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The song was released to iTunes on July 28, 2009. [22] The video was filmed at and around Gary Wiseman's home in Prosper, TX. Dallas photographer Jason Janik shot the single's cover art in between filming for the video. An EP featuring the song, titled the My Wena EP was released digitally August 7, 2009. [21]
Drunk Dynasty is the tenth studio album by the American rock band Bowling for Soup, released on October 14, 2016. [12] It was initially intended to be a 6-8 song EP but over the time spent in the studio recording there were still songs leftover, so the band decided to release a full-length album instead.
The discography of Bowling for Soup, an American rock band based in Wichita Falls, Texas, consists of eleven studio albums, three live albums/live DVDs, ten compilation albums, four extended plays, twenty-five singles, and thirty-six music videos.
Lunch. Drunk. Love is the ninth studio album by the American rock band Bowling for Soup, released on September 10, 2013, through Brando Records and Que-so. The album was completely fan-funded, [4] as well as being released on the band's own record label like their previous album. The band has released music videos for the songs "Real", "Right ...
The video is inter cut between these scenes and scenes of a girl, played by Linda Christopher and possibly the girl Jaret sings about, watching the band on TVs displayed in a store through the front window. The music video became the last music video to be played on the British music channel Scuzz directly before its closure on November 15, 2018.
A music video for the song was filmed and the video was released on July 21, 2009. [8] The song was released to iTunes on July 28, 2009. [ 9 ] " No Hablo Ingles" was supposed to be the first single released to the radio for the album, however, Jive split with the band and shelved Sorry for Partyin ' after only four weeks of being on sale, thus ...
A League of Ordinary Gentlemen is a documentary film about ten-pin bowling that was released on DVD on March 21, 2006. It was written and directed by Christopher Browne and stars PBA Tour players Pete Weber, Walter Ray Williams Jr., Chris Barnes, and Wayne Webb.
The song was the first single from the group's sixth album, The Great Burrito Extortion Case, and was released on September 19, 2006. The song deals with the frustration of graduating from high school and seeing that modern popular culture is very similar to the obnoxiously superficial and materialistic culture in high school.