Flyentology (feat. Trent Reznor) Lyrics

Lyric discussion by PooleRexword 

Cover art for Flyentology (feat. Trent Reznor) lyrics by El-P

It is, however, interesting to note that in the video the lead character resists indoctrination, and is plummeted to what the "Saviors" believe will be his doom. Might I propose that the fall is a metaphor for life disaster, and that the wings are simply the tools for escaping it. The Flyzealots grab people out of their lives and claim to be able to help them by giving them wings... but they get much more, they're turned into flyzealots themselves, with wings but also entire "fly minds" and are presumably charged with getting other people to accept their way. When the lead character tries to escape, they see that he won't accept their dogma and let him fall (or let him 'burn in hell') so he falls again, finding at the very last moment he actually had the tools he needed all along (notice he has wings but he's still himself... not a copy/paste "flyhead" like the rest) My conclusion is that the song is intended to be a criticism of religious faith from an outside skeptical point of view, sighting parodistic examples such as "emergency humility, just break glass" and "Our bible is in your seat back pocket"

Great analysis. I think that more than that, this song is about living life with some kind of meaning. If the plane/air represents living a life of faith and ignorance, the narrative changes. It starts with Reznor on the ground, who makes a call up to El-P. Reznor is grounded - he knows what his life is about. Contact with the outside world isn't allowed in the "Flying Faith Zone" because it results in a crisis of meaning. The drop to the earth is the process of sorting out what to do in the absence of existential safety....

A little investigating reveals the original purpose of the song, but I've got no official word on the meaning of the video.

From an interview in April 2007:

“If I was to get caught up in the gut impression, in the immediate interpretations people have of the lyrics, I would get frustrated. But I really only have myself to blame for that. I mean, there are songs like ‘Flyentology’, which I really just wrote about being afraid of flying. That song, very specifically, was about my relationship to God and how I’m an atheist, but when I get on a plane...