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Friday Night Karaoke  

Friday Night Karaoke

No ads, no gimmicks - just Karaoke! Friday Night Karaoke features amateur artists every week singing the songs they love, just for you! Get your weekly dose of vocal expression.

Author: Friday Night Karaoke

No ads, no gimmicks - just Karaoke! Friday Night Karaoke features amateur artists every week singing the songs they love, just for you! Get your weekly dose of vocal expression. Get featured on the podcast by joining the official Friday Night Karaoke Facebook group at https://www.facebook.com/groups/fridaynightkaraoke!
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Language: en

Genres: Health & Fitness, Mental Health, Music

Contact email: Get it

Feed URL: Get it

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That's Deep, Bro (Deep Karaoke Songs)
Episode 77
Monday, 16 March, 2026

It's Episode 77 of the Friday Night Karaoke Podcast, and the theme was That's Deep, Bro! This week, Mike and Joe go a little deeper than usual with an episode built around songs that mean something more. Some of these picks have hidden meaning baked right into the lyrics. Some clearly hit on a more personal level for the singer. Either way, this one is full of songs that make you stop, listen a little closer, and feel something. It is still FNK, so even with all the depth, it stays fun, honest, and full of personality. You get big voices, great song choices, some unexpected moments, and the kind of conversations that remind you why this group works so well in the first place. These are not just people singing songs. These are people connecting to them. Featured performances Marc Cross with Hurt by Nine Inch Nails / Johnny CashA killer way to open the show. Mike and Joe both really leaned into how heavy this song already is, then talked about how wild it is that Marc made them want to go back and listen to all three versions all over again. That is a huge compliment. He did not just cover it. He put himself right into it. Bonnie Richelle with How Deep Is Your Love by Bee GeesThis one landed exactly the way it needed to. The guys called out how well Bonnie layers and harmonizes with herself, but what really made it stand out was how naturally the whole thing unfolded. It was not just four boxes on a screen. It felt arranged. It felt built. And it sounded great. Rick Mendoza with 99 by TotoOne of those picks that perfectly fits the theme because it is not the obvious Toto song everyone expects. Mike flat-out said he did not think he had ever heard it before, which made Rick's choice even better. Then the song ends and just keeps ending forever, which turned into one of the funniest parts of the episode. Angel Lark with At 17 by Janis IanA deep cut in every sense. Neither Mike nor Joe seemed to know the song going in, which made it feel even more like a discovery. It fits the theme perfectly too - reflective, personal, and loaded with the kind of meaning that sneaks up on you. Nancy Van Eindhoven with Love Hurts by NazarethThis was one of those "okay, wow" performances. Mike and Joe both talked about how strong her voice is, especially the way she moves naturally between softer phrasing and those bigger, more powerful notes. And yes, they did eventually spell out why the song is deep - because it throws away the fairy tale version of love and says the real thing can hurt. Kristie Winn with Time After Time by Cyndi LauperA brand new voice to the podcast, and she absolutely made it count. The acoustic setup instantly won both Mike and Joe over, and from there it turned into one of those performances that feels intimate in the best way. Honest, stripped down, and really, really good. Sandy Hernandez with A Little Bit Me, A Little Bit You by The MonkeesSandy totally understood the assignment on this one. What made this performance stand out on the show was not just the song, but the fact that Sandy actually explained why it mattered - from loving it as a kid on The Monkees to realizing later that it had more going on underneath, and then finding out Neil Diamond wrote it. That made it hit even harder. Mario Rivera with Hey You by Pink FloydA strong closer and a perfect "deep" pick. Mike set it up by saying Pink Floyd basically owns this kind of theme, and Joe pointed out that the huge reverb actually made sense for the song. Afterward, Mike called it what it is - a desperate cry for human connection in an isolated world. Deep, bro. Very deep. This episode is a good reminder that karaoke is not always just about hitting the note or picking the crowd-pleaser. Sometimes it is about picking the song that says something. The one that means something. The one that carries a little extra weight. And this lineup absolutely brought that. Love what you hear? Join the Friday Night Karaoke Facebook group here and be part of the magic! It's negativity free, ad-free, and all about the music:See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

 

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