Prior to appearing in this video, "Here Come The Reindeer" and The Wiggle's cover of "Curoo Curoo" were first performed live at the 2000 Carols In The Domain TV special.
A mechanism that activates specific muscles in our ears is a leftover from our evolutionary past, back when our ancestors depended more on their hearing for survival.
A “useless” muscle that allows some people to wiggle their ears actually activates when we strain to hear something. Our ape ancestors lost the ability to pivot their ears when they diverged ...
Australia is a long way from Nashville, but that hasn’t stopped the Wiggles from saddling up with some country friends for their upcoming album Wiggle Up, Giddy Up!, out March 7. The beloved ...
Thought to be pretty redundant in modern humans outside of wiggling our ears for a giggle, new research has revealed that certain ear muscles that let animals and our ancient ancestors move their ...
The Australian children's music group The Wiggles have announced they are grabbin' their boots, dustin' off their cowboy hats and dropping a country music album titled "Wiggle Up, Giddy Up." ...
A new study suggests that our muscles for ear wiggling are also active when we listen with lots of effort. (Credit: BLACKDAY/Shutterstock) They wiggle, though they don’t do much else. That’s what ...
featuring Dasha (whose top three cities for Spotify streams, fun fact, are all in Australia). The video sees The Wiggles don their finest Western wear and have a hoedown, with help from characters ...
"There are three large muscles which connect the auricle to the skull and scalp and are important for ear wiggling," explained Andreas Schröer of Saarland University, first author of the study in ...