But didn't Ireland keep winning it at one point? That was the inspiration for the Father Ted episode I think, the winner has to host it and it was bankrupting the country and so they picked Father Ted to represent them with My Lovely Horse and guarantee a defeat. Or something.didn't someone here say you can only really do,it,properly if you never had pop culture in your country, and Britain is the only country in Europe that did. I count Ireland as part of Britain in this sense.
i saw it yesterday and thought it was quite good. i even liked some of the songs and i think some of them would score some points on the eurovision song contest.aye that's what alerted me as well, though I'm not sure why parody is needed when the object itself exists
see, there it is - in America the sinister is frequently, usually garish, but it's never frivolous. we're too earnest for that.The frivolity of it is quite sinister when matched up against the geopolitics.
Yeah the dirty bastard...
tbh even in a different time I find it pretty hard to believe she didn't have some inkling, especially as he was famous for double and triple-entendreWell there are many examples of course but the France Gall seemed a very unpleasant trick to play on an 18 year old girl.
Gall, aged 18, did not understand the double meaning of the song when she recorded it.[2] By Gall's account she did not realize until later why the filming of the clip attracted so many visitors to the set.[1]
She was extremely upset upon finally learning the truth about the song's double meaning — "mortified, hiding herself away for weeks, refusing to face anyone".[3] Gall said that she had sung Gainsbourg's songs "with an innocence of which I'm proud. I was pained to then learn that he had turned the situation to his advantage, mocking me."[4] In a 2001 television interview, Gall said that she felt "betrayed by the adults around me."
it's one of those bewilderingly continental European things that will remain forever beyond the grasp of true American understanding
see also: FIFA, the IOC, wars of religion, Dada and surrealism, ancient shrines, Nutella, Europass, and, let's be honest, continental philosophy