Wednesday, September 19, 2012

LA Same-bots: even the radio

It was my opinion when I lived in LA that everything was the same.

Everybody was trying to be (a) skinnier, blonder, browner, manscaped, landscaped, toned, tweezed, and whatever else have you. Even the palm trees, which were peppered along at mostly regular intervals.

Everybody drove BMWs, Lexuses, or Mercedes. (Whether they could afford them or not, and if they didn't drive one, they wanted one.) Seriously, every other car it seemed was one of those three makes.

Everybody drove on the same freeways. Everybody talked about the same stuff. (Celebrity gossip, mostly). *this is an injustice and I know it, but I'm being hyperbolic to emphasize my point.

Last week, when I was back in LA, I rented a car. I was on the road for maybe ten hours of the 80 I spent there. And the more I drove, the more my mind was numbed. But before the numbness came a concern for the musical souls of everybody in the barren wasteland that is LA. It has its beauties, but those are for another post.

I was mournful because I had six presets, with six different stations. One was classical, and one was country. That left four. I listened to some classical, no country, and bounced around between the other four stations for awhile. I even spent a lot of time with the radio off, because I felt like Groundhog Day. I heard the same songs...over....and over... and over...until I just started keeping track.

I thought, okay, you'd think the Top 40 were the only songs allowed, that we were in some dystopian society. The music was so repetitive and became so lame in my mind simply because of the overexposure that I actually wished some teenage girl would come along and rescue me and the rest of the teeming metropolis from the horrid music.

Here's the count for you.

Pink - Blow Me One Last Kiss: 10, including switching away from it on one station only to hear it start up immediately after on two stations. IF I NEVER HEAR THIS SONG AGAIN IT WILL BE FAR TOO SOON.

Rihanna: Where Have You Been: 7 (The lyrics to this one are particularly inane, it seems. "I been everywhere, man, lookin' for you, babe. I been everywhere, man, lookin' for you babe." It just seems like, a mix of "dude" and "honey" that isn't remotely appealing. I mean, the sentiment of the song is nice on a flowery level (not that Rihanna ever gets flowery, but I do), but she would have been better saying, "dudney" or "dooney" or maybe "hondud" instead.

Calvin Harris (not the history teacher): Feel So Close: 2 (I actually like this song, so I'm not complaining, though I can only take about two listens before I'm done.)

Katy Perry: Wide Awake, 4 Seriously, enough enough enough!!!!!

Fun. Some Nights: 3 I could actually take a few more listens of this one.

Flo Rida: Whistle - 5 I love the whistling part, but seriously, the rest of it? This is the sad exception to the rule that any song that has whistling in it automatically gets bumped up 2 points on the out-of-ten cool scale. :( It's a sadness.

Demi Lovato: Give Your Heart A Break - 4   I remember the first time I heard this, I was like, oh, yeah, this is totally bubble gum, and then I got to one of the lines and I was like, WHAT? they put that in a song, unedited, for tiny children to hear? I was so disgusted I turned it off and subsequently switched the channel whenever I heard it, which is probably why the count on some of the other songs is so high. Life lesson: Do not be a Mickey Mouseketeer. You'll grow up really fast, always be under the spotlight, have screaming tweenage fans, and go from being all little girl to must-be-as-sexy-as-soon-as-possible in about three months. And then the chances are you'll wear crazy clothes that are (a) inappropriate and (b) age inappropriate on national television, or go crazy and shave your hair and have a complete breakdown.

Carly Rae Jepsen: Call me, Maybe - 3. This has got to be the stupidest song ever, after Rihanna's Umbrella, Flo Rida's Whistle, and all of the Black Eyed Peas songs ever made. (See Dysphemisms post.) Seriously, I understood the term "bubblegum pop" after I heard this song.

And then finally there are a couple songs I heard that I was actually GLAD to hear, but alas I only heard them once each.

1. OneRepublic: Good Life . This is one that is definitely in the whistle-makes-it-better category.
2. Train - Drive By. This one didn't jump out and grab me the first time I heard it, but now, I kinda like it. Ah, train, there are only a few songs of yours I don't like. Like Drops of Jupiter. Maybe that's the only one I don't like.


Gosh. It's late. (I'm on early bird time since moving to P-town.) There are so many more songs I want to write about. So I will, later. But I'm going to make a list of them now so I don't forget.

Mumford & Sons - I will Wait :)
One Direction - What Makes You Beautiful :(
Taio Cruz - Break Your Heart :)
Gotye - Somebody





1 comment:

byuhotmama said...

Love this! I tell my kids you would like the pop songs from MY days, but they were sometimes just as bad....or leaning toward as bad. Maybe not the lyrics but the idiocy of the music. But then there were the goodies too.....be selective is the goal here, I guess! Great post! (I find that I can NOT ignore lyrics....just can't do it!)