I hated statistics at Uni. Systems Engineering was largely a good mix of mathematics, physics, electronics, computer programming and network protocols. Statistics however was the red headed stepchild compared to those other 'much cooler' areas of study.
By the way, no offense is intended to any red heads, stepchildren, or combinations of two. The best Co-Pilot could do for me when I asked it to generate a humorous way to contrast a group of things people like, and one that they don't was to suggest a Dessert buffet that included Brussel Sprout Ice-cream. Never fear comedians, I think your jobs are safe from the AI revolution.
Having a pure mathematics professor take the subject probably didn't help our interest levels either. There are only so many times you can think about the percentage of failed batteries on a battery production line. Thinking back, if he'd only replaced batteries with IP packets and we'd discussed interarrival probabilities, collisions, packet loss and buffer overflows he would have had half a chance to grab our attention. Alas.
Now, I realise that that was a very long introduction for what is now going to be basically a boring statement on why my random-o-meter is statistically more likely to randomly pick a song between the mid 1990's and the mid 2000's based on the sample set from which it has to choose. Anyway, enjoy this one.