Tampa Bay Lightning | The Empire Strikes Back | Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II | Summer Lightning | Lockheed P-38 Lightning | English Electric Lightning | The Lightning Seeds | London Lightning | Black Lightning | The Pink Panther Strikes Again | Lightning Ridge | Lightning Records | Ace Lightning | Three-strikes law | Ride the Lightning | Lightning whelk | Lightning Ridge, New South Wales | Adelaide Lightning | ''Writing FAST: How to Write Anything with Lightning Speed'' | Vincent Black Lightning | The Shock of the Lightning | The Lightning Field | The Green Hornet Strikes Again! | Texas Lightning | Strikes and Spares | Streetcar strikes in the United States | Saturday the 14th Strikes Back | Reg Strikes Back | Pajama Sam 2: Thunder and Lightning Aren't so Frightening | Lonnie 'Lightning' Smith |
Additionally, he helped co-write several songs, including the hits "Chip Away the Stone" (1978), "Lightning Strikes" (1982), "Amazing" (1993), and "Pink" (1997), among others.
The Eastern Victoria Great Divide bushfires, also known as the Great Divide Complex, were a series of bushfires that commenced in the Victorian Alps in Australia on 1 December 2006 due to lightning strikes and continued for 69 days.
"Lightning Strikes the Postman" was covered by Scottish rock band Aereogramme on their album Seclusion.
This song was later covered four times in 1989 on Kiss' Hot in the Shade, Ace Frehley's Trouble Walkin', Robin Beck's Trouble Or Nothin', and Molly Hatchet's Lightning Strikes Twice.
Lightning Strikes Twice is the seventh studio album by American southern rock band Molly Hatchet, released in 1989 (see 1989 in music).
The track "Lightning Strikes" borrows the opening flute solo from The Kinks' song "Phenomenal Cat" from the album The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society.
The group gained notoriety with their debut single, Lightning Strikes, which was about the Hungerford massacre.
On September 7, 2012, at 10AM, after playing "What Might Have Been" by Little Texas and the first minute and a half of "The Thunder Rolls" by Garth Brooks (which began repeating on the line "When the thunder rolls/and the lightning strikes..." before grinding to a halt that led into energizing sound effects featuring thunder and lightning), WZBK changed their format to Rhythmic Top 40, branded as "Energy 106.9".