It's one of the oldest mysteries in music. Who is Carly Simon's "You're So Vain" about? She's kept mum about the identity of the man for over 40 years, save for a few not very specific clues. But today, she straight up named a name.
As I was heading out in Ocean County yesterday, I noticed something that caught my attention when I turned off of Route 70 and on to Ridgeway Road. To the point that I had to stop and take a picture.
It's a mystery that's been going for weeks here at the WOBM offices - about once a day, a car will drive by and blow the familiar first couple notes of "Dixie", made most famous by The Dukes of Hazzard.
Yesterday, I presented you with a mystery - there is a vehicle in Toms River that has been piquing the curiosity of almost the whole staff here at the WOBM offices. Today, we got a little closer to the answer.
It doesn't happen every day, and it doesn't always happen at exactly the same time, but someone in Toms River is whistlin' Dixie, and I need to know who.
On June 10, 2007, one of the most critically acclaimed TV series of all time came to an abrupt end. To the background of Journey's "Don't Stop Believin", the screen went dark, and "The Sopranos" went into TV history. Since then, there has been plenty of speculation about what it all meant.