a blues standard, [3] music critic Charles Shaar Murray calls it "the greatest pop song he ever wrote". [4] "Boom Boom" was both an American R&B and pop chart success in 1962 and a UK top-twenty hit in 1992.
"American Idol" season 4 winner and pop/country superstar Carrie Underwood currently sings the coveted theme song, "Waiting All Day for Sunday Night." The tune is a reworked version of the Joan ...
It was ranked number 262 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time list in 2010. [12] In 2012, Paste ranked the song number four on their list of the 20 greatest The Who songs, [13] and in 2022, Rolling Stone ranked the song number two on their list of the 50 greatest The Who songs, behind only "Won't Get Fooled Again". [14]
The unlikely pair, who both had shows on NBC at the time, took the stage to perform the theme song from "Green Acres," to rousing laughter. Naturally, they went on to be crowned champs of "Emmy Idol."