After writing negative lyrics about George W. Bush Deryck Whibley, Sum 41 frontman, was threatened with deportation from the U.S. after a journalist took offence to the song. The Canadian rockers's song March of the Dogs contains the words: "Ladies and gentlemen of the underclass/ The president of the United States of America is dead... And now the president's dead/ Because they blew off his head/ No more neck to be red/I guess to heaven he fled."And one writer went to extreme lengths to have the band removed from the country over the controversial words - by calling on politicians to exercise their power against Sum 41.Whibley explains, "He (the reporter) went to the House minority leader in the States (a Republican), who tried to have me deported, trying to say I'm threatening the president." Sum 41's debut album Al lKiller No Filler was released in 2001 and went on to sell one million copies and produced hit singles Fat Lip, Motivation and In Too Deep.The band's new album Underclass Hero is there fifth studio album.Whibley married fellow Canadian singer Avril Lavigne in 2006 after dating for two years.
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