Hmm, I actually don't agree that we're off topic at all! We're discussing possibilities for the song Word Crimes. If a moderator disagrees, I assume they'll ask us to knock it off.Bruce the Duck wrote:I think we've derailed this thread long enough, so let's get back on topic.
Anyway, it really seems to me like you're ignoring a core part of what Al does. A lot of the time, the topic of the parody is itself a commentary - not a skewering, mocking, or teardown, per se - on the original song.
Examples:
Canadian Idiot - The original is a criticism of the Bush Administration; the last verse of the parody is a critique/satire of the Bush Doctrine.
Whatever You Like - The original is a celebration of consumerism and excess; the parody takes the same idea in the opposite direction.
Most of the rap songs (White & Nerdy, Pentiums, Amish Paradise) turn the image of the hardened gangsta rapper and make it about an inherently nerdy/un-gangsta topic.
There are a lot of Weird Al parodies that follow this formula. It's the most subversive part of his comedy, so I appreciate this type of satire a lot more than songs like Perform This Way and Achy Breaky Song, where he is being quite explicit about his commentary on the original. That doesn't mean the commentary isn't there in other cases.
To parody Blurred Lines, there almost has to be a hint of this type of humor, even if it's quite minor. For example, the narrator could be complaining that his woman of interest has bad grammatical skills (really bad example: "you're a smart girl...") I really hope the song at least somewhat goes in that direction of mocking the concept of Blurred Lines/Robin Thicke.