Wikipedia
Trippin is a 2005 MTV environmental documentary television series hosted by Cameron Diaz. It also features many other celebrities, including Drew Barrymore, Redman, Jessica Alba, Eva Mendes, Mark Hoppus and Justin Timberlake. On the show, said celebrities visit various ecological locales around the world, in particular underprivileged areas of the world.
Trippin' or Trippin may refer to:
- Trippin, a Malaysian infotainment programme
- Trippin', an MTV environmental documentary television series hosted by Cameron Diaz
- Trippin' (film) (1999)
- Trippin' (Push Push song) (1992)
- Trippin' (Total song) (1998)
- Trippin' (That's the Way Love Works), a song by Toni Braxton from her 2005 album Libra
- "Trippin'", a song by Godsmack from Awake
"Trippin' (That's the Way Love Works)" is a song by American R&B singer–songwriter Toni Braxton from her fifth studio album, Libra (2005). Written by Bryan-Michael Cox, Kendrick Dean, Johntá Austin, and Braxton and produced by Cox, the song was released to U.S. radio on September 26, 2005 as the album's second single. Like other singles from Libra, lack of promotion from Blackground Records affected the single's chart performance; it missed the Billboard Hot 100 and charted outside the top sixty of the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs. Subsequently, no music video was filmed for the single.
Trippin' is a 1999 comedy film starring Deon Richmond, Maia Campbell, Donald Faison, and Guy Torry. The film provided one of Anthony Anderson's earliest film roles. It was directed by David Raynr.
"Trippin'" was the first single from New Zealand glam metal band Push Push. The song was also recorded around the same time by Auckland punk stalwarts "The Warners" (1984-1995) and appeared on the Crazy Horses single released by Wildside records.
"Trippin'" is a song by R&B girl group Total, released as the first single from their second album in 1998. It was also their second release working with production/writing duo Missy Elliott & Timbaland, after What About Us?, although Timbaland this time provided only co-production and instrumentation, with the pairs' longtime collaborator Darryl Pearson instead handling main production with Elliott. Elliott was also often given a "featuring" credit (likely to create increased publicity for the track) despite only providing background vocals and spoken word to the song. The track was by far the group's biggest hit, peaking at number seven on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and number three on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.
The song was released with the Puff Daddy, Harve Pierre & Mario Winans Remix as the main version with regards to the singles' cover and track listings. This remix featured a re-arranged version of the original lyrics, heavily sampled LL Cool J's " 4, 3, 2, 1" and DMX (who also appeared on the sampled track) provided rap vocals. Both the original version (listed as "PD Mix") and another main remix (a similar, stripped-down version: the "Missy Mix") were also featured. Radio stations and the video however, simply censored the album version/PD Mix and a video for the remix was not shot.