Fashion Nugget - Appearances in Other Media

Appearances in Other Media

  • The Daria episode "The Road Worrier" featured the song "Frank Sinatra". The song "Daria" was used as closing credits for "The New Kid" and "Friend Is a Four-Letter Word" was the closing credit theme of episode 13 of season 4 : "Dye! Dye! My Darling".
  • The song "Frank Sinatra" was also featured at the close of The Sopranos episode The Legend of Tennessee Moltisanti
  • Cake's cover of "I Will Survive" was featured in the 1998 French film Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train, the 2004 Japanese movie Survive Style 5+, the 2003 film Secretary, and the 2003 Canadian comedy, Mambo Italiano.
  • "Open Book" was featured on the soundtrack to the 2001 film Sidewalks of New York.
  • "Stickshifts and Safetybelts" is featured in the film Waking Up in Reno.
  • "Stickshifts and Safetybelts" was featured on the Las Vegas callback episode of Season 6 of So You Think You Can Dance.
  • For two years, "The Distance" was used in the TV advert for the Powers Irish Grand National, which takes place in Dublin, Ireland every Easter Monday.
  • An instrumental version of "The Distance" was used in Episode 13 of Season 11 of The Simpsons, called "Saddlesore Galactica".
  • Excerpts of "Stickshifts and Safetybelts" are often used as bumpers on The Splendid Table, which is produced by American Public Media and airs on public radio stations nationwide.
  • The cover of "I Will Survive" and other songs from Fashion Nugget are used in the German film Herr Lehmann.
  • An instrumental and uptempo version of the song "Italian Leather Sofa" plays over the opening credits of the animated cartoon "Mission Hill" (1999–2002).
  • "Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps" is featured on the soundtrack of the movies Dream for an Insomniac and Welcome to Woop Woop.
  • The cover of "I Will Survive" was used in the Italian movie L'uomo in più (One man up).
  • "Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps" was used in Snapple commercials

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Famous quotes containing the words appearances and/or media:

    It is doubtless wise, when a reform is introduced, to try to persuade the British public that it is not a reform at all; but appearances must be kept up to some extent at least.
    George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950)

    Today the discredit of words is very great. Most of the time the media transmit lies. In the face of an intolerable world, words appear to change very little. State power has become congenitally deaf, which is why—but the editorialists forget it—terrorists are reduced to bombs and hijacking.
    John Berger (b. 1926)