![]() These are the identical lyrics on my soundtrack CD, which started this exploration on a recent Saturday afternoon, and I find no other set of lyrics on the Internet - the only resource I bother with anymore. The robots at Wikipedia claim that the Flintstones episode used a different lyric, but I can not prove it. The Flemmings are available for hire)įrente! - I would now like to hear Frente! versions of Smokey the Bear and I'm No Fool. The Flemming Fold (despite the olde-tymy look, this is a recent rendition. ![]() Most versions I found (and there were many more than I expected) used this lispy-toddler musical style, but you can find it recorded in a normal voice as well. The artists were his very own Sunday School singers, and yes, they are sped up to sound like little kids (who are cartoon rodents) You're not sure if it's ironic, satirical, or just cheap. This is the equivalent of, say, Butterfly Kisses showing up on the Simpsons. ![]() Through the strenuous research it takes for me to sit here on my bed, I have learned that "(Open up your Heart) Let the Sunshine In" had come and gone by 1965 - it had made number 8 on the Billboard chart in 1959. "Smilers never Lose, and Frowners never WIN." My whole life I heard that as "Mothers never lose, and fathers never win." Do with that whatever you like. Not since "If I should die before I wake" have children's verses been more chilling.
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