Mac Davis....'.Baby Don't Get Hooked On Me'..1972.. W/Lyrics - YouTube
At his commercial peak in the mid-'70s, 
Mac Davis  was one of America's most popular entertainers, a countrypolitan-styled  singer and actor who found considerable success in both fields. Born  Scott Davis on January 21, 1942, in Buddy Holly's hometown of Lubbock,  TX, he began performing in local rock groups while still in his teens.  After moving to Georgia, Davis first broke into the music business in  1962, when he was hired by the Chicago-based record label Vee-Jay as  their Atlanta-based regional manager. After joining the Liberty label  three years later, in 1967 he moved to Los Angeles to head the company's  publishing arm, Metric Music; in addition to running Metric's  day-to-day operations, he also began composing his own songs, with 
Glen Campbell, 
Bobby Goldsboro, Lou Rawls, and 
Kenny Rogers & the First Edition among the artists recording his work.                
In 1968, 
Elvis Presley  recorded Davis' "A Little Less Conversation," and soon after the King  was requesting more of his work. After notching a Top 40 hit with Davis'  "Memories," Presley reached the Top Five in 1969 with the songwriter's  "In the Ghetto," a single from the landmark 
From Elvis in Memphis  LP. Davis also arranged the music for Presley's first television  special before signing his own recording contract in 1970. In that year,  he released his first chart single, "Whoever Finds This, I Love You,"  from his debut album, 
Song Painter.                                                                                       In 1972, Davis scored a number one pop hit with  "Baby, Don't Get Hooked on Me," which also reached the country Top 20.  His crossover success continued throughout the decade, with singles like  1974's "Stop and Smell the Roses," 1975's "Burnin' Thing," and the  following year's "Forever Lovers" scoring with listeners in both camps.  Between 1974 and 1976, Davis hosted a musical variety show for NBC  television, followed by a string of specials; in 1979, he also starred  in the film North Dallas Forty with Nick Nolte.                
                                                                       Davis' success continued in the early '80s; "It's  Hard to Be Humble," the title track of his 1980 album, was the first of  four consecutive Top Ten country hits that culminated with his biggest  country single, "Hooked on Music," the next year. In 1980, he also  starred in a TV movie, Cheaper to Keep Her. However, a co-starring role  opposite 
Jackie Gleason and 
Karl Malden  in 1983's disastrous The Sting II effectively ended Davis' career in  Hollywood, and by 1985, he had recorded his last Top Ten hit, "I Never  Made Love (Till I Made Love With You)." In 1990, Davis made a comeback  as a songwriter, co-authoring Dolly Parton's hit "White Limozeen"; that  same year, he also took over the title role in the Broadway hit The Will  Rogers Follies. 
Will Write Songs for Food, his first LP in nearly a decade, appeared in 1994. 
Mac Davis | Biography | AllMusic