Media Appearances
The songs "Superstar" and "Click Click Boom" are featured in the movie The Fast and the Furious, but are not featured on the official soundtrack; the video of "Click Click Boom" is featured in the special edition DVD. However, the additional soundtrack "More Fast and the Furious" does contain these two tracks.
"Superstar" was used as one theme song at WWE Wrestlemania X8 (18), where the band performed the song live. "Click Click Boom" was also used as the theme song for the WWF No Mercy pay-per-view event in October 2001, and can be found on the Talladega Nights soundtrack. "Superstar" was also used in the Dragonball Z TV special, Bardock: The Father of Goku.
"Your Disease" was featured on the Dracula 2000 movie soundtrack.
In 2001 Saliva created a single for the Spy Hunter video game. Although the single is not listed on the CD, the video for "Your Disease" was put in the game as an unlockable.
"Click Click Boom" was used on the soundtrack for the 2001 video game Project Gotham Racing.
The song "After Me" was featured in the video game The Thing.
"Your Disease" is on the 2002 PlayStation 2 game Aggressive Inline soundtrack and the 2003 PlayStation 2 game Downhill Domination.
"Lackluster" was featured in the opening movie for the 2002 video game Test Drive: Overdrive.
"Superstar was featured in the 2002 video game Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2003.
In 2009, "Click Click Boom" was used in the video game UFC 2009 Undisputed.
"Click Click Boom" was also recently used in the 2011 video game Operation Flashpoint: Red River. It can be heard playing when riding in the back of a Humvee at the end of one of the missions. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TzmhaYh-xyo
Read more about this topic: Every Six Seconds
Famous quotes containing the words media and/or appearances:
“One can describe a landscape in many different words and sentences, but one would not normally cut up a picture of a landscape and rearrange it in different patterns in order to describe it in different ways. Because a photograph is not composed of discrete units strung out in a linear row of meaningful pieces, we do not understand it by looking at one element after another in a set sequence. The photograph is understood in one act of seeing; it is perceived in a gestalt.”
—Joshua Meyrowitz, U.S. educator, media critic. The Blurring of Public and Private Behaviors, No Sense of Place: The Impact of Electronic Media on Social Behavior, Oxford University Press (1985)
“What I often forget about students, especially undergraduates, is that surface appearances are misleading. Most of them are at base as conventional as Presbyterian deacons.”
—Muriel Beadle (b. 1915)