PARENTAL ADVISORY: EXPLICIT LYRICS FOUND HERE
Dear Friends,
I’ve known some of you for many years, others for just a short time. Regardless, I know that you love your children as dearly as I love mine. I’ve realized, during the past eleven+ years of parenting, that each of us brings our own experiences, values, and desires to the parenting table. One way doesn’t work for all of us, and it shouldn’t.
That said, many of you also know the trouble I have with lyrics to some of the songs that are topping the charts right now. During a recent conversation with a friend, I realized that some of you probably think I’m nuts. Oh, her. She’s the crazy one. Lyrics Nazi.
But I am not crazy, I promise. I’m not even that easily offended. I am simply informed and disturbed by the constant repetition of these lyrics straight from their iPods into our childrens’ heads. Over and over again.
So if you are easily offended—or ignorant of these lyrics and wish to remain so—please stop reading now. You can click here to read a happier post.
For those of hardier stock, forge on.
Song 1: Low by Flo Rida (Guest rapper T-Pain)
This song is all over the radio and very catchy. I found myself singing along to the chorus one day, after driving for 7 hours and hearing it 700 times. When I returned home, I asked my 11-year old if he was familiar with it. Yes, of course, because he’s the only one who doesn’t have it on his iPod. My fault, again. I am not winning big points here. Thank goodness parenting isn’t about winning points or I’d be in serious trouble.
Partial Lyrics (for full lyrics, click here)
Hey
Shawty what I gotta do to get you home
My jeans full of gwap
…
…One stack (come on)
Two stacks (come on)
Three stacks (come on, now that’s three grand)
What you think I’m playin baby girl
I’m the man, I’ll bend the rubber bands
That’s what I told her, her legs on my shoulder
I knew it was ova, that Henny and Cola
Got me like a Soldier
She ready for Rover, I couldn’t control her
So lucky oo me, I was just like a clover
Shorty was hot like a toaster
Sorry but I had to fold her,
Like a pornography poster
…
Yea she was worth the money
Lil mama took my cash,
and I ain’t want it back,
The way she bit that rag,
got her them paper stacks,
Tattoo Above her crack,
I had to handle that…
I’ll leave the translation to you. If you don’t have any idea what it’s about, you can e-mail me. Here’s a hint: He’s paying her for sex. If you care to peek at the video, here it is. I find less offensive than the lyrics, which isn’t saying much.
/p>
Song 2: Lollipop by Lil Wayne
Currently #1 on the charts. This is a catchy tune that kids love.
Partial Lyrics ( for full lyrics, click here)
I say he so sweet make her wanna lick the wrapper
So I let her lick da rapper.
She say I’m l-l-l-l-l-l-like a lollipop (yeah)
She say I’m l-l-l-l-l-l-like a lollipop (yeah) …
…Shawty wanna hump
You know I like to touch
Ya lovely lady lumps
(She lick me like a lollipop)
…Shawty wanna hump
You know I like to touch
Ya lovely lady lumps
Ok lil mama had a swagga like mine
She even wear her hair down her back like mine
I make her feel right when its wrong like lyin
Man she ain’t never had a luv like mine
But man I ain’t never seen a ass like hers
Dat pussy in my mouth had me lost for words
So I told her back it up like burp burp
And I made dat ass jump like jurp jurp
And dats when she
Say I’m l-l-l-l-l-l-like a lollipop (yeah)
If you didn’t catch it the first time around, this one’s about a guy getting a blow job.
See the video here:
Yes, there are “clean” versions of these types of songs. But the “clean” versions simply delete the expletives. Does it really matter if a song says “ass,” when he’s talking about her “pussy in [his] mouth”?
Contrary to what our kids would like us to believe, the lyrics matter, my friends. It’s not just about the beat. What our kids listen to day after day, on bus rides, soccer trips, and hanging out with their buddies, matters. Because each of our families function differently, I’m not telling you to ban this music. But I am asking you to pay attention. Know what your kids like to listen to & talk to them about what they’re hearing. Think about, please, whether you want this drivel filling your kids’ heads, regardless of what everyone else is listening to.
And let’s not even get into the grammar…
Oh my. Makes me glad that I perpetually have to listen to High School Musical in the car. And I never thought I’d say that.
It is time for parents to step up to the plate and say no. We are the parents, we get the “say so.”
Right on! totally agree with this.
I happen to catch a small bit of the Teen Choice Awards a while back…their live act?? Nelly Fertado’s Promiscuous Girl… Here we are with 13 year old (and younger) girls in the audience while nelly sings about “I can see you with nothing on feeling on me before you bring that on” and the parents are dancing next to their kids…what kind of message is that?
don’t get me started…