I have no idea but I think the Popeye’s commercial are the worst. How can a person dance that bad
Adam S said... 11:16 am - March 23rd, 2009
THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!!! I’ve been wondering that for months. (Yes, it is the instrumental track from Sweet Home Alabama.) Awhile back KFC said they wanted to distance themselves from the full “Kentucky Fried Chicken” name, saying it was too folksy and not “modern” enough. Using SHA as background music was a dumb move either way.
197crazy said... 5:13 am - March 25th, 2009
i thought that was burge king?!!?!?!?!?! ok whatever, idk
acyberotaku said... 6:42 pm - March 27th, 2009
1. Although KFC originally stood for “Kentucky Fried Chicken,” not “Alabama Fried Chicken,” “Kentucky” is featured in very few rock-song titles recognizable by most demographic groups in the U.S. The closest I can come up with are “Kentucky Rain” by Elvis and “Kentucky Woman” by Neil Diamond/Deep Purple, both of which are kind of dated.
2. Juxtaposing “Alabama” (part of the Deep South) with “Sweet Home” (comforting memories) is a way to make you feel nostalgic for home-fried chicken like mythical Southern mamas made.
10:51 pm - March 21st, 2009
I have no idea but I think the Popeye’s commercial are the worst. How can a person dance that bad
11:16 am - March 23rd, 2009
THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!!! I’ve been wondering that for months. (Yes, it is the instrumental track from Sweet Home Alabama.) Awhile back KFC said they wanted to distance themselves from the full “Kentucky Fried Chicken” name, saying it was too folksy and not “modern” enough. Using SHA as background music was a dumb move either way.
5:13 am - March 25th, 2009
i thought that was burge king?!!?!?!?!?! ok whatever, idk
6:42 pm - March 27th, 2009
1. Although KFC originally stood for “Kentucky Fried Chicken,” not “Alabama Fried Chicken,” “Kentucky” is featured in very few rock-song titles recognizable by most demographic groups in the U.S. The closest I can come up with are “Kentucky Rain” by Elvis and “Kentucky Woman” by Neil Diamond/Deep Purple, both of which are kind of dated.
2. Juxtaposing “Alabama” (part of the Deep South) with “Sweet Home” (comforting memories) is a way to make you feel nostalgic for home-fried chicken like mythical Southern mamas made.