Ed Sheeran's latest album features an ode to his home of Suffolk called "Castle on Horror Archivesa Hill." In it, the singer reminisces about friendship, coming of age, and drives down open country roads.
SEE ALSO: Ed Sheeran celebrated the 7-year anniversary of his career with a sweet throwbackOne of his lyrics goes, "I'm on my way, driving at 90 down those country lanes."
In response to the new hit, Sgt. Chris Harris of the Norfolk Police tweeted a clever message to Sheeran and anyone listening to "Castle on a Hill."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
In response to the tweet about speeding, Sheeran decided to erect signs in Suffolk encouraging drivers to slow down. They are part of the marketing campaign for his latest album, Divide.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
In an interview with the BBC, Sheeran said, "I wanted to do some sort of billboards in Suffolk. We thought it would be quite funny instead of having billboards saying the album is out, just having a blue sign that says 'drive safe'."
We agree, Ed. The signs are both funny and informative. Belting out your favorite song as you drive down the motorway is completely fine, as long are you're doing it well within the speed limit.
Topics Music X/Twitter
Meet the woman who's making consumer boycotts great againFacebook has suspended 'tens of thousands' of apps for policy violationsGreta Thunberg slams politicians for burdening youth at climate strikePeople are handing out badges at Tube stations to tackle lonelinessEvery day, this dog picks up where the newspaper delivery person left offBudweiser accidentally made a moving political statement with its Super Bowl adEven Tom Brady thinks Simone Biles is a superstarChrissy Teigen has no time for trolls who question her fertility planLEGO releases 'Beauty and the Beast' blocks just in time for the liveMercedes is the latest carmaker that wants in on eFacebook pushes further into your home with Portal TVThe Impossible Burger is finally available at grocery storesAn umbrella blocked people out of a WeWork office for 2 daysDeveloper pulls critical code from tech company after ICE contract revealed4 climate change apps every techEverything coming to Netflix in October 2019Jennifer Lopez reboots iconic dress that inspired Google Image SearchDeveloper pulls critical code from tech company after ICE contract revealedFAA closes Area 51 airspace ahead of Alienstock for 'special security reasons'YouTube walks back changes to verification policy after outcry UK's chaotic general election was a historic moment for women Apple Watch Series 5 vs Fitbit Versa 2: Which smartwatch is worth it? I have drawn the Trump administration as Sonic the Hedgehog and I am ready to answer for it Caroline Criado Perez and Tracy King on the gender data gap that's putting lives at risk Facebook improperly gave users' data to third Black Lives Matter, George Floyd dominated social media. Now what? This man's celebrity encounter on the Tube is just glorious Finally, Uber exec who wanted to stalk female journalists is fired Elon Musk tells the SEC to...well, you can work it out Elon Musk's coronavirus self 'The Mandalorian' is getting multiple books, starting in the fall 'You will always be Batman': Celebrities post tributes to Adam West The best apps of 2020 (so far) 8 actually good things about dating in 2020, so far Are you ready for California’s big new privacy law? Enforcement starts today. Amanda Bynes is back, and wants to explain that infamous Drake tweet These photos of Emma Watson's doppelgänger will blow your mind Carl Reiner, beloved comedy legend, is dead at 98 How to enjoy the magic of 'Hamilton' without Disney+ Yes, the White house social media guy broke the law
1.9162s , 8195.765625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Horror Archives】,Exquisite Information Network