On one level, then, it shares the Thelma and Louise genre: two women journeying together through a hostile world with threatening male figures.
The area was also used in the final 'Grand Canyon' scene of the 1991 film Thelma & Louise.
Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma | Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll | Louise | Louise Slaughter | Tina Louise | Louise Simonson | Louise Nevelson | Louise Brooks | Louise Bourgeois | Princess Louise | Louise Redknapp | Mary-Louise Parker | Lake Louise | Mary Louise Wilson | Louise of Savoy | Louise Homer | Thelma Eisen | Marie Louise | Louise Marie Adélaïde de Bourbon | Louise Lawler | Louise Fletcher | Louise Erdrich | Clara Louise Kellogg | Thelma Todd | Thelma Schoonmaker | Thelma & Louise | Princess Marie Louise of Schleswig-Holstein | Louise Rennison | Louise (opera) | Louise of Sweden |
Some critics have commented on the story's similarity to Ridley Scott's 1991 Thelma & Louise.
It showcases nationally, regionally, and locally known blues artists such as W. C. Clark, Grana' Louise, Byther Smith, Eddie Shaw and the Wolf Gang, A.C. Reed, Jan James, and Lady Sunshine and the X Band, Calvin Cooke and Sacred Steel Ensemble, Mojo Phoenix, Those Delta Rhythm Kings, the Automatic Blues Band, Root Doctor, Doug Deming and the All Stars, J.R. Clark, and more.
The video, directed by Little X and shot in the Mojave Desert, is a remake of the 1991 road movie Thelma & Louise, and features May and Cantrell stealing money from a gas station, sleeping in a motel, running away from police, and driving a helicopter at the end of the video to escape from the local police.