"The Stars and Stripes Forever" is featured in many U.S. musical performances and instances of pop culture: • There are several orchestral transcriptions of "The Stars and Stripes Forever", including one by
conductor Leopold Stokowski and one by
Keith Brion and Loras Schissel. There was also an orchestral arrangement of the march by
Carl Davis and David Cullen for the album
Carl Conducts...Classical Festival Favourites. Orchestral versions are typically transposed one-half step lower than the original band version, to put the march in a key that is more familiar to string players. • The tune is widely used by soccer fans, with the trio/grandioso section sung with the words "
Here We Go". The supporters of Spanish association football team
Valencia CF used to sing it with the words
Xe que bó! which means something like "Oh! How good" in
Valencian, and those words have become a symbol for the team. Another version uses the word
cheerio repeatedly, normally sung to players or coaches when they have been
sent off or occasionally when an
underdog has ended its opponent's
cup campaign. Finally, certain clubs such as
Forest Green or
Sunderland use the chant just using the club name; this only works if the name has three syllables. A nickname can instead be used for the chant, such as
Gateshead fans chanting "Tynesiders". • In the 1933 film
Duck Soup,
Harpo Marx, playing Pinky, a spy infiltrating a house in the middle of the night, attempts to open what he believes to be a safe, but turns out to be a large radio, which loudly begins playing "The Stars and Stripes Forever" when he turns the knob. Pinky spends the next several moments futilely (and loudly) trying to quell the noise before throwing the radio out a nearby window. • The march was used in the 1939 cartoon
Officer Duck, after Donald Duck successfully subdues Tiny Tom, played by Pete. It is played by a marching band of police officers who further advance Tom's arrest. On the highest note of the brass, Donald kicks Tom on his rear end. •
Classic Popeye the Sailor cartoons by Fleischer Studios make frequent use of the tune in the music score accompanying the climactic fight between Popeye and the villain starting with the moment Popeye gets a spinach power boost. • Parts of the tune feature in two
Laurel and Hardy short films,
The Chimp and
Come Clean. • In show business, particularly
theater and the
circus, this piece is called "the Disaster March". It is a traditional code signaling a life-threatening emergency. This helps theater personnel to handle events and organize the audience's exit without panic. Circus bands never play it under any other circumstances. One memorable example of its use was at the
Hartford Circus Fire in July 1944, in which at least 160 people were killed. • A 1952 biographical film,
Stars and Stripes Forever, gives an account of the composer's life and music. • Russian-American pianist
Vladimir Horowitz wrote a famous transcription of "The Stars and Stripes Forever" for solo
piano to celebrate his becoming an American citizen. In an interview, Horowitz opined that the march, being a military march, is meant to be played at a walking tempo. He complained that many conductors played the piece too fast, resulting in music that is "hackneyed". •
Timmy Mallett was fond of chanting "Wacaday, Wacaday, Wacaday" to the tune in children's TV show
Wacaday, often getting child guests to do the same. • In "
Evolution", the first episode of the
third season of the television series
Star Trek: The Next Generation, a malfunction in the ship's systems causes the main computer to play Sousa's march on all channels throughout the ship. The episode was first aired on September 25, 1989. • The song is usually played for the
President of the United States after he gives a speech at a public forum, event, or ceremony, whereas "
Hail to the Chief" is played when the President is introduced. •
John Twomey performed "The Stars and Stripes Forever"
by noisily squeezing air through his hands on an episode of
NBC's
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson • The tune of the song appears in the
1970 animated TV special adaptation of
Horton Hears a Who! by
Dr. Seuss, used as the melody for the song
Be Kind To Your Small Person Friends. • In 1981,
fingerstyle guitarist
Guy Van Duser made an arrangement of the march for guitar. It was later performed by guitarists such as
Chet Atkins,
Rick Foster and Doug Smith. • The march was used during the Opening Ceremonies of the
1984,
1996 and
2002 Olympics, all hosted by the
United States of America: while in 1984 was immediately played after the
USA Olympic Team was introduced at the
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, both in 1996 and 2002 the tune was played after
John Williams Olympic Fanfare (that "introduced" Team USA at the former
Centennial Olympic Stadium and six years later at
Rice-Eccles Olympic Stadium). • The march was adapted for the theme song to
The Berenstain Bears 1985 cartoon. • In MacPlay Monopoly, this song is used when the only player wins the game. •
Acoustix, the 1990 International Quartet Championship of
SPEBSQSA (now
Barbershop Harmony Society, or BHS), covers the song on their 1995 CD
Stars & Stripes. This arraignment features new lyrics, but largely keeps Sousa's "Trio" lyrics. • An 8-bit version of the song is used in the
MS-DOS and
Commodore 64 versions of
Wheel of Fortune when solving a puzzle correctly. • The student band
Strindens Promenade Orchester in
Trondheim,
Norway, has the world record in "speed playing" of "The Stars and Stripes Forever" (absolutely all notes must be played). The band calls their speedy rendering of the march "Stars and Stri
bes", and performs the march at all solemn occasions at the
Trondheim Student Society. Set during the fall term of 1999, the record time is 50.9 seconds (nominal time is 3 minutes 50 seconds). For this, the band is noted in the Norwegian edition of the
Guinness Book of Records. • The march in a specific rendition is in the soundtrack of the video game
Postal 2, where it's performed by the
marching band. • American composer
Robert W. Smith parodied
Stars and Stripes Forever along with "Jingle Bells" with his composition "Jingle Bells Forever", published by Alfred Publishing Co. • In 2008, the
Muppets performed a web version starring
Sam the Eagle,
Beaker, a clucking
chicken,
Bobo the Bear,
The Swedish Chef, and
Crazy Harry. • The video game
Fallout 3 has the
Stars and Stripes Forever as one of the songs on the Enclave Radio. • In 2009,
Fetch! with Ruff Ruffman used this tune as a jingle in advertising character Ruff Ruffman's "RuffMeal" in the episode "The RuffMeal Needs More Roughage". • At the conclusion of WWE's
Extreme Rules pay-per-view in 2011,
Stars and Stripes Forever played following
John Cena announcing the
death of Osama Bin Laden. It was also played during the January 5, 2015 episode of
WWE Raw from
Corpus Christi, Texas, also involving Cena, during the main event segment called
John Cena Appreciation Night, where
The Authority (
Triple H and
Stephanie McMahon) thanked Cena for (
kayfabe) re-hiring them following the previous year's
Survivor Series event's main event match, only to slander him and then (kayfabe) fire his teammates from that night,
Dolph Ziggler,
Ryback and
Erick Rowan.
The Big Show, who was also Cena's teammate during the aforementioned match, was not fired since he turned his back on Cena during the match and then joined The Authority. Balloons and confetti then fell from the rafters as Cena and his teammates stood in the ring, dejected, as the song played. • In Argentina, a sensationalist news channel,
Crónica TV, always uses the first 22 seconds of this march as a background music on reporting breaking news stories. • The
Grateful Dead finished their 50th reunion concert on July 4, 2015 with fireworks accompanied by a recording of "The Stars and Stripes Forever", in front of 70,000 people in
Soldier Field in Chicago. • In 2022, a
March Madness–themed commercial from
Capital One featured the opening notes of "The Stars and Stripes Forever" being played by a marching band led by
Charles Barkley, who claimed to represent a fictional university named "Chuck U".
Samuel L. Jackson and
Spike Lee are also featured in the commercial. • The WWE Wrestlers Chad Gable and Ludwig Kaiser, playing "El Grande Americano" gimmick (a living legend of lucha libre), have a customized version of the song • The
Boston Pops Orchestra is well known for playing "The Stars and Stripes Forever", especially as an encore.{{Cite web |date=3 July 2021 |orig-date=13 April 2021 |title=Pops & Patriots at Caramoor - Katonah, NY July 4, 2021 ==See also==