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'Straight Up' is the work of a startling talent". [25] Black Girl Nerds gave the film a 4.5/5 rating and Donnie Lopez wrote: "In Straight Up, the two characters fall for one another’s intellect. [...] But just like any rom-com, no good thing can last without there being some kind of complications to their unique coupling.
"Straight Up" is a song by American recording artist Paula Abdul from her debut studio album, Forever Your Girl (1988). The song is a mid-tempo dance-pop song with influence from new jack swing . Written and produced entirely by Elliot Wolff , the song was released as the album's third single on November 22, 1988, by Virgin Records .
Straight Talk is the soundtrack to the 1992 film of the same name starring Dolly Parton and James Woods. Composed of ten original Parton compositions (including a rerecording of her 1976 composition "Light of a Clear Blue Morning"), the album reached #22 on the US country albums charts. Two singles were released: the title track and "Light of a ...
Straight Talk opened at the American box office at No. 4, grossing $4,575,746. [3] The movie went on to earn a total gross of $21,202,099. [4] The film was released in the United Kingdom on June 12, 1992, and opened at No. 1. [5]
"I Stay in Love" is a song by American singer-songwriter Mariah Carey, taken from her eleventh studio album, E=MC² (2008). It was written by Carey, Bryan-Michael Cox , Adonis Shropshire and Kendrick Dean , and produced by the former two.
Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco just dropped a new song called "Scared of Loving You" right in time for Valentine's Day. And on top of THAT, they went ahead and announced a joint album called I Said ...
NEW YORK − Young musicians don't make love songs like they used to. At least that's what Nathan Morris, one-third of Boyz II Men, tells me. He's sitting backstage squeezing in a quick dinner ...
"More I Cannot Wish You" is a song written and composed by Frank Loesser and first performed by Pat Rooney in 1950. [1] [2] The song was featured in the musical Guys and Dolls. The sentimental lyrics relate the feelings of the oldest character in the play, missionary Arvide Abernathy, [3] who sings it tenderly to his granddaughter, Sarah Brown. [4]