- 6/21/2025
From chart-topping hits to beloved classics, some of music's biggest songs owe a debt to lesser-known originals. Join us as we explore the fascinating stories behind these controversial musical "borrowings" and the legal battles they sparked. Which track surprised you the most?
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MusicTranscript
00:00I'm thinking out loud, maybe we found love right where we are.
00:08Welcome to WatchMojo, and today we're counting down our picks for the hits that are indebted
00:13to other older songs for inspiration, yet whose popularity has endured beyond the OG.
00:18And she's buying a stairway to heaven.
00:23Even before you factor in the alleged copyright infringement, Colombian superstar Shakira's
00:442010 World Cup anthem was mired in controversy.
00:47Audiences in South Africa, where that year's FIFA World Cup was held, were far from happy,
00:51claiming that a South African musician should have borne the honor of representing the country.
00:55However, a media uproar exploded over Shakira's sampling of Zangaliwa,
01:00performed by the Cameroonian MACOSA group Golden Sounds.
01:03While critics accused Shakira of unjustly stealing and plagiarizing the iconic tune,
01:08Golden Sounds manager Didier Edo set the record straight, saying, quote,
01:11the international singer has simply re-adapted the song,
01:14and that permission had, in fact, been granted for the sample.
01:21Number 29, Good For You, Olivia Rodrigo, original, Misery Business, Paramore.
01:30Good for you, you look happy and healthy, not me, if you want the character eyes.
01:36Before any Paramore fans come for us in the comments, we'll just point out that Good For
01:40You hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100, while Misery Business only ever reached as high
01:44as number 26.
01:45And to be clear, that in no way diminishes its status as a bona fide pop-punk anthem.
01:51Besides, you can hear Paramore's fingerprints all over the Olivia Rodrigo smash hit.
01:56According to Rodrigo, her team reached out to the band's members, coordinating for them to
02:05eventually receive a songwriting credit on Good For You.
02:08Said Rodrigo, quote,
02:09Number 28, Stay With Me, Sam Smith, original, I Won't Back Down, Tom Petty.
02:28Oh, won't you stay with me?
02:33This treacly, mushy-gushy ballad became Smith's signature song in 2014, elevating the British
02:38singer to superstar status and reaching as high as number two on the Billboard Hot 100.
02:43Unfortunately for Smith, things went free-fallen after legendary singer-songwriter Tom Petty
02:48heard more than a passing similarity to his 1989 hit, I Won't Back Down, which Smith claimed
02:54to have been unfamiliar with.
02:56Well, I won't back down.
02:59No, I won't back down.
03:03Despite that song's defiant title, no legal proceedings ensued between the two parties,
03:08with Petty and co-writer Jeff Lynne agreeing to be credited.
03:11Said Petty, quote,
03:12All my years of songwriting have shown me these things can happen.
03:15Sam's people were very understanding of our predicament, and we easily came to an agreement.
03:20Oh, won't you stay with me?
03:24Cause you're all I need
03:30Number 27.
03:32Love is a Wonderful Thing, Michael Bolton
03:34Original, Love is a Wonderful Thing, The Isley Brothers
03:37Love is a wonderful thing, I said love
03:40Love is a wonderful thing
03:42Would you believe the legal fight over the song lasted nearly 10 agonizing years?
03:47The Isley Brothers' Love is a Wonderful Thing, a mostly forgotten soul ditty from the early 60s,
03:52had been all but lost to history before hitmaker Bolton put his spin on it in 1991.
03:56Love is a wonderful thing
03:59Make a smile through the floor in the rain
04:04The Problem?
04:05Said lead singer Ronald Isley, quote,
04:07I was upset because the credits weren't on there
04:10So we got in touch with his people, and then he went into the
04:13Oh, I didn't know you all had a song like this
04:15A 1994 Los Angeles jury ruled in the Isleys' favor, resulting in a multi-million dollar payoff for them
04:22You know you're making a lot
04:23Don't breathe!
04:26Number 26.
04:28Only Wanna Be With You, Hootie and the Blowfish
04:30Original, Idiot Wind, Bob Dylan
04:33Copyright law can be a fickle, complicated thing
04:44Just ask Hootie and the Blowfish
04:46The earnest roots rockers struck an agreement with Dylan's management to use several lyrics from his song Idiot Wind in their signature song
04:53Fast forward to 1995, after the song's release and, crucially, after it had become a top 10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100
05:06Dylan's team reached back out
05:08And according to Hootie lead singer Darius Rucker
05:10They wanted a payday based on the considerable success of Only Wanna Be With You
05:14It was later reported that Dylan settled with the beloved cult band for $350,000
05:19She inherited a million books
05:22And when she died, it came to me
05:25I can't help it
05:27If I'm lucky
05:29Number 25.
05:31Greatest Love of All, Whitney Houston
05:33Original, If You Could Read My Mind, Gordon Lightfoot
05:37Originally commissioned for the Muhammad Ali biopic The Greatest, hence the title
05:47Greatest Love of All was originally performed by jazz fusion guitarist George Benson
05:52before Whitney Houston brought it to another level in 1986
05:55Her version of the song spent three weeks atop the Billboard Hot 100 in the year of its release
06:00However, the following year, trouble reared its head
06:03I will never be set free
06:06As long as I'm a ghost
06:10You can't see
06:11Canadian folk legend Gordon Lightfoot filed a lawsuit against Greatest Love songwriter Michael Masser
06:16claiming that he had stolen as many as 24 bars of music from Lightfoot's song
06:21If You Could Read My Mind
06:22Lightfoot eventually retracted the suit to avoid antagonizing Houston
06:26and an out-of-court settlement was accompanied by a public apology from Masser
06:30Chances are you heard this catchy pop rap jam on the radio following its appearance on the Black Panther soundtrack in 2018
06:52So, with that in mind, it seems fair to say that you probably haven't heard of defunct Brooklyn art rock band Yeasayer
06:58In 2020, the band sued the Pray For Me artists
07:01claiming that the song uses, quote,
07:03the recording of a distinctive choral performance
07:06which plaintiffs, Yeasayer, created and recorded using their own voices
07:10Some months later, though, Yeasayer dropped the suit
07:22But don't hesitate to give them a listen
07:24In our humble opinion, there's no reason they didn't deserve to reach the same heights as bands like MGMT and Animal Collective
07:30Number 23. Thinking Out Loud
07:39Ed Sheeran
07:40Original, Let's Get It On, Marvin Gaye
07:42Sheeran's Thinking Out Loud is the wedding song to end all wedding songs
07:54When that first dance ends, there's nary a dry eye in the room
07:58which makes it all the more hilarious when you consider that Sheeran was accused of cribbing the comically risque Let's Get It On
08:03In 2016, the estate of Let's Get It On co-writer Ed Townsend sued the British hitmaker
08:09The suit alleged that, quote,
08:11the melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic compositions of Thinking are substantially and or strikingly similar to the drum composition of Let's Get It On
08:18While that lawsuit was dismissed, Sheeran was sued again in 2018 by Structured Asset Sales, who owned one-third of Gaye's original
08:34The case was resolved in 2023, with the outcome ruled in Sheeran's favor
08:38Thinking out loud
08:41Maybe we found love right where we are
08:47Number 22. Bittersweet Symphony
08:49The Verve
08:50Original, The Last Time, The Rolling Stones
08:53Bitter courtroom battles don't always end in hurt feelings and million-dollar payouts
09:05Sometimes, like in the case of The Verve's Richard Ashcroft, they have a happy ending
09:10For what became the band's signature song, lead singer Ashcroft sampled the Andrew Oldham Orchestra cover of this relatively obscure Stones tune
09:17Under the threat of legal action from the rock gods, The Verve granted Mick Jagger and Keith Richards sole songwriting credits
09:32Eventually, in 2019, Ashcroft personally appealed to the two, who conceded that the previously struck deal had been overly harsh
09:40Ashcroft's royalties and songwriting credit were restored, and he remarked that, quote,
09:44I never had a personal beef with the Stones
09:47They've always been the greatest rock and roll band in the world
09:50Number 21. Stairway to Heaven
09:58Keep an eye out for these British legends of hard rock and heavy metal
10:12This won't be the last time you see them on our list today
10:14As you might have guessed, Robert Plant and the Boys developed an unfortunate reputation for ripping off classic blues songs without permission
10:21Or even acknowledgement
10:23In this case, though, the victim wasn't a blues musician, but L.A. rocker's Spirit
10:28In 2014, Mark Andes, the band's bassist, filed suit against Zeppelin with the goal of securing a songwriting credit for the late Randy California, Spirit's guitarist
10:45After a tortured, nearly decade-long legal battle, the United States Court of Appeal for the Ninth Circuit in San Francisco ruled in Led Zeppelin's favor
10:53Ending the struggle with a whimper, rather than a bang
10:56And she's buying a stairway to heaven
11:00Number 20. Down Under, Men at Work
11:03Original, Kookaburra, Larrikin Music
11:06They say that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery
11:10But a caveat to that saying might also be
11:12Watch from where you steal your musical inspiration
11:15Greg Hamm and his bandmates from Men at Work found this out the hard way when it came to light that Hamm, the band's flautist, nicked a bit of the Australian children's tune Kookaburra for the group's smash Down Under
11:34It took until the mid-2000s for the similarities between the two songs to come to light via a television quiz show
11:47At that point, the publishers of Kookaburra, Larrikin Music, successfully sued for back royalties to the tune of 5%
11:59Oh, and did we mention that these royalties were backdated to 2002? Ouch
12:04Number 19. The Bad Touch, Bloodhound Gang
12:12Original, In the Night, Pet Shop Boys
12:14It isn't so much popularity that's at the center of this entry, but rather obscurity
12:20There's no denying that synth-pop icon's Pet Shop Boys have a much greater legacy than comedy rocker's The Bloodhound Gang
12:33That said, the comparative obscurity of this Pet Shop Boys B-side, In the Night made it easy sample fodder for the gang
12:45Their hit, The Bad Touch, does a great job at sampling the original's beat while adding an infectiously electronic pop vibe of their very own
13:00This, combined with The Bad Touch's legendarily silly video, proved to be a recipe for MTV's success
13:07You and me, baby, ain't nothing to mammal
13:10So let's do it like they do on the Discovery Channel
13:14Number 18. Surfing USA, Beach Boys
13:17Original, Sweet Little Sixteen, Chuck Berry
13:19The publishing history of the Beach Boys Surfing USA is nothing if not a long and strange trip
13:25If everybody had a ghost
13:29Across the USA
13:32Songwriters Brian Wilson and Mike Love openly admit to having swiped the arrangement of Chuck Berry's Sweet Little Sixteen for their hit
13:40Although they initially neglected to credit Berry as a composer
13:43All over the St. Louis
13:45Way down in the Farley
13:47Yet the song was still published under Berry's company
13:51With sources alleging that the Beach Boys' father-slash-manager Murray did so under duress
13:56Whatever the case
14:03Surfing USA has endured as an icon of the era for quite a bit longer than Berry's hit
14:08It's just another example of the Beach Boys' chaotic careers as pop music megastars
14:13Yeah, everybody's done surfing
14:15Surfing USA
14:18Number 17. I Got a Feeling, Black Eyed Peas
14:22Original, Take a Dive, Brian Pringle
14:25Here's a question
14:26Does it matter if a song has been legally cleared of plagiarism if the similarities remain evident to the naked ear?
14:32I Got a Feeling
14:33That tonight's gonna be a good night
14:39Intention certainly matters
14:42And it's unclear if the Black Eyed Peas had actually heard the dance mix of Brian Pringle's Take a Dive
14:47Prior to writing their hit, I Got a Feeling
14:49The Wikipedia entry for the song lists Pringle as a sample source
15:00And in 2010, the Peas were sued for copyright infringement
15:04However, Pringle had only copyrighted the original version of Take a Dive
15:16And not the dance mix
15:17The case was ultimately decided in favor of Will.i.am and company
15:21But what do you think?
15:22That tonight's gonna be a good night
15:26That tonight's gonna be a good, good night
15:30Number 16. Shake It Off, Taylor Swift
15:34Original, Play is Gon' Play, 3LW
15:37There are many perils that come along with fame
15:45Not the least of which is other artists attempting to piggyback upon another success
15:50This seems to be the reason why a plagiarism case was thrown out against Taylor Swift
16:00By the songwriters behind 3LW's millennial hit Play Is Gon' Play
16:04Those composers, Sean Hall and Nathan Butler
16:11Claimed that Swift ripped them off within the lyrical arrangement to shake it off
16:15Swift, in a statement, claimed that she'd never heard the song
16:18And wasn't even allowed to watch MTV's Total Request Live during 3LW's heyday
16:23Shake, shake, shake, shake, shake
16:26Shake it off, shake it off
16:29Shake it off, shake it off
16:31Number 15. All You Need Is Love
16:33The Beatles
16:34Original, in the mood, Glenn Miller
16:36The Beatles were at the height of their psychedelic and experimental powers
16:40During the release of All You Need Is Love in 1967
16:43Love, love, love
16:46Love, love, love
16:50The composition of this song, as a result, is full of different snippets from popular musical artists
16:57Including In The Mood by Glenn Miller
16:59The latter's big band jazz hit emerges near the end of All You Need Is Love
17:10And it's clear that the Beatles are intentionally utilizing the sample for dramatic effect
17:15All you need is love
17:17All you need is love
17:19This also serves as something of a changing of the guard, however
17:25A moment of major cultural shift
17:28Glenn Miller's dancehall jazz was now being seen as a quaint relic
17:32While the Beatles pushed for the justification of a youth culture that could change the world
17:36Love is all you need
17:38Love is all you need
17:40Love is all you need
17:42Love is all you need
17:44Number 14. Crocodile Rock
17:46Elton John
17:46Original, Speedy Gonzales
17:48Pat Boone
17:49The case of Crocodile Rock is another where the songwriters and performers seemed to know what they were doing
17:55I remember when rock was young
17:58Me and Susie had so much fun
18:01Bernie Taupin and Sir Elton John admit that the tune was a nostalgic throwback to rock and roll tropes
18:06Meanwhile, the composers of a forgotten novelty hit titled Speedy Gonzales came calling two years after the release of Crocodile Rock
18:14Claiming they were ripped off
18:16Speedy Gonzales
18:18Why don't you come home
18:21Their claim that Taupin and John adapted similar chords was eventually settled out of court
18:27While the Pat Boone version of Speedy that charted back in 62 is largely left to the dustbin of history
18:33Number 13. Dazed and Confused
18:42Led Zeppelin
18:43Original, Dazed and Confused
18:45Jake Holmes
18:45One doesn't need to be a rock historian to understand that Led Zeppelin ripped off a lot of songs
18:51Been dazed and confused
18:54For so long it's not true
18:56It's just one of the band's infamous legacies
18:58But Led Zeppelin was effectively caught red-handed with Jake Holmes' Dazed and Confused
19:03I'm being abused
19:04I did better off
19:06I can't stand this tease
19:09And I'm starting to crack
19:11Sure, it took until 2010 for justice to be served
19:14But versions of the song today list the composition credit as Jimmy Page inspired by Jake Holmes
19:19Every day I work so hard
19:22Bringing home my heart and pain
19:24Try to love you baby
19:27But you push me away
19:29That's because Page admits that he heard Holmes perform the tune before adapting it for his old band The Yardbirds
19:34And eventually bringing Dazed and Confused with him to Led Zeppelin
19:38Maybe Guns N' Roses figured that Black Sabbath's 1983 LP Born Again was far enough removed from their glory days to be ripped off
19:59Or perhaps GNR didn't think the Sunset Strip Glam Metal fans would notice
20:08The riff similarities between the former's Paradise City and the Sabs' Zero the Hero
20:12Sure, the Sabbath version is a bit darker
20:20But the groove is remarkably similar
20:22And also taken from around the same era
20:25Fast forward to 1995
20:27And Rocket from The Crypt's On a Rope seem to have the same idea
20:31On a Rope, on a Rope, got me hanging on a Rope, on a Rope, got me hanging on a Rope
20:37But you know what?
20:38We see you guys
20:39And Sabbath does too
20:41Number 11
20:47Creep
20:47Radiohead
20:48Original
20:49The Air That I Breathe
20:50The Hollies
20:51This song is a veritable spaghetti bowl of tangled rights claims and plagiarism accusations
20:56Radiohead had to forsake a portion of their songwriting to Albert Hammond and Mike Hazelwood
21:11Who wrote The Air That I Breathe back in 1972
21:13That song was a hit for the Hollies in 74
21:24While the members of Radiohead fully copped to utilizing this inspiration during the composition of Creep
21:30This admission makes it seem strange that the band would then contact Lana Del Rey for her song Get Free
21:45Which they claimed ripped off Creep
21:55Or is that Creep and The Air That I Breathe
21:58We're so confused
22:00I don't belong here
22:03I don't belong here
22:08Number 10
22:10My Sweet Lord
22:11George Harrison
22:12Original
22:13He's So Fine
22:14The Chiffons
22:15Ex-Beatle George Harrison scored himself a number one hit
22:25The first by a former member of the Fab Four with My Sweet Lord
22:28He didn't have much time to celebrate, however, before he was hit with a copyright infringement lawsuit
22:33It was alleged that Harrison's song contained overt similarities to the 1963 Ronnie Mack written hit single
22:47He's So Fine by New York girl group The Chiffons
22:50Ultimately, the court decided that he had subconsciously plagiarized the song
23:00And Harrison nearly had to pay $1.6 million to Bright Tunes Music Corporation
23:05This amount was reduced after the court ruled that Harrison's ex-manager Alan Klein's actions during the suit had been improper
23:19Number 9
23:20Viva La Vida
23:21Coldplay
23:22Original
23:22The songs I didn't write
23:24Creepy Boards
23:25Plagiarism accusations are not uncommon, but verifying their legitimacy can sometimes be difficult
23:37Anti-folk duo Creepy Boards once accused British rock band Coldplay of plagiarizing their track
23:43The songs I didn't write for their hit song Viva La Vida
23:45Lead singer Andrew Hoffner even went so far as to accuse the band of hearing it at one of their concerts
23:57Hoffner retracted the claims, however
23:59Coming to the conclusion that both bands were influenced by Nintendo's The Legend of Zelda series of computer games
24:05We guess they didn't write that song after all
24:13Never an honest word
24:16But that was when I ruled the world
24:20Number 8
24:21Roar
24:22Katy Perry
24:23Original
24:24Brave
24:24Sara Bareilles
24:25You can be amazing
24:27You can turn a phrase into a weapon or a drug
24:30There was something of an uproar in 2013
24:33When pop superstar Katy Perry was accused of plagiarizing the less popular singer and actress Sara Bareilles
24:39I used to bite my tongue and hold my breath
24:42Scared to rock the boat and make a mess
24:44Not only do Perry's song Roar and Bareilles' Brave hit the ear in a similar way
24:49They share a similarly uplifting message about the power of believing in oneself
24:54Some have even produced mashups to prove the overlap between the two tracks
25:05Unlike with Taylor Swift and Perry
25:07There doesn't seem to be any bad blood between these two
25:10With Bareilles tweeting
25:11Quote
25:12All love everybody
25:13All love
25:14It seems pretty undeniable that the Beatles cribbed from the legendary Chuck Berry
25:36Also known as the father of rock and roll
25:39For their song Come Together
25:40Especially with the flat top line
25:43It was alleged that the two songs were musically similar as well
25:46This caused legal woes for John Lennon due to Berry's controversial publisher Morris Levy
25:59However, as a direct result of the rampant Beatlemania of the time
26:03The solution to this problem was less costly than you might think
26:06As repayment, Lennon agreed to record three songs owned by Levy
26:17Which were released on his 1975 solo album Rock and Roll
26:21You've got to be free
26:23Come together
26:25Right now
26:28Number 6
26:29Come As You Are
26:30Nirvana
26:31Original
26:3280s
26:32Killing Joke
26:33Nirvana riffed pretty heavily on 80s by UK band Killing Joke for Come As You Are
26:45Seriously, listen to the riffs on these two tracks
26:48Come As You Are
26:55Come As You Are is driven by a slowed-down variant of the riff from the Killing Joke song
27:00Tragically, Kurt Cobain passed away before the two bands could collaborate
27:04During the 21st century, it was Dave Grohl who would eventually turn things around
27:14The former Nirvana drummer and current Foo Fighters frontman paid the group back in 2003
27:19by playing drums for their album Killing Joke 2003
27:22As I want you to be
27:26There's a friend
27:28There's a friend
27:30Number 5
27:31Do You Think I'm Sexy?
27:32Rod Stewart
27:33Original
27:34Taj Mahal
27:35Georgie Ben Jor
27:36Do You Think I'm Sexy?
27:44was a huge hit for British singer Rod Stewart in 1978
27:47Brazilian musician Georgie Ben's answer to the titular question seems obvious as he presumably
27:53didn't find anything sexy about Stewart's alleged plagiarism of his song Taj Mahal
27:57A settlement was reached out of court, with this song being another classic case of an artist
28:08admitting unconscious plagiarism of a song
28:10In his 2012 autobiography, Stewart said that he had heard the Ben Jor song while at the 1978 Rio Carnival
28:17He didn't stop there, however
28:26Also admitting that the song's synthesizer riff was lifted from Bobby Womack's
28:30If You Want My Love, Put Something Down On It
28:32Number 4
28:39Ghostbusters
28:40Ray Parker Jr
28:41Original
28:42I Want A New Drug
28:43Huey Lewis and the News
28:45Who am I gonna call?
28:54My lawyer is what we assume Huey Lewis said upon first hearing the theme song to the 1984 classic comedy
29:00This may have been a case of envy, as Huey Lewis passed on writing music for Ghostbusters to do Back to the Future
29:14Both films were hits, but we imagine he had to have still been kicking himself for not having done both
29:19We admit though, the Ghostbusters theme does sound curiously similar to Lewis' I Want A New Drug
29:24This was settled out of court in 1985, only for Ray Parker Jr. to turn around and sue Lewis back in 2001
29:38after Lewis talked about the confidential settlement on VH1's Behind the Music
29:42If you're seeing things running through your head
29:45Who can you call?
29:48Ghostbusters
29:49Number 3
29:50Whole Lotta Love
29:51Led Zeppelin
29:52Original
29:52You Need Love
29:53Muddy Waters
29:54Led Zeppelin is one of the most acclaimed bands of all time
30:01This is due not only to how they trailblazed in heavy metal and hard rock, but to how their many influences manifested in their music
30:08Even though this could occasionally get them in trouble
30:11You need cool air
30:13Baby, I'm not fooling
30:16Among these various influences was blues music, including the work of one McKinley Morganfield, known professionally as Muddy Waters
30:24This fact became a little bit too evident when Led Zeppelin was sued in 1985 for the whole lot of things in common their track had with Muddy Waters' 1962 You Need Love
30:34Way down inside
30:36Woman, you need love
30:38Willie Dixon, the song's writer, reached a settlement that includes listing him as co-writer
30:43Way, way down inside
30:45Honey, you need love
30:47I'm gonna give you my love
30:50Number 2
30:51Feels Like We Only Go Backwards
30:53Tame Impala
30:54Original
30:55Oceano
30:55Pablo Ruiz
30:56Kevin Parker, aka the one and only member of psychedelic project Tame Impala, may be one of the most influential artists in music today, working with names like Dua Lipa and The Weeknd
31:17So it would make sense for someone with his talent to have wide-ranging taste and influences, and for some of that to even subconsciously make its way into his music.
31:25However, sometimes the song really is too obscure to believe an artist could be ripping it off.
31:30When Chilean music site Rata published the claim that Parker had plagiarized the corny 1989 Pablo Ruiz track Oceano, we thought it must be a joke.
31:38And they later claimed it was. That didn't prevent Ruiz from considering legal action, though.
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32:13Number 1
32:14Uptown Funk
32:15Mark Ronson featuring Bruno Mars
32:17Original
32:17Funk You Up
32:18The Sequence
32:19Mark Ronson and Bruno Mars' chart-topping single Uptown Funk
32:29Funk has been the subject of an unusually high number of alleged plagiarism cases.
32:40Even before the song was actually released, rapper and songwriter Trinidad James received a writing credit
32:45due to Ronson and Mars borrowing from him for the song's hook.
32:48The Sequence, a lesser-known hip-hop group from the 1970s composed of three women,
32:53sued Mars and Ronson for copyright infringement in 2018.
32:56They argued Uptown Funk had too many compositional similarities to their 1979 single Funk You Up.
33:15Funk You Up had been something of a hit itself when it was released,
33:19being only the third rap song in history to chart on Billboard's top 50 singles.
33:23Get up, get up, get up, get up, get up, get up, get up, get up, sit back down.
33:28Right on up, we're gonna bump you, right on up.
33:31Which rip-off song on our list is your favorite?
33:33Are there any we missed?
33:34Be sure to let us know in the comments below.
33:36No, I don't have a gun.
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