I don't think that was Weird Al, but a parody group call ApologetiX.
William Bernhardt
Weird Al is often incorrectly credited with that song. However it is not him. Bob Rivers wrote and sang the song.
Maya Angelou wrote a poem called A Hater.Selma Bejbi Esmerovic wrote a poem called Haters.
Weird Al gets good songs and makes them funny. Michael Jackson wrote Bad so Weird Al made Fat. Avril Lavigne wrote Complicated so Weird Al made A Complicated Song. You can just go to youtube.com and type Weird Al.===============================================================Alfred Matthew "Weird Al" Yankovic (born October 23, 1959) is an American singer-songwriter, music producer, actor, comedian, satirist, and a parodist. Yankovic is known in particular for his humorous songs that make light of popular culture and that often parody specific songs by contemporary musical acts.
Usha Bansal wrote this story
Bobby Edner. Your welcome to everyoneMy husband and I was having a discussing about who wrote and sang Smooth Criminal first and he was arguing with me that it was not Micheal Jackson and I went on the internet to prove my husband that he was wrong....lol I won!!!!
No whoever wrote this question is weird
Burgundian
Author of The weird sisters wrote 'Waldeck Abbey.'
It wasn't Weird Al.
William Bernhardt
It was written by "Weird Al" Yankovic.
Michael did it first, Alien Ant Farm just did a cover Michael Jackson's was made in 1988 and Alien Ant Farm's was made in 2001.
it is a iditarod rider very weird
Burgundian ( apex )
Michael was an amazing man. Most of his songs come from unknown inspirations. He once said he could look at a painting or have a water gun fight or be driving down the interstate or be 2,000 feet in the air, or just in his bedroom and find inspirations. Most of his inspirations came from the most random things and at the most random times. He knows the answer better than all of us.
The Romans did have a kind of paper made from reeds, and wrote on animal skins, but this was too expensive for children to write on. Schoolboys would write on wax tablets with a pointed stick called a stylus. They then rubbed the wax smooth and started again.