
Most of us only know "Bad Boys" by Inner Circle from the 25 seconds used as the Cops theme, but it's a full song telling the story of a Jamaican youth who doesn't accept family support and ends up a criminal.

"Who Let The Dogs Out" won a Grammy. It took the award for Best Dance Recording in 2000.

Cheap Trick's original version of "I Want You To Want Me" was countrified and kind of hokey. When they sped it up for their Live At Budokan album, it became a huge hit.

The video for Brad Paisley's "Online" is a mini-Seinfeld reunion, featuring Jason Alexander, Estelle Harris, and Patrick Warburton.

"Virginia" in "Only The Good Die Young" is named after a real girl Billy Joel was trying to impress.
The top chant artist in the Western world, Krishna Das talks about how these Hindu mantras compare to Christian worship songs.
In the name of song explanation, Al talks about scoring heroin for William Burroughs, and that's not even the most shocking story in this one.
Charlotte was established in the LA punk scene when a freaky girl named Belinda approached her wearing a garbage bag.
With $50 and a glue stick, Bruce Pavitt created Sub Pop, a fanzine-turned-label that gave the world Nirvana and grunge. He explains how motivated individuals can shift culture.
Wes Edwards takes us behind the scenes of videos he shot for Jason Aldean, Dierks Bentley and Chase Bryant. The train was real - the airplane was not.
How a country weeper and a blues number made "rolling stone" the most popular phrase in rock.