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American Dream Lyrics

I used to see you on every T.V.
Your smiling face looked back at me.
I used to see you on every T.V.
Your smiling face looked back at me.
Then they caught you with the girl next door,
People's money piled on the floor,
Accusations that you try to deny,
Revelations and rumors begin to fly.
Now you think about reaching out
Try to get some help from above.
Now you think about reaching out
Try to get some help from above.
Reporters crowd around your house.
Going through your garbage like a pack of hounds,
Speculating what they may find out,
It don't matter now, you're all washed up.
You wake up in the middle of the night.
Your sheets are wet and your face is white,
You tried to make a good thing last,
How could something so good, go bad,…
Song Info
Submitted by
songmeanings On Feb 06, 2012
2 Meanings

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Cover art for American Dream lyrics by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young

Success is a sandcastle washed up by a wave. How many Americans succeed and make millions, only to have it crumble in their hands because they are weak and give into temptation. As Carlin said, the American Dream is a dream because you'd have to be asleep to believe it. Dreams of success are shattered by the frailties of human error.

Song Meaning
Cover art for American Dream lyrics by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young

This song is about Gary Hart, disgraced US Democratic Presidential nominee.

His tumultuous campaign ended in March of 1988. This album was released in November. “Used to see you on every TV” references Hart’s ubiquitous media coverage at the time. The ambiguous lyrics refer to reporters “Going through your garbage like a pack of hounds.” This signifies the extra-marital affair Hart was having with Donna Rice, and the media frenzy that ensued, resulting in reporters following the candidate around incessantly.

“People’s money piled on the floor” most likely refers to the $1.3 million dollar debt Hart had racked up during his 1984 presidential bid.

The lyric “Don’t know when things went wrong / Might’ve been when you were young and strong” may be up for interpretation. ‘You’ may be Hart, or America itself. Perhaps Neil Young was asking if America went wrong long ago when it was young and strong, and indeed whether the American dream had died long ago.

 
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