Monte's streetlights people
Mark Kohut
markekohut at yahoo.com
Wed Oct 30 12:14:13 CDT 2013
ironically, thy name is Bleeding Edge, he sez....
On Tuesday, October 29, 2013 7:04 PM, Joe Allonby <joeallonby at gmail.com> wrote:
The song is usually enjoyed ironically. It's a hipster trope. The lyrics are gibberish. the music bombastic. The band so uncool as to lack self-awareness of their camp appeal.
It's a staple of jukeboxes in supposedly hip bars.
On Tue, Oct 29, 2013 at 6:45 PM, Mark Kohut <markekohut at yahoo.com> wrote:
Monte wrote and asked:
>I felt the need of an ambulance myself on learning that Journey’s ‘Don’t Stop Believin’(Preview)
>Play
>(Show link)
>Journey - Don't Stop Believin' (Audio)
>journeyVEVO
>Music video by Journey performing Don't Stop Believin'. (C) 1981 Columbia Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment
>(Show link)
‘ – source of the phrase “streetlight people” -- is “the top-selling catalog track in iTunes history with over 5 million digital copies sold, as well as the best-selling rock song in digital history. “ Why would Slagiatt and associates have chosen that then-20-year-old song?
>
>I don't know the answer either, of course, but I will suggest two things. 1st, being so popular, TRP thinks it embodies insight into..us. them. them as us.?
>
>Also that the phrase below greatly appealed to him. We know something about TRP's streetlights trope and BE is sprinkled (filled?) with hints that the characters lack (some) emotions. First, all the televisual perceptions suggests Thanatoidsim, yes?
>And, some other examples of missing emotions coming up...
>
>"Streetlights people, living just to find emotion"
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