Real World (Matchbox Twenty song)

"Real World" is a song by American alternative rock group Matchbox 20. It was released in June 1998 as the fourth single from their debut album, Yourself or Someone Like You. The single was initially ineligible to chart on the US Billboard Hot 100 due to not receiving a physical release; it instead peaked at number nine on the Billboard Hot 100 Airplay chart in August 1998.[1] However, in December 1998, the Hot 100 chart rules were changed to allow airplay-only singles to chart, and "Real World" became the band's first single to enter the listing, debuting and peaking at number 38.[2] Worldwide, "Real World" reached number five in Canada and number 40 in Australia.

"Real World"
Single by Matchbox 20
from the album Yourself or Someone Like You
ReleasedJune 23, 1998
Recorded1996
Genre
Length3:51
LabelAtlantic
Songwriter(s)Rob Thomas
Producer(s)Matt Serletic
Matchbox 20 singles chronology
"3 a.m."
(1997)
"Real World"
(1998)
"Back 2 Good"
(1998)

Content

The song was written by lead singer Rob Thomas, and details him wondering about what it would be like if he lived in various settings other than the current one, including a superhero, a rainmaker, and being a boss at a job, and if they would worsen or improve his life.

Music video

The music video, directed by Matthew Rolston, starts with Rob walking through a bowling alley with a camel. It then shows him on a street, where Kyle Cook is on an ice cream truck, but instead of selling ice cream, he unveils what appears to be a raw steak. Next, Rob is doing a news broadcast, with Brian Yale acting as a director. In the meantime, intercut with this is a diner with Paul Doucette dressed as a waitress, eventually discarding the outfit. In the midst of the news broadcast, we see what appears to be a breakfast cereal commercial with Adam Gaynor sitting with a family. The video concludes with the camera going back and forth between Rob with the camel and at the news station.

Track listing

Australian CD single

  1. "Real World" – 3:50
  2. "Long Day" (live) – 3:53
  3. "3am" (live) – 3:45

Japanese CD single

  1. "Real World" – 3:50
  2. "Push" (live acoustic) – 4:11
  3. "3am" (live acoustic) – 3:48
  4. "Busted" (live acoustic) – 4:24

Charts

gollark: They must have so many weird special cases everywhere for slightly broken software or hardware.
gollark: I've read a bit about it, and it's probably 80% insanity given the amount of stuff they do to maintain backward compatibility.
gollark: Yes, they could probably just put basically anything in there and it would be hard to do anything about it.
gollark: No, I mean it would be hard to do in the various open source OSes.
gollark: > Maybe you've never thought about this, but if there are 100 devs working for free you'd only need to hire 50 devs to compromise all their code.That's, um, still quite a lot given the large amounts of developers involved, and code review exists, and this kind of conspiracy could *never* stay secret for very long, and if you have an obvious backdoor obvious people are fairly likely to look at it and notice.

References

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