October 02, 2005

I AIN'T NO HOLLABACK GIRL

Things are looking very good for The Side Salads in the Wasted Sundays fantasy football league. Going into Week No. 4 of 17, we're not only undefeated and in first place but we have the most points in the league:

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The Noodly Appendages, though, are nipping at our heels.

Final scores last week:



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The Fighting Salads had quite the banner week of production from it's talented team, including a career day from Ledanian Tomlinson.


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Gaudy numbers, I know.

This week's opponent?



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I say, "This shit is is bananas. B-A-N-A-N-A-S."

Speaking of which, there's quite the hilarious dissection of the inanity of Ms. Gwen Stefani's improbable hit song. O.C. Weekly absolutely skewers the tune. And rightly so. Consider this passage:

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Gwen Stefani’s “Hollaback Girl” is one of the most baffling pieces of music of the modern age. It’s got something to do with cheerleaders—that much is clear, judging from the chanting and the marching band that’s honking and tooting in the background. Beyond that, good luck deciphering the song’s ambiguities. We were so vexed by the mystery that is “Hollaback Girl” that we have devoted countless hours to its study. Our conclusions are below. The first thing you should know, though, is that Gwen is not singing “I ain’t no Harlem fat girl”—at least, we don’t think she is.

Uh huh, this my shit
Gwen is introducing us to her shit.

All the girls stomp your feet like this
This talk of shit and stomping has nothing to do with actually stepping on feces. But what does it mean? From a reading of the later text, we can conclude that the song takes place in the world of high school athletics, and that Gwen is apparently leading the girls in a calisthenics exercise. The “shit,” we surmise, is what she calls the exercises she’s teaching the other girls.

A few times I’ve been around that track
So it’s not just gonna happen like that

Here, Gwen exhorts the girls to try harder as they jog around the track, reminding them that physical fitness is “not just gonna happen,” but must be worked at.

Cause I ain’t no hollaback girl
I ain’t no hollaback girl

These lines are the most confusing, but their meaning will become clearer later.

Oooh, this my shit, this my shit
Gwen repeats this four more times. She wants to make sure that we are well acquainted with her shit.

I heard that you were talking shit
And you didn’t think that I would hear it

Gwen has been the victim of some slanderous high school gossip, and she doesn’t appreciate it. Gwen is 35 years old sliding into MILF status at this point, but we’ll grant her some poetic license.

People hear you talking like that, getting everybody fired up
So I’m ready to attack, gonna lead the pack

Gwen is going to round up a “posse” of her girlfriends and retaliate against the person who’s been talking “smack” about her.

Gonna get a touchdown, gonna take you out
Gwen is going to beat up the person who wronged her, after she completes the cheerleading routine that will inspire the football team to score a touchdown. Gwen has interesting priorities.

That’s right, put your pom-poms down, getting everybody fired up
It seems the entire cheerleading squad is going to beat up the person who spoke ill of Gwen; they have put down their pom-poms, and they are now “fired up” to exact swift and terrible vengeance on Gwen’s behalf.

A few times I’ve been around that track
So it’s not just gonna happen like that
Cause I ain’t no hollaback girl
I ain’t no hollaback girl

Gwen is apparently the captain of the cheerleader squad; she is the girl who “hollas” the chants, not one of the girls who simply “hollas” them back. Given that the squad is preparing to beat somebody up on Gwen’s behalf, she’s picked a strange time to remind them that she is their leader and they are her sheep-like followers. Gwen obviously rules her squad with an iron fist.

Oooh, this my shit, this my shit [repeated four times]
Again with the shit.

So that’s right dude, meet me at the bleachers
No principals, no student-teachers
Both of us want to be the winner, but there can only be one
So I’m gonna fight, gonna give it my all

We learn that it was a “dude” who gossiped about Gwen. She challenges him to a fight at the bleachers. If he imagines it will be a fair, one-on-one fight, he is sadly mistaken. Gwen and her aforementioned “pack” will pounce on him like rabid wolves.

Gonna make you fall, gonna sock it to you
That’s right, I’m the last one standing, another one bites the dust

Gwen’s pack of furious cheerleaders leaves the boy a quivering, bloody heap behind the bleachers for the groundskeeper to discover the next day.


Posted by Jeff at October 2, 2005 08:47 AM
Comments

OK, I've never read this publication, so I'm not sure of the M.O. of this author, but if he's serious, this hits the top of the unintentional comedy scale. He did a pretty good job of breaking it down, but it illustrates the divide between white and black music, which Stefani attempted to breach.

To put it simply, a "hollaback girl" is a whore; after a "playa" gets the girl and beds her, his parting line is usually "I'll holla at you, girl," or "I'll give you a call." Therefore, a "hollaback" girl is the girl who "holla"s back time after time, meaning she's only in it for the sex.

So, the song is about some guy spreading a rumor that Gwen is a "hollaback girl," much to her dismay, and her taking care of that guy by beating the crap out of him. You can add the high school context by the marching band; maybe some guy called her a whore after she slept with him when she was in high school. I don't know.

I'm not saying it's a good song (it is catchy). I'm just saying I get it.

And I don't know what's funnier -- that article on the song, or the fact that I spent this much time writing about it.

Good stuff, Jeff. Keep it comin'. And a belated happy burfday to all that is Salad.

Posted by: Niko at October 6, 2005 09:23 PM
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