Looking for... the Best

Looking for... the Best of David Hasselhoff is a greatest his album released by David Hasselhoff in Germany in October 1995.[1]

Looking For ... the Best
Compilation album by
Released9 October 1995 (Germany)
GenreEasy Listening
LabelBMG Music
David Hasselhoff chronology
For You
(1995)
Looking For ... the Best
(1995)
Hooked on a Feeling
(1997)

Internet meme

Looking for has become the center of an Internet meme, in what Mashable described as a "review bomb":[2] participants leaving humorous reviews on Amazon.com, all of which state that the song "Hot Shot City" is "particularly good".[3][4]

Track listing

  1. "Looking for Freedom"
  2. "Wir Zwei Allein"
  3. "Crazy for You"
  4. "Do the Limbo Dance"
  5. "Flying on the Wings of Tenderness"
  6. "Hot Shot City"
  7. "Save the World"
  8. "These Lovin' Eyes"
  9. "Du"
  10. "Fallin' in Love"
  11. "Is Everybody Happy"
  12. "Best Is Yet to Come"
  13. "Freedom for the World"
  14. "Je T'Aime Means I Love You"
  15. "Do You Believe in Love"
  16. "Danice Dance d'Amour"
  17. "Everybody Sunshine"
  18. "I Believe" (duet with Laura Branigan)
gollark: Nobody knows.
gollark: Okay then, I've added a setting (hopefully, I haven't... really done much testing...) which should allow you to disable PotatOS EZcopy/disk infection (`set potatOS.disable_ezcopy` out of sandbox, `est potatOS.disable_ezcopy` in sandbox). This is rolling out to potatOS computers on Switchcraft, and I'm planning to eventually mention this to users on first boot or something.
gollark: Generally ext4 is good.
gollark: The symlink thing? I think so. You will need to automount the disk, probably.
gollark: What ”sort” of ”special case”?

References

  1. "Looking for... the Best of David Hasselhoff Remastered". amazon.de. Retrieved 12 June 2017.
  2. 10 Hilarious Amazon Review Bombs, at Mashable; published February 15, 2013; retrieved December 14, 2017
  3. "Tiny Pineapple - Hot Shot City is particularly good". Tiny Pineapple. Retrieved 2014-01-18.
  4. Music Appreciation: Hasselhoff's high notes, by Julian Champkin, at the Guardian; published January 20, 2003; retrieved December 14, 2017
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