It's exactly the opposite for me. I hated how catchy "Blurred Lines" was because the lyrics were so sleazy, so Al parodying it was the best of both worlds. I get the catchy music and now the subject matter is something I can appreciate. If you feel compelled to buy all of Al's source material, I guess I see where you're coming from but from my perspective, "Word Crimes" eliminates the need to listen to "Blurred Lines."Muldernscully wrote:It kind of bugs me when Al parodies morally questionable songs. Because then I feel guilty for liking Al's song so much. Word crimes is awesome because I'm a Grammar Nazi like Al. The problem for me when Al parodies these immoral songs is when my kids ask me what the original of this song is, and I'm like, "yeah, you really shouldn't listen to it".
Word Crimes
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Re: Word Crimes
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Re: Word Crimes
Good point, anthontherun.
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Re: Word Crimes
To me, it just shows Al's genius. I hate Blurred Lines... what non genius can see the line "I know you want it" and say, "Oh, '...to learn some grammar' would fit PERFECTLY there!"
In the past I've loved that too. Al rarely parodies a song the I like (though sometimes I like the original afterwords) But with SOL, both Confessions and TITDT were just horrible sleezy songs I hated, and they seemed stupid and pointless. But to me Al was saying, "See how dumb these are? I'm gonna make them dumber!"
In the past I've loved that too. Al rarely parodies a song the I like (though sometimes I like the original afterwords) But with SOL, both Confessions and TITDT were just horrible sleezy songs I hated, and they seemed stupid and pointless. But to me Al was saying, "See how dumb these are? I'm gonna make them dumber!"
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Re: Word Crimes
I came here to express this exact sentiment. I heard "Blurred Lines" on iTunes Radio last night, and all I could think was, "if I didn't hate the lyrics so much, I would totally buy this song." Thanks to "Word Crimes," I can enjoy the music and the lyrics without feeling dirty.anthontherun wrote: I hated how catchy "Blurred Lines" was because the lyrics were so sleazy, so Al parodying it was the best of both worlds. I get the catchy music and now the subject matter is something I can appreciate. If you feel compelled to buy all of Al's source material, I guess I see where you're coming from but from my perspective, "Word Crimes" eliminates the need to listen to "Blurred Lines."
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Re: Weirdal.com And Social Network Site Chit Chat
Does this belong here?:
The brilliant man who made Al's Word Crimes music video was discovered by Al when the Weird One watched "the shop vac video" and called him. Like everybody else I thought this vid was some sort of tutorial on how to use a name-brand shop vac that the guy did for a vacuum company (didn't YOU?). But Shop Vac is a COOOOL vid, and it is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4sOfO8Ei1g" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
The brilliant man who made Al's Word Crimes music video was discovered by Al when the Weird One watched "the shop vac video" and called him. Like everybody else I thought this vid was some sort of tutorial on how to use a name-brand shop vac that the guy did for a vacuum company (didn't YOU?). But Shop Vac is a COOOOL vid, and it is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4sOfO8Ei1g" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: Weirdal.com And Social Network Site Chit Chat
No, it should probably be put in the Word Crimes thread
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Re: Weirdal.com And Social Network Site Chit Chat
And I believe it was discussed
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Re: Word Crimes
So there's a line in the song where I'm not sure exactly how Al intended it to come out. The "Like I could care less," one. Does Al mean it, "(for example) 'I could care less'", or "Like I could care less" as a whole phrase? Same joke either way, but still curious as to how others interpret it.
Last edited by Big Spoon on Thu Jul 23, 2015 2:17 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Word Crimes
I always thought he meant for example, but I'm not sure.
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Re: Word Crimes
I think it would have to be "such as, 'I could care less'"--otherwise, it feels kind of jarring to shift the perspective like that. He does that later on with "What's a contraction?" but that's a reference to the original song.