Andy Warhol used Wiles' photo in one of his prints entitled
Suicide (Fallen Body). Her picture was also used on the cover of
Saccharine Trust's album
Surviving You, Always, released in 1984 by
SST Records.
Lethal Weapon references this picture in the opening sequence.
David Bowie's 1993 video for the single "
Jump They Say" and
Radiohead's 1995 music video for the single "
Street Spirit (Fade Out)" both include a recreation of the image, with Bowie and
Thom Yorke respectively splayed atop a smashed car. The cover of the 1995 album
Gilt by the Tucson band
Machines of Loving Grace uses a color photo that recreates the original image, while that of the 2009
Pearl Jam album
Backspacer features an artist rendition of the iconic photograph in the bottom right corner. On the cover of the 2019 album
Better Out Than In by the St. Paul, Minnesota band Skittish, singer and songwriter Jeff Noller poses in a stylized recreation of the infamous picture. The photograph is referenced in the movie
Stranger Than Fiction by the character Karen Eiffel. The photograph is also referenced in the song "Shatter Me with Hope" by
HIM from their album
Screamworks: Love in Theory and Practice, with the lyrics "Turn to page 43, and you'll know how I feel", being in direct reference to the photograph as shown in
LIFE Magazine May 12, 1947 issue. The 2022 music video for the
Cyberpunk: Edgerunners ending theme song "Let You Down" by
Dawid Podsiadło contains a visual homage to the Evelyn McHale photo, with a character's body being depicted atop a car in a pose reminiscent of McHale's. In 2018, a novel by journalist and writer Nadia Busato was published in Italy, tracing the story of Evelyn McHale and her suicide. The novel is entitled (''I will never be anyone's good wife''). ==See also==