Sing-Alongs: I Can Be Your Friend is a VeggieTales Sing-Along DVD released in 2007. It is the fourth and final in a series of 4 DVDs, the others being Sing-Alongs: Dance of the Cucumber, Sing-Alongs: Do the Moo Shoo, and Sing-Alongs: I Love My Lips.
Songs
- I Can Be Your Friend (from Are You My Neighbor?)
- God is Bigger (from Where's God When I'm S-Scared?)
- There's a Hole in the Bottom of the Sea (from The Wonderful World of Auto-Tainment!)
- Oh, No! (from Where's God When I'm S-Scared?)
- Keep Walking (from Josh and the Big Wall!)
- Big Things Too (from Dave and the Giant Pickle)
- The Yodeling Veterinarian of the Alps (from The End of Silliness?)
- Erie Canal (from The Wonderful World of Auto-Tainment!)
- Stand Up! (from Rack, Shack and Benny)
- The Great 'I Am' (from Gideon: Tuba Warrior)
- Promised Land (Bonus song, from Josh and the Big Wall!)
Features
- Studio Store
Previews
- Gideon: Tuba Warrior
- LarryBoy and the Bad Apple
- Sheerluck Holmes and the Golden Ruler
- Lord of the Beans
- Veggie Library
- Bob & Larry Sing the 70s
- Boyz in the Sink
- LarryBoy and the Bad Apple (video game)
Fun Facts
Trivia
- I Can Be Your Friend is repeated from Sing-Alongs: Dance of the Cucumber.
- The Silly Songs card for The Yodeling Veterinarian of the Alps is cut off like in The Ultimate Silly Song Countdown.
- This is the last in the sing alongs video line, as it was cancelled likely due to poor sales.
Remarks
- Instrumental bits from His Cheeseburger, Larry's High Silk Hat, Happy Ki-Yi Birthday, Schoolhouse Polka, and Gated Community are heard throughout the DVD, but those songs are not included in the actual video.
- Kristen Blegen and Shelby Morimoto are credited, but Good Morning George and The Thankfulness Song are not included.
- Keep Walking and Big Things Too came in the same order on The End of Silliness?.
Goofs
- During Keep Walking, "its" (as in "You think that walking round will bring this city to its knees?") is misspelled as "it's". "It's" (with the apostrophe) means "it is" or "it has", while "its" (without the apostrophe) means "relating to something that was previously mentioned".