By July 2002, the two largest rock stations in Chicago; Q101 and 94.7 “The Zone” began to randomly spin the single “Hey Luv” within normal rotation hours. The response by the listeners was so overwhelming that music director James Van Osdol of 94.7 “The Zone” contacted The Dog & Everything and asked them to post a message on their website asking their fans to stop calling in for the song, as they could not handle the volume. Coincidently, the songs “Hey Luv” and “Superglue” were licensed to MTV, and featured on MTV’s hit reality show “The Real World,” and the sitcom “Undressed.” As their Chicago fan base continued to multiply, The Dog & Everything began to tour the Midwest and west coast with acts such as Something Corporate (Drive Thru), Riddlin Kids (Aware) and Lucky Boys Confusion (Electra). The infectious songs and energetic live show immediately caught on in other cities, and before long there were substantial followings in markets such as Omaha, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Madison, Milwaukee, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Oakland as well as surrounding areas. By Fall 2002 The Dog & Everything had headlined and sold out such Chicago venues as The House of Blues (1200 capacity), The Vic Theatre (1500 capacity), and the famed Metro (1200 capacity).
In October of 2002 The Dog & Everything entered a contest sponsored by 94.7 “The Zone” called “The Next Big Thing.” After a series of live performances at The Hard Rock Café in Chicago, The Dog & Everything was selected by a panel of industry judges as Chicago’s best unsigned band. This gave the band a great deal of radio promotion, and helped develop a strong relationship with James Van Osdol, the Music Director and the station’s head DJ.
On December 13th, 2002 The Dog & Everything single “Hey Luv” was featured on “94.7 The Zone’s” specialty radio show “The Pillow Fight.” This cage match-type program put two songs up against one another, and then listeners voted for the song they wanted to continue on to face another challenger. “Hey Luv” was put up against a new Sum 41 single, and “Hey Luv” won the listeners’ votes overwhelmingly. The song continued to win night after night, defeating singles from artists such as Good Charlotte, System of a Down, Everclear, Jimmy Eat World, The Used, Transplants, 3 Doors Down, Fuel, Chevelle, and Papa Roach. After 30 days, the song was the first ever retired from the program, smashing the old record of 7 set by New Found Glory.
The month of radio play gained a great deal of recognition for The Dog & Everything. Their Chicago fanbase grew immensely, and individuals within the industry began to take notice. “Hey Luv” appeared on two compilations put out by the promotion mammoth Jeff McClusky and Associates. One of these entitled “The Best of Unsigned Chicago,” and the other, called “The Bridge Sampler” featured only up and coming national acts (The Dog & Everything was the only unsigned band to appear). “The Bridge Sampler” went out to every major reporting rock station in the country, and before long “Hey Luv” began to gain random spins across the country. Labels soon began calling on the band, however they have not yet found the label that they feel they can call home.
By the end of 2003, 8,000 copies of the debut album "Bandshell" had been sold. This July the band releases their sophomore independent album titled “Sound Off”. With the buzz this album is already creating, the next year looks to be big for The Dog and Everything.
For more information, visit their website: http://www.thedogandeverythingonline.com/
Anymore
The Dog and Everything Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
I can't think here anymore.
I can't sit here anymore, and wait for you.
I can't be there anymore.
I can't compete here anymore.
I can't give treatment anymore, and be sweet to you.
In "Anymore" by The Dog and Everything, the lyrics convey a deep sense of frustration and exhaustion in a relationship. The singer expresses their inability to continue in the relationship and details the reasons for their discontent. The repeated line, "I can't do this anymore," emphasizes the singer's determination to move on and their overwhelming emotions that have led them to make this decision.
The first stanza reflects the singer's mental and emotional exhaustion. They feel overwhelmed and unable to think or concentrate while being in this relationship. The repetition of "anymore" in the first three lines emphasizes the singer's growing dissatisfaction and their desperate need for change.
The second stanza reveals the singer's dissatisfaction with their role in the relationship. They can no longer be physically present or emotionally invested. The line "I can't compete here anymore" suggests that the singer is exhausted from trying to meet the expectations or demands of their partner. Additionally, the mention of giving treatment and being sweet implies that the singer has been constantly providing care and affection without receiving reciprocity in return.
Line by Line Meaning
I can't do this anymore.
I am unable to continue with the current situation or task.
I can't think here anymore.
I am no longer capable of processing thoughts in this particular place or situation.
I can't sit here anymore, and wait for you.
I am unwilling to remain in this position, waiting for you, any longer.
I can't be there anymore.
I am unable to be present or exist in that specific place or situation any further.
I can't compete here anymore.
I am no longer willing or able to participate in a competitive manner in this place or situation.
I can't give treatment anymore, and be sweet to you.
I am unable to provide care, attention, or kindness to you any longer.
Lyrics © Universal Music Publishing Group
Written by: ANNA JEANETTE WARONKER
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
@mashed
t̩̠͎̙̃̒̂̕h̢̫̙̳̒́̾̔e̮͓̠̽̐͂ ̬̮̉̎d̺͝ỏ̞ġ͖͍̣̼̇̃͋ ̓͜w̩̭̖̳͌̃͌͌į̮̼̟̺̿̉̓̊͠l̗͎͍̓̏̈́l̨͍̱̪̉̇̾̚ ̡̥̻̎̅̊̓͢n̹̱̺̈́̈́̊ev̯͉̩̓͑̀ȇ̫ṙ̛̫̣̺̠̌͠ ̧̞͔́͂̽͞ͅé̬̣͒n͔̹̞̎͝͝d͈͈̈̋ t͙͉̮̞̝͛̅̓̀͝h͙̝͘͝ĕ̦ ͈̺͍͎̊̆͐͒d̡̜̉̏ō̼̟̗͇̖̈́͆̔̇g ͓̲̘̌͌̉ẃ̧̻͘i͓̬̗̞͒̓͗̾l͓͙̱̬̑̌͗́l̪͙͑͗̾ͅ ̣̉n̻͌e̟͖̗̓͘͠v̧̘̣̆͋͋̓͟ē̩ṟ̦̳͈̓͌͌͠ ̬͝e̛̩̞̳̾̀̍͜n̪̭̩̿̎̈d͔͓̐̚ ̥̣͐̐t̖̬̀̕͢͠h̪͐ḙ̙͌͝ ḑ̖̓͊o͔̫̜̊̀͞g ̲̹̩͔͐̀̂͑̽͟w̛̗̩̫͓̗͑̏̽̉ï̢̨̏̚͟ľ̙̘̗̐̈́l͉͗ ̪̹̘̳̊̀̿̑ne͍̮͉̮͐̊̐͗v̮̩̗̫̉̃͆̈́e̻̔ŗ̩̦͍̥̃̉͛̊͘ ̝̗̥̲̏̐́̕͢͡ẹ͖̲̅̊͝n͍̄̾͢d͔̗̯͕͑͗͊̅ ͍̕t̨̯̝̝́̄͑̑h̡̩̒̇ĕ̝̖̭́͘͝ͅ d̙̲́͛o͙̺̠̘͂̉̄͂g̢͔̘̎̽̂̔ͅ ̛͎̰̗̀͆̈́͢wǐ͖̖̀̓͟l̡̤̞͆̊͞l̢̞̺̑͡͡ ̥̻̏͂ń͖e͇̼̗͍̓͆͆̕v̠͋ę̠̤͑̔̿r̡̹̼͛̋͡ ͎͎̻̀͐̆ę̤̬̙̬͑͐̾̊͘n͇̑d̝͈͙́͑̀ ̹̀̋͟t̗̤́̓͊ͅhê̜̲̦̟̰͗͆͘͝ ͇̔̏͟d̟̐ȏ̝̩̭̄͌̋͢͡ͅģ̙̻͆͐͊͒ͅ w͉̣̽͂î̧̼̮̲̈́͐͡l̮̬̤̲̈͌̾̅l͍͚̪̦̎͑̎́ ̰͕̋̍n͉͙̊̽ḙ͉̉͡v̠̺̣̩̍͆͂͗ë͉̮͗r͉̟͚̯̆͛͗̃ ę̬͎̀͂̍ṉ͓̗̄̈͡ḑ̮̳͙͂̇̚͡ ̖̍̅͢t̬̠͖̩̓̿͒͋͜͝h̰̕e ̦̅d̪̻̈̕ơ͈̪͈̭͉̍̈́͆̊ğ̡̟̈ ͙͈̌́w͍͓͇̽͛͠į̫͎̔̍̈́̓͜ļ̮͒͡ḷ̡̛̤̮͇̓̀͑̃ n̡̺̬̍͂̐͢͝e͔̱̭̥̓̓̒̑v̪̼̪̆̐̿er̘̐̚͟ ͓͈̱̮̔̆͘̚ë̘̤̦̟̘́͊̎̓͡nd̦̰̞̼̄̋̽͘ ̫̜͒͞t͓̮̮͐̑͡ḣ̛̼͔̹͍͊̿̈́͟ë̢̙̺́͆̂́͟ ̳͕͑̑́͜d̢͎̦͌̀̌̔͜o̾̕͟ͅǵ̯ ͔̉ŵ̢̮̂í͖̜̱͌̋̃ͅl͇̬̠̾̔́l ̯̬̺́̓͒ṉ̊e̹͡v̰̰̋̌̀͜e͍̍̌͜r ̲͈̺̝̇͗́͒e͍͔̞̺̒̉̃̕n̙̩̦̳̦̓̂͐͂̃d̝͔̺̑̿̓ ̬̟͍͆̔̓͟͝t͙́̓͜h̛͓̻͙̯̍͋͋e̯̻̗̍͆͞ ̹͗ḋ͙̳̹̅̓ơ̗̳̓g w̠͌i̭̐l̬̣̔͒l̨̨͓̿̅̔ ͎̀n̙̊e̛̠v̳͞ẻ͈͉̟̟̎̚͡ŕ̰̦̇ ̭̫̖̣̓̅̕͞en͚̼̳̉̉̂d̥̺͎̎̈̌ ̜̠̋̔ẗ̘́h̙̭́̚e ͇̳̲̋̃̾̚͜ḓ̡̛̪͊́o̖̽g ̢̲͉̥͌̓̓̕wil̙̼̀͝l͚̥̻̙̱̽̈̋͂̾ ͔̝̟̏̒̐̕͢n͍̓é̝̞͑v̢͚̤̀́͝ė̺r͇̠̐͂ ̙̖̄͆è͕̕͟n̞̩̑̉́͢d͇̠͈̲̋͛͌̓̚͢ ͕͆th̖͇̍͢͞͞e͔͗ ̻̻͔͙̄̏̓͑ḓ̯̠̓̇͡ö͚͊ͅg̗̜͌́͟͞ ̱́w̙̘͛̕í̭̮̕ll͂ͅ ͈̲͗̉͟͡ṋ̛̩̮̼̄̄́͟͞ẻ͇̞̟̣͔͂͗͐͞v̬̔ḝ̯̖͓̑͛̏r̜͆ ̨̤̋̈e̬̓n̢͈̄͗d̹͂ ̩̙̜͖̓͒̉̚t͢͡h͕̍͌ͅė̗̲͙͖͗̉̇̊ͅ ͎̫̞͍͛̂͑͊d̳̗͈͂̑̅og͎̑̔ͅ ̹̃ẃ̻̮̣̱̍̚̕í̡̢̥̻͖͆̕͘͞l̞̹̈́̃l̥̿ ̟̘͒̚n̛̬̺̪̩̝̎̔̕͝ȅ̜͎̑v͕̹̒̆e̟̫̰͆͒̑͘͟͢͡r̢̃ ̨̹͆̐e̻͝ṇ̛̘̖̲͉̇̆͊̎ď̖̞̭̼͂͂̋ ̯̅t͇̍̀͜h̰̏͊ͅē͉͖̉ ̢͉̽̓ď͖̲̟̿͝ȏ̡̪̗̮̐̆̏g̲̔ ̪̝̿̈ŵ͓̲͑͘͜i͂͜ḷ̦̫͖̀̓͌̆l͕̘͂̇ ̮̬̮̟͐̐́͠n̝͗ę̭͍̹̟̾̍̌͛̕v̭͇̲̘̌̈̒͊è̟͙̘̎̉r̮̾ ̪̩͔̔̅̑͊ͅé̡͔̗̏̓͢͞n̼̲͈͕̼̄͑́̕͘d̰̍͂͜ ̯͛t̨͙͙̓͛̆͂͜h̩̝̞̼͐͒̈͝e̡̛̫̟̔̓͡ͅ ͈̋d͙̪̊̋ơ̧̘̔̌̾͟͜g̢̖̩̉̑̽ ̩̝̮͊̎̉̕͟ŵ͉̣̪̃̔̚͜ǐ̘̪̈́́͢l̺̥̥͆̒̈͟͞l̢̘̱͕̂̅̐̑ ̥̻͈̫͋̓̑͡n͕͡ev̝̤̳̋͐́͡ͅe̡̮̖͐̎̐̈͜ȑ̞͓̕ ̡͓͔̐̂̏͆͒ͅͅe̦̯͊͗n͇̜͖̋̋̚ḑ̞̟͎̽̀͂̚ t̟̭͇͊̑͑h̩͍̟̃́͞ę̡̺̯̐̋̽̏͘͟ ͔̜̀̓d̫̻͔͈̻̊̿͊̉̅oģ̢̘͇̋͊̿͘͘͜ ̨̳͑̿̄͟w̡̬̜͒̇̆̒͢iĺ͎l̨͎̝̆̇͗̋͜ n͔̋ẹ̢̭̈̕͡v͚͚̯͙̔̃̕̚e̡͖̙̪͛̉̎̇r̛͎͍͒ ̳̗̘̀͂̕é̫̋͜ņ̧̟́̈̅d̠͒ ̛͕̮̱͒̏̒ͅť̨̢͓̲̈́̓́h͎̚ę̱̌̚ ̢̟̪͓́̋̽͟͡͠ḍ̝͇̯͊͛̌͡ơ̹̘̤͙̼̂̓̆͂g̖̐ ̥̞͓̽̋͗͘͟w͎͔̦͖̬͌͋͒̒͡į̡̧̺͇̋̍̅͘͞l̢̖͔̟̓̿̚͘l ̢̖̙̏͑́n̖̥̤͂̈́̈ev̧̪͌̇e̡͖̰̯͛̓̅͗͒ͅŕ͙ ̤̇e̢͓̪͌̏͘͜͝n̼̪̊̀d̤̫̎́ ͓̤̻́̚͞th̰͔͊͑ě̡͈̫̓̊ d͔̜̅̋og͚̪̟̏͗̚ ̭̔̽͟w̗̌ï͚̮̘͖̒͑̔l͔̆l̖̪͉̝͚͋̎͋̆͡ n̨͝e̫͡v͙̒̀ͅe͚̞̠͖͖̍̿̊̕͝ṙ͓ ̹̊e̡̙͒̂n̻̯̫̍̾͡d̬̫̃́ ţ̮͍̓́͘ḥ̡̦̭̍̀̀̒ȅ̠ ̨̪̺̜̑̍̅͝d̝͉̉͒o̰̝̎͞g̨̩̪̳̉͑̿̂̅͜ ̨̛̩̱̭̓̾͝w̯̳̎̊ǐ̜l̨͂̒͜l͚̳͛͞ ͍͈̼͋̂̓n̡̘̪̈̅̃ę̝̬͋̈̈͂͟v͇̯̍̕e̤̤̣̋̕̕r ͎͗e͈̥̟̼̒̐͊̒n͚͍̎͂͟͡d̯̼̰̀̚͡ ̬͇̓̇̀ͅt̫̔h̥͙͙͉͈̆̌͐͂͝ē̼̭̰͑̑ ͖̐dǫ̟̠̠̏͗̏̓g͓͖̲͙͆̿̈͆ ̢̲́̅ẁ̺͟͠i̱͢͞͞l̢̛̝̮̪͗̾͂l̲͉̹̾͗͋̀͜ ̱̘͗͋n͓͍̈́͗ev͔͍̈́͞e̹͓̖͒̂̄r͉̖̥̒̍͆ ̧͇͉̓͗̑̕ͅẹ̠̓͒nd̩̟̀͞
@bonniethebunny5204
Lol
@Kimshis__
What the fuck its this video pls explain
@tychamberlain2119
SHADOW REALM
@bonniethebunny5204
Mashed the dog and house the dog and table the dog
@Adam_X78
mashed Where am I
@user-yv3ke7mg2l
Dog doesn't even sound like a word anymore.
@humannomore7759
What I did was stop trying to listen to it as "dog" but "dawg"
@user-yv3ke7mg2l
@@humannomore7759 But now Dawg doesn't sound like a word, either way, we're screwed
@poweroffriendship2.0
OH MY DAWG!