The Radio references

 




"...I climbed the foggy hill
I'm standing extra still
'Cause that's what fog tells you to do"

"You're down four miles in the Trans-Am"

Craig commented that the song was "about two small town teens heading up into the fog of a local hill to get lost and pretend they aren't in their small town anymore. The radio blasts up from their car with classic hits."

A Trans-Am is of course the preferred ride of the trailer park set and remains ever popular still among the mulleted. Extra points if you can find one with a big friggin' bird on the hood. Classy.

"...goes the Adam's tune"

Bryan Adam's?

"...some kind of Coolio
Through the T-top; out of the stereo"

'Gangsta's Paradise' was really good.

"...Na-na-na-na-na-na-na like a comfort food
Na-na-na-na-na-na-na my dad's Wilson Picket tune"

One of the most popular singers of the '60s, Wilson Pickett helped introduce the rhythmic style of soul music. Aided immeasurably by the excellent studio bands backing him at the Stax Studios in Memphis, Tennessee, and The Fame Studio in Muscle Shoals Alabama, Pickett scored a series of R&B and pop hits on Atlantic Records between 1963 and 1972 that included "In the Midnight Hour," "Mustang Sally," and "Funky Broadway."