First of all, the name of the song is "It's 5 O'clock Somewhere", but I assume the question editor removed your colon, so I can't blame you for that. Don't know who WROTE it, but Alan Jackson sings it, with help from Jimmy Buffet. Alan Jackson.
http://www.angelfire.com/music4/ajfan2/Lyrics/ItsFiveOclockSomewhere.html
Well, there are three different versions of that song. The original I believe is by the Proclaimers, another copy is made by Less Than Jake, and the Punk Cover version is made by Pennywise. The song is called 'I Would Walk 500 Miles'
Proclaimers' songs have been in nine movie soundtracks.The following is a list of the movies with the Proclaimers' song:Benny and Joon (1993) (song, "I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles)")Bye Bye Love (1995) (song, "Bye Bye Love")Bottle Rocket (1996) (song, "Over And Done With")Dumb and Dumber (1994) (song, "Get Ready")The Crossing (1990) (song, "King of the Road")Shrek (2001) (song, "I'm on My Way")How I Met Your Mother (2007, 2009 - episodes Arrivederci, Fiero; Duel Citizenship) (song, "I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles)")Mama's Boy (2008) (song, "Then I Met You")Burke and Hare (2010) (song, "I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles)")
Scott Neustadter's(the guy who wrote the story) ex- girlfriend.
Richard McGonagle is the narrator in the movie 500 Days of Summer.
500
Galen of rome wrote 500 books!
The Proclaimers.
somewhere :)
Julianne Hough
it's Pat Monahan of Train
like about 500 years.
Somewhere in the top 15
An example of a song with hyperbole is the song I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles). The song is by the band The Proclaimers.
Ritchie Valens wrote the song and we should give him most of the credit. Los Lobos then sung the song and made it very famous. It hit number one in the United states and United Kingdom! When Valens sang it, he made it to the Rolling Stone top 500. It was the only song in Spanish on that list.
i belive it is somewhere between 1 and 500
Somewhere in between about $100 and $500
There's too many to name. Almost any singer from the 1930's, when the song was written, who sang standards. So pick any big name singer from that era and I guarantee, they sang that song. Biggest examples I can think are #1 Judy Garland, who made it famous in the movie of the musical from which it came "Babes in Arms." But try Sinatra, Doris Day, Ella Fitzgerald. But a total, definitive count of everyone would be very difficult to get. Easily over 100; maybe even 500.