On This Day: February 27 1984 Weird Al Yankovic in 3-D Was Released

  • Author Author Pete
  • Publish date Published Published
  • Reading time 1 min read

Welcome to the We Love the Eighties Community

This community is dedicated to the music, movies, television, games, radio, and pop culture that defined the 1980s. It is a place for people who lived the decade, as well as those who appreciate what made it unforgettable. Members use this forum to check in during live radio blocks, share weekly listening memories, and talk about what the music, shows, and moments of the 80s bring back for them. Guests are welcome to browse selected discussions, while full participation requires registration. If you would like to understand the intent behind this community and how it is curated, you can read more here: About This Community. Explore current conversations, share your memories, and take part in a community built around real 80s experiences.

Join the discussion

See what members are talking about right now
Free registration. Facebook and Google login available.

Overview Discussion

On This Day: February 27 1984 Weird Al Yankovic in 3-D Was Released
On this day February 27 1984 Weird Al Yankovic released his second studio album Weird Al Yankovic in 3-D, which became his breakthrough record. The album reached number 17 on the US Billboard 200 and helped establish Al as the king of musical parody.

The album featured the hit single Eat It, a parody of Michael Jackson’s Beat It. The song’s music video, which humorously mimicked Jackson’s original, became a sensation on MTV, further catapulting Weird Al into mainstream pop culture. Eat It peaked at number 12 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it one of his most successful singles.

Beyond Eat It, the album also included fan-favorite parodies like The Brady Bunch, based on Men at Work’s Down Under, and originals like Midnight Star, which showcased his signature offbeat humor. In 3-D marked the beginning of Weird Al’s long career as a parody artist, proving that comedic music could also be commercially successful.

Fun fact: Eat It won Best Comedy Recording at the 1985 Grammy Awards, making Weird Al a Grammy-winning artist early in his career.

Trivia question: Eat It was Weird Al’s first major parody hit, but can you name another Michael Jackson song he later parodied?

Comments

There are no comments to display
Back
Top