These Boots Are Made For Walkin'

Album: The Dukes of Hazzard soundtrack (2005)
Charted: 4 14
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Songfacts®:

  • This is a reworking of Nancy Sinatra's 1966 original "These Boots Are Made For Walkin'," a #1 hit and cultural touchstone. When Nancy (Frank's daughter) laced up her boots, she brought a level of sass and sophistication to the pop charts that hadn't been seen before, delivering lines like "You keep lyin' when you oughta be truthin'" with unabashed confidence.

    Jessica Simpson stepped into the boots for her role in the 2005 movie The Dukes of Hazzard, based on the popular TV series that ran from 1979-1985. In the movie, Simpson plays Daisy Duke, a waitress at the local watering hole, the Boar's Nest. In the TV series Daisy was played by Catherine Bach, who wore cut-off shorts so memorable, they became known as "Daisy Dukes." Her character was always one up on any guy with bad intentions.

    Simpson was the perfect choice for a modern Daisy and looked really good in those Daisy Dukes. She sings "These Boots Are Made for Walkin'" in character, with the lyrics changed to make it a little more modern and add some country flavor. The song plays in a scene near the end of the film.
  • Willie Nelson, who played Uncle Jesse in the film, played guitar on this track and sang backup. He also appears in the video (look for him smashing a bottle over some guy's head when the fight breaks out). In the movie, Nelson also sang the Dukes of Hazzard theme song ("Good Ol' Boys"), originally recorded by Waylon Jennings. Nelson and Jennings were good friends and made a lot of music together, including the country classic "Mammas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Cowboys."
  • The song was released as a single and did pretty well, going to #14 in the US. It was included on the soundtrack to The Dukes of Hazzard, which includes a lot of Southern rock favorites, tracks like "Flirtin' With Disaster" by Molly Hatchet and "Black Betty" by Ram Jam.
  • Jessica Simpson got in incredible shape to play Daisy Duke for the film. It was her first acting role, and while it's not the kind of movie that will show up on Oscar ballots, it's hard to imagine anyone else pulling it off like she did. Simpson parlayed it into more roles in comedic films, including Employee Of The Month (2006) and Blonde Ambition (2007).
  • The music video doesn't include scenes from the movie, but does use the same sets, and everyone is in character, including Simpson as Daisy Duke and Willie Nelson as Uncle Jesse. Simpsons sings it while doing her duties at the Boar's Nest; a fight breaks out when an unruly patron smacks her on the butt and she takes umbrage.

    The video proved very popular and was great promotion for the film, which overachieved at the box office an got a lot of airings on TV.
  • The video starts with Simpson emerging from the General Lee - the iconic Dodge Charger that Bo and Luke Duke drive in the TV series and movie. Fans of the show noticed right away that Simpson opening the door and getting out is a faux pas - the car's doors should be welded shut, so you have to jump through the windows to get in. Most guys who watched the video quickly dismissed this continuity error when Simpson started pageant walking toward the camera.
  • The song was produced by Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, the team that worked with Janet Jackson on most of her hit songs.
  • According to Simpson, this song wasn't planned for the film, but as they neared the end of shooting, she and Willie Nelson started talking about it and decided it might work. He encouraged her to write new lyrics from Daisy's perspective, so she did.

    "That song will always be a part of me," she told People in 2025. "Nancy Sinatra really helped me step into those boots of a woman, for sure."
  • Even though the song is substantially different, with lyrics and music updated by Jessica Simpson and producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, it's still credited entirely to the writer of the original song, Lee Hazlewood.
  • Jessica Simpson was still married to Nick Lachey when this song was released in 2005, but they divorced the following year. Together, they starred in the MTV reality series Newlyweds: Nick & Jessica from 2003 to 2005.
  • Simpson sings this in a 2005 Pizza Hut commercial as "These bites were made for poppin'." In the spot, she accelerates a young man's journey through puberty by walking her boots over to him and feeding him the bites.

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