What a Feelin was released by
Geffen Records on November 2, 1983, without "The Dream", which was to be on the
D.C. Cab soundtrack album by
MCA Records. Since the film was originally scheduled to be released in April 1984, the soundtrack was going to hit store shelves in February.
D.C. Cab told the story of a taxi service in the nation's capital, and one of the cabbies was played by
Mr. T., whose new television show
The A-Team was a top ten hit in the
Nielsen ratings. The film's distributor,
Universal Pictures, wanted to take advantage of his popularity by moving the film's release up from the April 1984 slot to December 16, 1983. but the loss of those four months that had been available for publicizing the film disrupted the plans that the studio had to market it using members of the cast. to start a 37-week run there and peaked at number 77 in the February 25, 1984, issue.
AllMusic critic William Ruhlmann noted that the album struggled to stay in the top 100 of the 200 albums listed there and speculated that it was because people already had a copy of "Flashdance... What a Feeling" and "Cara never established a base beyond her individual hits."
Singles "
Why Me?", the first official single from the album, debuted on the
Billboard Hot 100 in the issue of the magazine dated October 22, 1983, to begin a fifteen-week run which began in the December 3 issue. The December 10 issues of that magazine and
Billboard Cara did appear in the other two videos created for songs on
What a Feelin, "Why Me?" and "The Dream". Both were directed and edited by Doug Dowdle and produced by Jeffrey Abelson. The character Cara portrays in the video for "Why Me?" juggles two plot lines: her frustration as a performer going to auditions at
Broadway theaters and finally having success while at the same time ending one relationship and finding another. Because the story takes place in
Manhattan, Cara is filmed at various landmarks and theaters as she lip-syncs the song.
Billboard listed the clip in the New Videos Added section of its
MTV Adds & Rotation column, which noted that it was added to the cable channel's playlist of music videos as of December 7 in the magazine's December 17 issue, eight weeks after its debut on the Hot 100. The video for "The Dream" used scenes from
D.C. Cab alongside footage of Cara playing herself in her home and around the streets of London. The cabbies have sent her a note that reads, "We miss you, Irene! Your friends at D.C. Cab", and Cara lip-syncs and dances to the music as the comedic visual elements from the film are interwoven throughout. According to the MTV Adds & Rotation list, the video began airing on the cable channel on December 14, one week after "Why Me?" did. == Critical reception ==