The bars are temples but the pearls ain't free One night in Bangkok and the world's your oyster That's really, really where I'm going to Listen when: you're on a $388 flight to Vienna, or a $671 flight to Johannesburg, or a $353 flight to Paris, or. Here are some of our favorite songs that mention a specific city or country, and a snippet of the lyrics. And Simon & Garfunkel's America was inspired by a road trip that Paul Simon took with his girlfriend. In Walking in Memphis, Marc Cohn croons about his experience wandering the city. In London Calling, the Clash sing about the social issues facing London in the late 70s. But others not only reference a country or city, they also evoke a specific sense of that particular place or tell a story about that destination.įor example, in Marrakech Express, Crosby, Stills & Nash recount scenes from a train ride Nash actually took in 1966. Sure, some of these songs, such Paris by the Chainsmokers or Toto’s Africa, actually have little to do with the specific place it’s just used as the title or the setting for the story. 56 songs that reference specific places in the title or lyrics Here, in no particular order, are 100 of our favorite travel songs. Some reference specific places, others showcase the musical talent of a specific country, and others simply celebrate the joy of exploration. With help from members of our Travel Community and Going staff, we've created the ultimate travel playlist of 100 travel songs. It can helps us understand the people and culture of a place, break down language barriers, and sear certain moments into our memories forever. And, for many travelers, music is closely linked to travel. Music has the power to transport us, change our moods, and conjure memories.
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Sifl and olly bjork7/1/2023 One example: “Okay, not that I care, but here’s Sifl and Olly.” Sifl and Olly did most of the pitching for Roy’s products, and then they cut it over to him to remind you to buy his stuff. The stars of the recurring supporting cast were Chester (lovable stoner friend of Sifl and Olly) and Precious Roy, a TV pitchman for products like pirate cripplers (“to render any pirate helpless,” of course). Here’s one representative exchange between Sifl and Olly and a caller:ĬALLER: “Uhh, yeah, I’m having a little bit of a problem in the bathroom.”ĬALLER: “Don’t make me say it, it’s so embarrassing… shaving.” Here’s an interview segment from one episode: Olly says it’s time for interviews, and he says, “Sifl, I have no idea what you booked.” Sifl says, hesitatingly, “I got some… characters that are going to do nursery rhymes.” Olly asks if it will be Mother Goose nursery rhymes, and Sifl says, “No, these guys were blacklisted by Mother Goose.” And then it’s what you’d think: a parade of bizarre characters (also all socks) reading weird, bad poems in different voices. The structure was a series of segments: interviews, music videos, poetry, jokes. The show was created by musicians Liam Lynch (who later directed the Tenacious D movie) and Matt Crocco, and they voiced almost all of the characters. (I hope that drawing attention to them doesn’t lead to a cease-and-desist from MTV, which would be very un-chill.) The athropos videos are the ones you want-at some point, video game content company Machinima (I assume after buying the rights) started producing Sifl and Olly video game review videos, and those videos have a different (newer) look and are bad and not cool. Thank you, athropos! And another user, Vegetarianrage, also uploaded a bunch of episodes. There is no DVD set of the show, which is offensive and sad, but some enterprising and godly YouTube user, athropos, has uploaded 41 of them (I believe that may be the full set). I watch YouTube clips of it more than is healthy. It’s that kind of humor-deceptively simple, usually eliciting giggles more than guffaws, but extremely likeable. And about one year ago, I rediscovered it in YouTube clips and, man, it has aged well.Įach 20-minute-episode opens with the very catchy theme song: “Sifl / and / Ol-ly / Sifl / and Olly / show!” (Now repeat 4x.) Midway through the song, they yell “rock!” and show a rock on the screen.Īnother recurring song, equally delightful, is when they take calls from the public the song goes: “Calls calls calls / calls from the public / calls calls calls, calls” and then a phone hits the operator in the head with a satisfying coconut thwack. I was 10 years old in 1997 and we didn’t have “cable” anyway (just the basic channels: ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, PBS, UPN, WB), so it’s hazy to me how or why I even remember the show, but I recall being a big fan. Yes, a sock puppet show, but what a sock puppet show it was! As charming as it was low-budget. If you have no idea what Sifl and Olly was, the briefest and most succinct description would be: a sock-puppet show. I guess it was originally a TV thing, but now it’s definitely an internet thing. Mine has to be The Sifl and Olly Show, which was on MTV from 1997 to 1999-the days when MTV was “music television” and was funky and, often, weird (in the best sense). content aggregator/curator, before those were dirty words), this week asked people for their favorite under-the-radar internet things. The good folks at, site of Jason Kottke (basically the O.G. |