Backstreet Boys - No Place
I've been all around the world, done all there is to doBut you'll always be the home I wanna come home toYou're a wild night with a hell of a viewThere ain't no place, ain't no place like youThere ain't no place, ain't no place like you
Backstreet Boys - No Place
I've been all around the world, done all there is to doBut you'll always be the home I wanna come home toYou're a wild night with a hell of a viewThere ain't no place, ain't no place like youThere ain't no place, ain't no place like you (no)
I've been all around the world, done all there is to doBut you'll always be the home I wanna come home toYou're a wild night with a hell of a viewThere ain't no place, ain't no place like youThere ain't no place, ain't no place like youSaid: There ain't no place, ain't no place like you, yeah
The boy band -- composed of Kevin Richardson, Nick Carter, Howie Dorough, AJ McLean and Brian Littrell -- released their new song, "No Place," and its accompanying music video on Friday. The heartwarming track talks about how the performers have been all over the world, but there is no place like being home with their wives and children.
DNA is supported by lead single "Don't Go Breaking My Heart," which was released last year and which rose to No. 63 on the Hot 100, becoming the group's highest-ranking solo single on the listing in 13 years. Two other singles, "Chances" and "No Place," have failed to reach the Hot 100 but have placed on other global charts and genre-specific tallies.
Also this is in conjunction with on of the boys being on a reality talent show. Cross promotion all around people. The really sad part is they dug up the Backstreet Boys as if they are some kind of legacy act now.
St. Paul, Minnesota, removed an Easter display from City Hall in response to a complaint filed by the city's human rights director Tyrone Terrill. The WSJ's James Taranto comments: Well, this certainly makes sense. After all, everyone knows the Easter Bunny is a Christian symbol, which has no place in the public square in St. Paul, a city named after -- uh, we've forgotten. Does anyone know where St. Paul got its name? Good question. And while we're on the subject of historical amnesia, ever look at the United Airlines departures screen at an airport and catch yourself chanting the list as you read? Santa Ana, San Antonio,Saint Augustine,Santa Barbara,Saint Charles,San Diego,San Francisco,San Jose, Saint Louis ... You get the point. If you're not careful you end up singing Ora pro nobis after every destination until you get to Stamford, at which point you switch to Libera nos, Domine. I suppose someone so zealous in the safeguarding of our human rights as Mr. Terrill might initiate causes for de-canonization so as to return these cities, and their namesakes, to the Church Militant: Ana, Antonio, Barbara, Joseph, etc. Don't you feel a huge weight of sectarian oppression lifted off your chest? ("I left my heart in Frank," croons Tony Bennett. "Meet me in Louie Louie," warbles Bill Clinton.) But Christian influence, alas, is not always so blatant or so easily remedied. We have to stretch a bit to find safely secular equivalents in some cases. Sacramento could be corrected to Sharing, I suppose, and Des Moines to De Backstreet Boys. Los Angeles might become Los Angulos. Even the Protestants, albeit more bashfully, got into the name game in the 17th century, and yet we've got to scrub the public square equilaterally clean. That means a change to Prudential Forethought, Rhode Island. Despite our best efforts a few stubborn christianisms will remain intractable. What do we do with a name like Santa Fe? "Holy Faith" expresses what to the secularist mind can only be a contradiction in terms, and will become even more offensive as America's percentage of Spanish speakers increases. With liberty and justice for all, the only cure for Santa Fe is to nuke it. Human rights are a lovesome thing, God wot.
"After admonishing them to abstain, there is no place educators can say, if you do try it, here are some things you should know," says Marsha Rosenbaum, director of the Lindesmith Center-West in San Francisco. 041b061a72