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Lee greenwood proud to be an american
Lee greenwood proud to be an american








lee greenwood proud to be an american

To see the latest product from Black Cat® Fireworks visit our YouTube channel at /blackcatfireworksusa. The partnership between Black Cat® and Lee Greenwood was brokered by Spinning Plates Marketing with legal representation by John Mason.įor more information about Black Cat® Fireworks or to find a retailer near you, please visit. We hope everyone will enjoy and celebrate together - it’s our proudest creation to date!” We were ecstatic when his team came to us with this partnership opportunity, and we are even more elated to finally bring this creation to market. America’ and his music is featured all over the United States every year at fireworks celebrations in cities great and small. “When you think of patriotism and music and celebrity in America, you turn no further than to Lee Greenwood,” says Chris Noland, VP of Marketing and Brand Development, Black Cat® Fireworks, USA. I want to thank Chris and their whole team for creating such a beautiful product that everyone can enjoy.” Partnering with Black Cat® was a natural fit – and they put together a beautiful assembly of red, white, and blue to honor our great country.

lee greenwood proud to be an american

“The 4th of July is one of my favorite holidays to honor our veterans and celebrate freedom. “I have been looking forward to this for a long time!” says Lee Greenwood. The Proud To Be An American Lee Greenwood signature firework features three separate cakes: God Bless The USA (14 shots/red), I Love This Land (14 shots/white), and From Sea To Shining Sea (14 shots/blue). The firework will be available in select locations starting May 17th in time for Memorial Day and everywhere in time for the July 4th season. – Lee Greenwood, the Grammy-award winning artist known as America’s Patriot, and legendary global firework manufacturer Black Cat® have teamed up just in time for the 4th of July to introduce a brand new, spectacular red, white, and blue ‘Proud To Be An American’ Lee Greenwood signature 42-report patriotic firework to the public. But they die knowing they will never be forgotten.Black Cat® Fireworks is celebrating its 70th Anniversary in the US in 2022 Tragically, they have an enemy, and too many of them are forced to sacrifice their lives to keep the rest safe. They eventually vote to reinstate the Constitution, becoming Americans, even though America is long since gone. The characters start out in L.A., New York, and Texas, but they slowly come together. Not many, but enough to form a new set of friends, and eventually, family. It’s like this song was written as the theme of Stephen King’s “The Stand.” All the things are gone, but some people remain.

lee greenwood proud to be an american

The men who died to give this life to him is literally everyone. The pride in “every American heart” is just his own. So apparently hearts weren’t included in this cataclysm of “things.” I prefer to think he is traveling across post-apocalyptic America, like in “The Road” by Cormac McCarthy. He says there is pride in every American heart. Minnesota lakes, Tennessee hills, Detroit, New York, Los Angeles. But it’s hardly a message we can relate to. I have to assume the government is gone, or else what is this person rebuilding? But he is still proud to be an American. The song then describes rebuilding, with “children” and “wife.” Wait-so people weren’t included in the vanishing of all “things”? If not, then what exactly is gone? Plants? Buildings? Clothes? Not flags, apparently, because a later verse informs us that they still “stand for freedom.” ‘Cause the flag still stands for freedom and they can’t take that away I’d thank my lucky stars to be livin’ here today If tomorrow all the things were gone I’d worked for all my lifeĪnd I had to start again with just my children and my wife

LEE GREENWOOD PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN FULL

We’re not talking about good old middle-America we’re talking “I Am Legend.” Here’s the full first verse: There are a few versions I’ve found online, but they all start with the line “If tomorrow all the things were gone.” Whoa.

lee greenwood proud to be an american

No, I hate this song because it doesn’t make any sense. I don’t hate it because it is cheesy, boring, or even that it gets over-played to the exclusion of better songs, although all of that is true. It talks about family! And work! And Texas! And Tennessee! And shining seas! And the troops! And the Apocalypse! “God Bless the U.S.A.” gets overplayed every Independence Day, Memorial Day, and Veterans Day.










Lee greenwood proud to be an american