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  1. Feb 11, 2017 · Provided to YouTube by Legacy RecordingsTake This Job and Shove It · Johnny PaycheckTake This Job And Shove It℗ 1977 Sony Music EntertainmentReleased on: 201...

    • 3 min
    • 171.9K
    • Johnny Paycheck - Topic
  2. Jan 18, 2024 · Take this job and shove it tells a whole story in just those first six words. Songwriter David Allan Coe started with those words, and Johnny Paycheck was the perfect artist to deliver the ultimatum.

    • 3 min
  3. Dec 27, 2020 · Artist: johnny paycheck SonG title: take this job and shove it [Chorus] (no chord) Take this job and shove it Bb F I ain't working here no more F Dm G C Woman done left and took all the reasons i was working for F Bb F You better not to try to stand in my way as i'm a-walking out the door Bb F C F Take this job and shove it i ain't working here ...

  4. take this job and shove it, I ain't working here no more. 2024-05-29T19:22:26Z Comment by stevedoyleSoundwave. Someone needs to repost the Dead Kennedys version. 2023-10-20T21:10:51Z Comment by Rusty Shackleford. the rate at which people were quitting their jobs actually skyrocketed for like two years after this was released. legendary😭😭

  5. May 31, 2005 · Brief Synopsis. Read More. Frank Maclin is given a project by his corporate bosses to revitalize the run-down brewery that they recently acquired in his hometown. Frank has become a success with the company and is not eager to move back to the town in Iowa he left ten years before, so he wants to make the changes quickly and leave.

  6. Take this job and shove it! I ain't workin' here no more!" A character is in a job that's making them more and more miserable by the day. Never mind that it's their (probably only) source of income; the plain and simple of it is, the job sucks and is draining them of their energy and patience. Maybe it's a Dangerous Workplace they're employed ...

  7. Released in August 1977, "Take This Job And Shove It" was the first #1 Country hit of 1978, staying at the top the first two weeks of January. It introduced the title phrase into the lexicon, which stuck around so long there are now people who say it that don't even know it's a song. Johnny Paycheck recorded the original and definitive version ...

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