
Robert Preston - Chicken Fat - YouTube
If you went to school in the 60's or 70's, this is probably burned into a little corner of your brain. Allow me to access that little corner.
Chicken Fat (song) - Wikipedia
"Chicken Fat" was the theme song for President John F. Kennedy's youth fitness program, and millions of 7-inch 33 RPM discs which were pressed for free by Capitol Records were heard in …
Chicken Fat Song (2020 Version!) - YouTube
Meredith Willson's 1962 "Chicken Fat Song" Sung by Robert Preston Routine: Dick Snider and Ted Forbes (Physical Fitness Council) I want to thank my Physical Education mentor, Judy …
Robert Preston – Chicken Fat Lyrics - Genius
Chicken Fat Lyrics: Touch down every morning - ten times! / Not just now and then / Give that chicken fat back to the chicken / And don't be chicken again / No, don't be chicken again /...
"Go, you chicken fat, go!" - YouTube
"Go, you chicken fat, go!" - YouTube. "Go, you chicken fat, go!" A short look back at the classes of 1961, a/k/a the first "lab rats" who were "treated" to Robert Preston's rousing tune of...
Chicken Fat Song - boyscoutfun.org
A song written by Meredith Wilson of "Music Man" fame. It was commissioned by John Kennedy for his new Youth Fitness Program. A copy of this record was sent to every school in the U.S. …
Chicken Fat "The Youth Fitness Song" - Robert Preston - dmdb.org
Chicken Fat "The Youth Fitness Song" - Robert Preston (written by Meredith Wilson) entered by Jeff Morris; May 22, 1995 & June 1, 1995. This record was made circa 1962. It was …
Chicken Fat by Robert Preston - Songfacts
Chicken Fat by Robert Preston song meaning, lyric interpretation, video and chart position
Go, You Chicken Fat, Go!: The story of the Youth Fitness Song - Engadget
Jul 2, 2014 · The reason you can't find Chicken Fat -- also known as the "Youth Fitness Song" -- on iTunes (or Spotify, for that matter) is that it wasn't created as a contender for the Top 10 …
Chicken Fat - Detroit Kid Show
“Go you chicken fat, go!” If you attended grade school during the early 1960s, those five words will either bring a smile to your face or conjure up painful memories of elementary school gym …