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LOS ANGELES, CA. (Top40 Charts/ New Line Cinema) - "Love Me Sexy," the first single from the soundtrack of the upcoming New Line Cinema comedy "Semi-Pro" (which opens nationwide on Feb. 29), was released by New Line Records on January 29 and is available on all digital service providers.
The song, performed by Jackie Moon (Ferrell's character in the film) and written by Ferrell, Scot Armstrong and Nile Rodgers, is also featured on the "Semi-Pro" soundtrack which will be released by New Line Records on February 26. In addition to "Love Me Sexy," the film's soundtrack will feature classic '70s tracks from Curtis Mayfield, War, LaBelle, Sly and the Family Stone, and the Ohio Players, as well as an Elijah Kelley's ("Hairspray") cover of the Earth, Wind & Fire song "Shining Star."
The video for "Love Me Sexy" has already taken off online, being viewed more than one million times on since being released on January 22, and was the No 1 most watched video on YouTube on January 25th.
Ferrell stars in "Semi-Pro," an outrageous comedy set in 1976 against the backdrop of the maverick ABA - a fast-paced, wild and crazy basketball league that rivaled the NBA and made a name for itself with innovations like the three-point shot and slam dunk contest.
Ferrell plays Jackie Moon, a one-hit wonder who used the profits from the success of his chart-topping song "Love Me Sexy" to achieve his dream of owning a basketball team. But Moon's franchise, the Flint Michigan Tropics, is the worst team in the league and in danger of folding when the ABA announces its plans to merge with the NBA. If they want to survive, Jackie and the Tropics must now do the seemingly impossible - win. "Semi-Pro" co-stars Woody Harrelson ("Anger Management," "White Men Can't Jump"), Will Arnett ("Blades of Glory," "Arrested Development"), Andre Benjamin ("Four Brothers," music group Outkast), Rob Corddry, Maura Tierney, Josh Braaten, DeRay Davis, Jay Phillips, Jackie Earle Haley and Andy Richter. The film is written by Scot Armstrong ("Old School"), directed by Kent Alterman, and produced by Jimmy Miller.