Nhạc sĩ: Jim Gaffigan
Lời đăng bởi: 86_15635588878_1671185229650
I'm a man.
I am a man.
I'm a man.
I guess I don't know how that would be.
Anyway, so this is all about how it really kind of feels.
Part of me, it feels very foreign, the whole manly machismo chauvinism thing.
This is really like behind the music.
It is behind the music.
But some of it, it starts with this joke about, you know,
it's a play on the idea that I don't understand other people's, you know, materialism.
But, you know, like, and I thought about this as like, you know, I don't care about cars.
I don't care about houses and stuff like that.
But then I thought, you know, I do want my own plane.
So I am kind of, it's a joke, you know, my kind of like judgment of other people's consumerism.
And then the, you know, when we get into the fake kind of male chauvinism
of wakefulness.
My wife up to make me pasta.
I thought that was really an effective way to kind of play into this.
Because I am married to you, a strong woman, that I think that there's something funny about
that, you know, obviously they're not kind of like unrelated, but like the male chauvinism
is really kind of, it's something like if you're married to a strong woman,
you can't get away with that stuff.
And so, and then basically you're scared of me.
I'm scared of you.
And I'm a great guy.
That's what, that's the whole message.
And then it was, some of it is, you know, touching on our favorite activity, which is
consuming television and how.
You know, I'm in charge of the remote control, but you pick all the shows that we watch on
that remote control.
Or I'm constantly critical of the way that you're handling the remote control.
Which is like a metaphor for our marriage.
That has nothing to do with you being a wife.
It has to do with the other person that you're watching television with.
Anyway, once again, I'm a great guy.