Pretty Pink Ribbon Lyrics
radiocakedoves, actually, I agree with you on your first impressions of this song. Either way, Cake rocks
"pretty pink ribbon" ... "sticky little kitten" ... "tight little denim" It's definitely about a female getting away with stuff & getting advantages simply because of being female. I think the ticket reference is more about not receiving traffic tickets than being given free tickets.
" Your muscles would bulge underground"
Could this refer to Male anatomy?
I don't think the cancer reference is literal; John doesn't write like that. I think the cancer is some unnamed personal flaw.
And what about "lift this steaming herd ... kill all the sick ones ... bury them deep in the earth" ? Is this referring to male responsibility; men having to do the unpleasant physical tasks? And the idea that because of her frailness & femininity she's excused from these hardships.
I think that this song is about a woman that is as rotten to the core as the speaker but has outward beauty that lets her get away with it. Hope i didn't steal anyones ideas here, anyway, the cancer angle is interesting as well ;)
I think that her 'pretty pink ribbon' is just the fact that she's female. It's always seemed like this song is just about how women have it easier, and how if they weren't women, they'd be completely different--'end up just like me.' He mentions things that are typically female, like tight denim, free tickets, etc. and basically says that if she wasn't a woman, these wouldn't be important and she'd change altogether. Kind of like radiocakedoves' and morningstar's ideas put together, but her redeeming quality is only that she's female.
"room that you live in" = vagina.
@rasputin33 I think the room that you live in might be referring to her physical body in general - it kind of fits the theme of the song, that they are alike when you look at their minds/souls/personalities. But he's a man, and she's a woman. By referring to her body as a "room" that "she" (her soul) lives in, he is further drawing a parallel that they are alike, and stripping her inner identity from her physical appearance. They are two similar souls in opposite bodies, and one can get away with more because of it....
@rasputin33 I think the room that you live in might be referring to her physical body in general - it kind of fits the theme of the song, that they are alike when you look at their minds/souls/personalities. But he's a man, and she's a woman. By referring to her body as a "room" that "she" (her soul) lives in, he is further drawing a parallel that they are alike, and stripping her inner identity from her physical appearance. They are two similar souls in opposite bodies, and one can get away with more because of it.
I'm curious how many of the above posters have been male, esp those discussing women have it so much better?
I, for one, have always felt like it's about how women are very much constrained by the feminine roles they are supposed to fulfill, and it describes what those roles are and the societal results of fulfilling those roles. I mean, "Without the pretty pink ribbon, you'd say just what you pleased."
I feel like basically the pretty pink ribbon symbolizes the intense constraints/ribbon of femininity/pretty pink.
I think it a situation with this song that Elvis Costello faced earlier in his career in which people thought he was misogynistic because of his songs talking of the vapid roles women were in, but the reality was that he was complaining about them having to be in such roles and was really more of a feminist than a misogynist.
Consider Pac Man, for a moment. What makes Ms. Pac Man female? She has a ribbon on her head. That's it. Without that, she'd "end up just like" Pac Man, right?
But she already IS just like Pac Man. She does the exact same things he does. She is functionally equivalent to him. Nearly every difference that we attribute to her is imagined on the basis of the superficial symbol on her head.
That's what I have always felt was the theme of this song. It's a snarky statement about how our culture places an unjustified amount of weight on superficial, irrelevant differences between the sexes, and how this prevents us from truly relating to each other.
I assume this is some kind of twisted love song; obviously, the girl's got a great ass, and it's about her only positive point (tight little denim). Perhaps she's a kept woman, or whatever the appropriate term for that is these days. Freud would love this song.
I think this song is about a girl with cancer. Pink ribbons are a sign for cancer and the song also talks about the room that she lives in (perhaps a hospital room) and it even mentions 'your cancer would eat through the bone' it may not actually be that she has cancer but a mataphor. He may have cancer or some bad quality in him and she doesnt. He is saying that she would be just like him and have this bad quality if it werent for the pink ribbon. -just a thought, not actually sure about this one though
The "Cancer" angle is one I have not considered, it's great. However, when I heard this song for the first time, I thought that this was an observation on the vanity of society. How we excuse the "pretty" people of such crimes as banality and utter stupidity. We worship them because they are easy on the eye. We actually care what they have to say. Nothing bad ever seems to happen to these people. They lead perfect lives. Or is that just on the surface? Do they struggle with the daily trials and tribulations of being role-models to thousands of the misguided, diluted masses. Sorry for the melodrama, i was just kidding.