Yeah, a whopping four songs out of something close to 150 songs. That's why I said "
Very little to none", mate.
Not only that, but...
lookatthenumbersinIandlaugh wrote:Everything you know is wrong
They Might Be Giants who are... somewhat notorious for having vague, obtuse lyrics that mean something. It's not clear about
what they mean, but they obviously mean
something. Everything You Know Is Wrong parodies this by having odd, obtuse lyrics that clearly
don't mean anything beyond "Well, that's odd."
lookatthenumbersinIandlaugh wrote:Stuck in a closet with Vanna White
Again, it's something that's parodying things that usually mean something - In this case, dreams. Look around and you'll see there's heaps of websites that give meaning to objects in a dream that you had in an attempt to explain it and give it meaning beyond "Your subconscious is one smurfed up place. Remember, the main plot of the song is that Al is explaining to his psychiatrist/therapist about the dream he had; He's looking for meaning in it, when there clearly is none.
lookatthenumbersinIandlaugh wrote:albuquerque
It's someone's life story. But it's an unrealistic and bizarre recollection of someone's life story, which gets side-tracked and on tangents. It's only "random" because the person telling isn't entirely with it and is pretty much saying anything that comes to mind.
lookatthenumbersinIandlaugh wrote:dare to be stupid
Devo's main mythology revolves around how humanity is getting stupider and dumber and is basically devolving. Dare To Be Stupid is the inverse of this -- It's celebrating the fact that people are doing dumb things and it's telling you to go and "Dare to be stupid".
In effect, it's completely different to Family Guy, who mostly relies on "jokes" that either make no sense in the context of the current point of conversation ("Wow! This is like the time that I saw the Nostalgia Critic dancing the can-can with Hitler!" [cut to the Nostalgia Critic dancing the cac-can with Hitler] "Look everyone! He's dancing the can-can with Hitler!"), overly long gags that seem to have no other point than to stretch out the length of the episode. (See: Stewie beating up Brian for not paying back money, Peter's fights with the chicken, et al), mere references to popular culture in a sad attempt to make people say "Hey, I remember that!" (See: Peter's rendition of Rock Lobster, Brian dressing as a banana and dancing to Peanut Butter Jelly Time) or a really stupid combination of all three. (
Ladies and Gentlemen, Mr. Conway Twitty)
Sever your leg, please. It's the greatest day.