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    • "You Gotta Love That"
    • "If I Was A Drinkin' Man"
    • "Going, Going, Gone"
    • "Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye"
    • "Now I Pray For Rain"
    • "For A Change"
    • "The City Put The Country Back in Me"
    • "The Shake"
    • "No Doubt About It"
    • "Wink"

    His faster-driving material, the type you want to play at full-blast on road trips, makes McCoy a potent song interpreter and one heck of a live performer.

    While a lot of country songs are about drinking to forget, McCoy met someone who'd made remembering the tough times worthwhile.

    This is the more subdued Bryan White tune, not the raucous George Strait song. McCoy has the chops to handle either, when you consider this performance along with some of his more upbeat material.

    McCoy's a talented song interpreter beyond country songs, as heard on this reimagining of a John D. Loudermilk-penned doo-wop classic. It's the best country version of a song once recorded by the legendary Eddy Arnold.

    Pop-accessible country songs that rely on traditional-sounding vocal harmonies and instrumentation rarely sounded better.

    Intentional or not, this song about long-awaited life changes applies to McCoy's delay in cracking the country charts' glass ceiling.

    This one hits home for anyone raised in a rural area who couldn't wait to ditch the countryside for the big city, only to find out that you're more old-fashioned than you'd realized.

    This is either about a particular dance move or butts in general. Either way, it's one of those fiery, fiddle-driven line dance tunes that makes '90s country fun.

    The title track off McCoy's career-breaking album became the first of consecutive No. 1 Billboardsingles. It simply and sweetly says that the narrator and his woman belong together like biscuits and gravy — no doubt about it!

    The 1994 single that helped make McCoy a household name is this fun, clap-along song about appreciating the little things in a loving relationship. Honorable mention songs: "A-OK," "The Luckiest Man in the World," "At This Moment," "You Don't Know Me," a cover of Hank Williams' "Kaw-Liga" and a duet of "You're My Jamaica" with Pride. This story was...

  1. Grampa Amos must adjust to a more modern way of life when the McCoy family moves from Smokey Corners, West Virginia to an inherited ranch in the San Fernando Valley of California.

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    • January 1, 1963
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  2. Unlocked. About the Show. It’s the true American story of a legendary family feud—one that spanned decades and nearly launched a war between Kentucky and West Virginia. Hatfields & McCoys, a...

  3. 1 Video. 59 Photos. Comedy Family. From the hills of West Virginia, Amos McCoy moves his family to an inherited farm in California. Grandpa Amos is quick to give advice to his three grandchildren and wonders how his neighbors ever managed without him around. Creator. Irving Pincus. Stars. Walter Brennan. Richard Crenna. Kathleen Nolan.

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