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Post by Deleted on Jun 22, 2019 11:09:55 GMT 10
I was just listening to this song from 2011 and the lyrics are ominous Robert's got a quick hand He'll look around the room, he won't tell you his plan He's got a rolled cigarette, hanging out his mouth he's a cowboy kid Yeah found a six shooter gun In his dad's closet hidden oh in a box of fun things, I don't even know what But he's coming for you, yeah he's coming for you
All the other kids with the pumped up kicks You'd better run, better run, out run my gun All the other kids with the pumped up kicks You'd better run, better run, faster than my bullet All the other kids with the pumped up kicks You'd better run, better run, out run my gun All the other kids with the pumped up kicks You'd better run, better run, faster than my bulletIt kind of made me the innocence of those times. The song is about being bullied at school and getting your revenge, but had it been released today after the events of Sandy Hook and Parkland, I'm pretty sure they would have been dismissed as psychotic.
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Post by smartboi on Jun 22, 2019 11:38:50 GMT 10
Thats pretty much why this song is a meme now.
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Post by al on Jun 22, 2019 12:17:29 GMT 10
In 2011 the song was still kinda bizarre, but it fit the whole indie pop sound of the era so we kinda ignored the creep factor. If the song came out today, well, it would not. It would need to instead be from the perspective of the student, well, outrunning a gun. And even so, it would still get deemed insensitive.
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Post by SharksFan99 on Jun 28, 2019 21:51:25 GMT 10
Social media was pretty ubiquitous back in 2011, however the far-left SJW movement had yet to really take off. I feel as though "Pumped Up Kicks" would be absolutely scrutinized if it were to be released today. I mean, if people can find fault with a traditional Christmas carol from 70 years ago, imagine how people would have responded to a new Top-40 hit that features the lyrics, "better run, faster than my bullet". It's sad really, but unfortunately, that's just the world we're living in now.
I remember the lyrics did spark a few discussions at the time though. It was nothing particularly bad and the discussions didn't receive extensive coverage in the media, however it did get some people talking.
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Post by daywatch on Sept 21, 2020 18:33:22 GMT 10
Hmm, don't think so, the group wrote that song back when they read about a "growing trend in teen mental illness" for whatever reason, and since people are aware of how depressed and antisocial everyone is, I don't see it coming out nowadays.
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Post by SharksFan99 on Sept 21, 2020 18:55:06 GMT 10
Hmm, don't think so, the group wrote that song back when they read about a "growing trend in teen mental illness" for whatever reason, and since people are aware of how depressed and antisocial everyone is, I don't see it coming out nowadays. But if more and more people are aware of mental illness in comparison to how many were aware of it back in 2011, wouldn't the song be more culturally relevant than it ever had been previously? I personally couldn't imagine it being released in 2020 either, but only for the fact that the song is rooted in the early '10s indie-pop subculture and it would sound out of place on the current Top-40 charts. Welcome to the forum btw.
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Post by slashpop on Sept 27, 2020 14:33:25 GMT 10
This could definitely come out in 2013-2014
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Post by #Infinity on Sept 29, 2020 3:59:31 GMT 10
It came out one year before the Aurora shooting, which was basically the beginning of the ceaseless trend of mass shootings in the present day.
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Post by sman12 on Sept 30, 2020 1:19:43 GMT 10
Most likely not. It'll easily get chastised by the mainstream media for "glorifying" mass shooters in this day and age.
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