I'm pretty sure it's part of the genius to be honest, it's a very obviously false and almost corporate statement, similar to those that large powerful figures make to try and relate to thier audiences
I think it’s indicative of the fact that he feels like he has lost all sense of himself catalyzed by the absurdity of the America, he also is wise enough to know that some if not many have experienced the same feeling(I know I have).
definitely. The futile attempt to at least grasp hold of all that's left- and get a good laugh or cry out of it. To at least still be able to feel something at the end of it all.
I think the term for that is “Gallows Humor”. Named after the gallows where people used to be publicly executed. Basically cracking jokes about the shitty situation you’re in because you feel powerless to do anything else. Although Bo’s form of it still acknowledges how serious and devastating the situation is for all involved.
"The quiet comprehending of the ending of it all" that line really resonates with me. It just feels like the whole world is a speeding train racing towards the end of the tracks and instead of looking for the breaks everyone is just looking out the windows.
in the outtakes theres a line he says (pretending to be a spokesperson presenting to companies) that gives a different context to this fear: "And the other fear, the deeper fear, the unspeakable fear, of never hitting the wall. Of this feeling never ending, never slowing down, but rising forever, like a shepherd's tone, an endless and pointless climb towards a terrible and dense nothing"
Coming back to this years later, I wanna point out the genius of the set design. The entire song to me feels like "trying to be human in a society that's not" and pointing out the irony in the way things work today. "Gift shop at the gun range, mass shooting at the mall", "book on getting better hand delivered by a drone". The set PERFECTLY compliments this whole thing. He's sitting in the woods, illuminated by a campfire, singing a campfire song, but the backdrop is projection and the campfire is LED, and in reality he's sitting alone in a shed. The music alone is a work of art, but the thought put behind the set design makes the whole thing come together so beautifully.
The contrast to his other songs rings of authenticity and the place this one has in his heart. It's a subtle invitation to listen up, as he's pushing his chips into the artistic pile.
“Googling derealisation and hating what you find” one of the most underrated lines in this song. The desire to figure out what’s wrong, but once you find something that might fit, is too much to admit.
@@John.0079 So much bitterness! It's almost like you, a grown man, goes on comment sections solely to make angry, sad comments as some weird coping mechanism lol. At least make your comment good, like damn.
If you don't mind me asking, what is it about derealisation? I know the feeling well, it's a common response to stressful or traumatic experiences or situations - where you sort of "zone out", stop caring, don't feel like the situation is real, or like it couldn't possibly be actually happening, but it's pretty mild compared to having full on panic attacks Is it that people who think they're perfectly fine are googling it and realizing that they've been there, and that they're not as okay as they thought they were?
It's like "We Didn't Start the Fire", but instead of being an upbeat acknowledgement that "the world has always been awful and will continue to be awful, but we'll get through it", it's more of a realisation that things aren't getting better and perhaps the best we can hope for is to just shuffle off quietly in the dark so we can finally get some rest at least.
The list of weird nihilistic things that have happened really did remind me of Billy Joel's We Didn't start the fire too. Except that's just the Historical events. (Mostly was or tensions) That have happened
Check out Phil Ochs if you dig this. I’d suggest “when I’m gone”, “here’s to the state of Mississippi”, and “draft dodger rag” (two have an emphasis on the era they came out in, but that’s what makes them similar to this). His rendition of “the Highwayman” is also top-notch, even if you don’t like the other ones.
And it coexists with "Reading Pornhub's terms of service, going for a drive and obeying all the traffic laws in Grand Theft Auto V" in the same song hahaha
‘Total disassociation, fully out your mind. Googling derealisation, hating what you find.’ No lyrics have ever hit me so hard. Thanks Bo, for finding a way to articulate that funny feeling none of us had the right words for.
Rainn Wilson (Dwight from The Office) just tweeted this: I get a strangely sinking feeling in the pit of my stomach - I look around and the world is on fire, and all our culture is talking about is a popstar dating a football star. There's a song for that!
I had to hear there's talks of putting NATO troops in Ukraine from a friend. The risk of ending all mankind in a few hours of nuclear fire was less important than football to my own national news. I honestly feel like I've gone crazy sometimes. It's some fucking Kafka shit, surely I'm not the only one noticing I'm turning into a bug here???
"The quiet comprehending of the ending of it all" is delivered with such lightness and beauty, but it's possibly the most devastating line in the whole song. Incredible.
Not really bro. I’ve been a science guy my whole life. So in the past 50 years, humans have learned a lot more stuff about the universe. However, this doesn’t make the data projections of the future infallible. No I’m not saying “it could all be wrong”. What I’m saying is-in another 50 years, there will be many more keys discovered, which will unlock more discoveries, and then in another 50 years… So we can’t be SO hasty in thinking that are projections of the future are complete and unchanging. In fact, they are the opposite. And anyone who has studied scientific discoveries through history knows that this happens over and over and over. “This is it! We know everything now.” Hahaha, but that’s not what everyone thinks. Isaac Newton said didn’t think he found what gravity really is. However, a million other people thought they knew what gravity really is because of what they learned from Newton. -- Humanity is the best life form we have seen and we haven’t found fossils of a more capable life form in our past here on earth, but in its current condition it isn’t my prime pick for the journey on into the late universe to discover what is possible and what will occur. But things change a lot in 1,000,000 years. Or 10,000,000,000 years.
To me, the most devastating line will always be "Googling derealization and hating what you find". Since I started to derealize far harder since the beginning of the pandemic than I ever had, to the point of noticing.
+1, I think it's moving and comforting because it sounds like he is on the verge of tears. That's obviously moving, bit it's comforting to know that others are in the same boat
I just realized this song is basically the quiet, hopeless version of "We Didn't Start the Fire." Man, that's beautiful and horrible. Billy Joel makes it sound like active chaos, there's this feeling of anger and energy. But this shows the underside. The quiet, creeping apocalypse you watch from your TV, outwardly opposing it but deep down accepting it, knowing there's so little you can do.
This line makes me think of what it's like to be young with global warming knocking at humanity's door. I wanted to be an artist, a storyteller but a lot of good that'll do me when climate change really kicks it into hard drive 😞
"Full agoriphobic, losing focus, cover blown. A book on getting better hand delivered by a drone..." Is one of the hardest lyrics in modern music lol. Bo is incredible
@@dathaniel9403 is it a mechanical drone though? or just someone transformed from all the routine and pressure of the conformist society - a drone employee?
I will forever be HAUNTED by bo being robbed at the Emmys. Only reason Hamilton even qualified that year was because of the disney+ release. Inside was COMPLETE genius. It showed so many people what we had all been saying about bo for years. I pray his mental health stays up and we get more from him. The man's a genius.
All eyes on me was about anxiety, while this was about depression and society’s downfall. I feel both hit hard, but all eyes on me had a more engaging video. The eye contact man.
Personally, I prefer That Funny Feeling, but All Eyes On Me is also good. And I didn't know he had won a grammy lol, it should have been because of Welcome To The Internet!!!
All eyes on me won a Grammy because by the time you hear it, it's a culmination of everything we've heard up to that point. Everything after is the chaser to how powerful that moment was.
August 2023 and still vibing to this song. I remember when i first saw the special when it came out on Netflix and almost cried listening to it because the song described so well the feelings i was going through during the pandemic. Bo is a genius.
I can't really, uh, play the guitar very well, um, or sing So you know, apologies Stunning 8K-resolution meditation app In honor of the revolution, it's half-off at the Gap Deadpool's self-awareness, loving parents, harmless fun The backlash to the backlash to the thing that's just begun There it is again, that funny feeling That funny feeling There it is again, that funny feeling That funny feeling The surgeon general's pop-up shop, Robert Iger's face Discount Etsy agitprop, Bugles' take on race Female Colonel Sanders, easy answers, civil war The whole world at your fingertips, the ocean at your door The live-action Lion King, the Pepsi Halftime Show Twenty-thousand years of this, seven more to go Carpool Karaoke, Steve Aoki, Logan Paul A gift shop at the gun range, a mass shooting at the mall There it is again, that funny feeling That funny feeling There it is again, that funny feeling That funny feeling Reading Pornhub's terms of service, going for a drive And obeying all the traffic laws in Grand Theft Auto V Full agoraphobic, losing focus, cover blown A book on getting better hand-delivered by a drone Total disassociation, fully out your mind Googling "derealization", hating what you find That unapparent summer air in early fall The quiet comprehending of the ending of it all There it is again, that funny feeling That funny feeling There it is again, that funny feeling That funny feeling Hey, what can you say? We were overdue But it'll be over soon, you wait Hey, what can you say? We were overdue But it'll be over soon, just wait Ba-da-da, ba-da-da, ba-da-da-da-dum Hey, what can you say? We were overdue But it'll be over soon, you wait Ba-da-da, ba-da-da, ba-da-da-da-dum Hey, what can you say? We were overdue But it'll be over soon, you wait Ba-da-da, ba-da-da, ba-da Hey, what can you say? We were overdue But it'll be over soon, you wait Ba-da-da, ba-da-da, ba-da-da-da-dum Hey
@@beepboop4103 I mean moving forewards into sufficiency without the need of a resource that will eventually deplete should be the goal anyways all it is doing is speeding it up its not like we have endless supplies of oil on our planet
I like people with long brain. I have long amount of disl*kes btw. Why? Maybe people with short brain disl*ke because jealous of my long amount of subscr*bers. Please have long brain, dear tyler
I feel like Bo Burnham was there for me when no one wasn't. Over the last school year I was just crying and overthinking everything that was happening in my life at that moment and what could happen from there. Anytime I was given the chance during class, I would grab my earbuds and put on some Bo Burnham to make me feel better and not think about anything. If there's any song that Bo has made that made me feel better, it was this songs. Well, either this or "Feel Good" from the Outtakes Album.
Bo Burnham is the only person I’ve ever felt truly understood how to express the constant depression and sadness I’ve felt my entire life. This special was a masterpiece.
"The whole world at your fingertips, the ocean at your door" "Twenty-thousand years of this, seven more to go" "The quiet comprehending of the ending of it all" "Hey, what can you say? We were overdue But it'll be over soon, you wait" Man. Nailed it. Went thru a really rough patch with my own mental health a couple years ago after becoming collapse-aware & trying to come to terms with what's in store for us in my lifetime. Found this song just a couple months ago & I feel like it's the theme of our times.
"That unappearing summer air in early fall." always hits me hard. Especially now, when there are 27°C here at the beginning of October, ten more than the average.
@@lordmarcusrax I think he's saying unapparent summer air in early fall. Which I interpret as the fact that "summer" is slowly getting longer and longer, but a lot of people aren't, or are refusing to, notice it.
The bah da dahs at the end kill me every time. That’s what makes the whole song for me. Like, here he’s saying we’re at the end times, but like… what else can you do? Keep sobbing? You might as well find some light where you can. And maybe that light is a fun little tune to hum to yourself. It’s a very hopeful ending to a hopeless song.
I like that in the special he doesn't even give you time to sit in peace with the song, it's immediately followed up with Bo having a complete breakdown on camera.
This song is great. Especially the lines "a gift shop at the gun range, a mass shooting at the mall" and "the whole world at your fingertips, the ocean at your door" are downright genius. I also love the atmosphere that Bo's created with both the visuals and the tone of the song. I imagine this song being played on a campfire, in a burnt forest, in the middle of an apocalyptic wasteland in a world that's about to end. And also, at the ending of the song, the cheerful singing about the end of the world tops it off perfectly.
the line “a gift shop at a gun range, a mads shooting at a mall” is one of the most emotional lyrics i’ve ever heard, i remember the first time i heard it gasping and just thinking about how messed up that is. the line itself really did give me that funny feeling
I've been working almost every day in the forest that I grew up in that saw 302 square miles burned last year. This song perfectly describes how I feel every minute of every day between our climate disaster and our political disaster.
I know this is primarily a sad song. But I find comfort in it too. Knowing that other people feel this way. That I'm not the only one who steps back every so often and goes, "this whole thing's kind of messed up"
@@higuysimcharley I would probably think so if it was only about the guitar, which he doesn't play too often. But he built a career on signing. So to say he can't sing near the end of the special and only then feels more like poking fun.
“The whole world at your fingertips, the ocean at your door” I don’t know if Bo really meant this, but I interpreted this as having come so far with technology but with the consequence of climate change(ocean at your door=flooding). It’s kind of like “look, a good thing!” But then rebuttals with a consequence. Similar to “20,000 years of this, 7 more to go” as well.
Yep, and hope, whatever left is the last to go, keep somr And yes embrace absurdism, and that no one is alone with that, really Listento exgirlfriends," no one is singing my song"
Personally, I believe there's meaning but this is strangely comforting; if the end is coming, laugh instead of cry / find beauty in the madness. Kinda makes me think abt games with moral choices - there's no real consequences so some people say why not be bad (nihilism) and some say why not be good (absurdism)
what’s awesome is that these songs all resonate so deeply with people who have mental health issues. they feel so good because finally, FINALLY someone has expressed exactly what you have felt. what’s sad is that this means bo has felt this to its depths. i’m sorry you’ve been going through this, dude. i’m glad you’ve made something so beautiful from it.
It seems like the "funny feeling" is one that's surprisingly familiar to a lot of people, but still ambiguous enough to seem foreign at the same time. That's probably why it's a song that sticks with a lot of people well after hearing it, it's almost like hearing the thoughts that they can't define articulated? Like it's almost uncomfortably relatable, but mainly to the things you push to the back of your mind. That's been my experience at least. It's a masterpiece if you ask me.
I think it encapsulates the quaking mess of the human condition and how on a macro scale how we are perpetuating it in our society that celebrates and worships convenience, pop culture, and our political views that are literally that of pop culture. I mean, when civil war is the easy answer…how fk’d are we?
My take is that probably it's not just one "type" of funny feeling but it depends on the fact he is talking about. It's cool that it's ambiguous enough that multiple people will relate in different ways to the same song, but kind of make sense for everyone at the same time. Most of the analogies from the song point to one thing, but then say another one that kind of makes you doubt or rethink the first thing he said.
Watching Bo Burnham since high-school and seeing this bright energetic whimsical person mature and age and grow calmer and more introverted gives me a since of melancholy. He hasn't lost his touch but I can feel the world has worn him down a bit. I feel he has aged with me in these times and I'm sad yet excited to see what's next for him.
@drifting static There is something uniquely satisfying about reading the comments of long time fans enjoying the least "liked 👍🏻" song the most. Too dark for the masses, though I can't help but envy the bliss in that crowd.
same i've been watching bo since I was in junior high and seeing the changes in him makes me feel some sort of way (read: "that funny feeling"), because I almost see myself in him, in a way. when we were younger everything just felt more hopeful and exciting, and now as an adult, I realize that there was no reason to be excited about adulthood.
I've always wondered if that "bright energetic whimsical" he started his career with wasn't always a facade, a character. Look at the message he leaves us with in Make Happy, "Are you happy? Cuz it sure is destroying me to give you that" and that evolution was him coming to term with it and finally exposing it to the audience.
bo - if youre out there and you can read this - thank you. my life has been turned upside down and inside out in the last few months since my wife was diagnosed with very late stage cancer. your art has helped me stay focused in one of the most intense and chaotic periods of my life. if only a youtube comment could share the gratitude and empathy I have for you and your art. you have made a colossal impact on me at this point in my life, and i feel strangely un-alone in the disarray that i currently call home. thank you very much for your art - and for taking care of yourself, and for being here with us.
its ironic listening to the words of this song while seeing every comment complimenting it flooded with scripts and bots. kinda cements the whole song for me...
The first time I heard “20,000 years of this, 7 more to go” I had to pause the special to catch my breath because it’s a perfect, succinct, nihilistic encapsulation of where it feels like society is at.
@@waxenknight8864 recorded humanity has existed for about 20k years or so including caveman era and at the rate of civil war and bitterness we as societies throw at one another, it means in 7 years from a Nihilist perspective our world will be over soon.
I think it's actually a reference to the Climate Clock. The climate clock says we only have 7 more years to get to zero emissions before we are guaranteed to end up with more than 1.5C of global warming, which in the near future would make areas of the tropics completely uninhabitable to human life due to temps above the wet bulb temperature. Making a large chunk of the planet uninhabitable will cause major issues for the whole world, not just affected regions. Expect mass migrations and war within the next 25 years as people in mass try to flee uninhabitable regions.
I spent a whole day once staring at my own arm and hand on and off. I couldn’t figure it out, but it just felt off. Like fake. Or not mine. Couldn’t exactly place what or why. That was when I realized my “weird head feelings” about me or the world around me and how it felt to me or how it interacted with it were maybe something more than just feeling off. Where getting into the shower and scared to be alone was the only comforts I had. Thank god for then gf now wife at the time. Even when we split up for a year during a really bad time, she’d still open her door for me late nights to comfort me. Even though I didn’t even deserve to knock on the door. Thank god she gave me a chance. I never got medical or professions help, I just learned to live with it. The world is weird anyway, what’s a little weirder.
Yeah, with all the other lyrics I always feel like Im being made to reckon with the boring dystopia we allowed ourselves to be in at that point in the song.
It’ll never get old to me how he so vividly reflects the way our minds distract us with thoughts of entertainment and everyday living, but every now and then, our minds will pepper in the invasive existential thoughts we all have. He captures the unspoken parts of the human experience so beautifully
The lyrics and theme are beautiful, but I also gotta appreciate how much Bo has improved as a vocalist. He sounds as good as any proficient professional singer here. Beautiful vocal tone, also good dynamic control on the guitar.
This song describes so many things. The feeling of not knowing anything but needing to in order to feel sane. Watching everything around you as you slowly slip into mental anguish. Only being able to describe it as a funny feeling.
As soon as I heard that line I had to pause, rewind, listen again, and reflect. I hope both that he is right and that he is wrong. History will always go on, but in what way?
I love just how calm and peaceful this song is. A strange accepting of the end, almost glad its almost over, but still sad its coming to an end. I think it really captures where we are with everything as humanity at times.
Whole world at your fingertips; the ocean at your door. (While talking about the accessibility of online E-commerce and growing trade in a globalised economy; the second clause also indicate sea level rise... The ocean risen up to your door, as an unintended consequence of this the first clause.) Brilliant, just brilliant. I've heard this song like 200 times and this is the first time i realised the second indication of this line.
I never knew tears could be both happy and sad at the same time, something about the totality of it all, the pure nihilistic catharsis is just beautiful in such a profound way.
My friend put it perfectly when he first watched inside, "Did Bo Burnham just write the modern 'We didn't start the fire'?" It feels so much like more contemplative version that fits so well given how the pandemic has changed things
I mean the government reaction to the lockdown has had 1000x more impact than the pandemic itself and we all gave in. Now we are on a never ending road to giving up our individuality. I expect many to disagree with me and that's fine. But the people who see this 5-10 years from now may think differently.
@@CousinBowling If we had done a solid, strict lockdown in the first couple months and then had strict national border controls, we wouldn't have COVID in the US. It's people like you who have made this nightmare drag on because Republican brainwashing makes you feel good.
@@googiegress7459 and that right there is a great example of what Bo was singing about. We’ve kind of doomed ourselves because we have been programmed not to work together
@@CousinBowling I agree. I‘m very scared of the future now that the right to protest even got taken away somewhere. I think it was Australia but so much is happening at the same time I don’t even remember.
Also succumbing to mania at the end. And we assume the cozy setting is supposed to be a campfire in the woods, a retreat, a vacation. But it could just as easily be a post-decline US lacking utility services, acoustic guitar by a burn barrel.
I can say my favourite thing about this song is during the bridge, at 4:09, where he hits an accidental harmonic or something it sounds like. It's a small, accidental thing, but it adds a lot I think, more depth to the chord change there in that one moment.
Sounds like he didn't push down a string far enough and accidentally got a 3rd fret harmonic. Actually, sounds like that happens a few times throughout the song if you pay attention, like little musical easter eggs.
Every lyric in this somg is crafted to evoke a sense of unreality, and “loving parents” is one of the first things he mentions. Supremely underrated line.
The term “loving parents” gives him a funny feeling because parents should automatically be loving. It infers that there are parents that aren’t loving.
@Larserus i read it as a whole "deadpool's sense awareness, loving parents, harmless fun" like even tho they have loving parents, they still have deadpool's sense of awareness and sarcasm towards the world
@@clarrie93 I read that "loving parents, harmless fun" as "loving parents" seeing their kids doing bad things as just "kids will be kids, it's just harmless fun". Could be totally wrong, though. Just makes me very uncomfy
@@larserus8286 it feels like a dig at the current trend of RU-vid parents that cash in on their children by portraying how loving and modern their family is with 'harmless' skits, pranks, vlogs, and whatnot- while putting immense pressure on the kid to make consumable content when they can't even fully comprehend the magnitude of what they're putting on permanent record for the world. at the end of the day, you're left with this funny feeling of watching a scripted 90s quirky family show... except you slowly realize, instead of a 'cut' from the director, this child is still going to be stuck with these 'loving parents' for decades more to come.
@Premiumboxingtips Predictions You're missing the point of the line. It's supposed to show how guns are so central to America that they now can have the purpose of stores yet are turning actual stores into a shooting range, swapping the roles. It's supposed to highlight the tragedy of how common gun violence is now. There have been over 100 mass shootings this year, yet it's only 85 days into the year. There were 11 school shootings and at least 9 shootings at shopping centres. If that's not terrifying, what is?
@Premiumboxingtips Predictions Oh, what a surprise, a bit of actual research dismantles your narrative that you formed by twisting the stats to fit it. Exhibit A of why people from the UK don't deserve to be taken seriously when they want to comment on American culture. Or in general, really. lol
@@damkylan3 You do understand that your last line is very racist? Yeah that person is wrong, but why continue their negativity further? Just let it be.
For the last few days I've been unwell. No appetite, can't sleep, knots in my stomach...came to this channel to watch Can't Handle This because that's one of the things that helps me and clicked on this for the first time. Literally had it on a loop for 2 days basically. My view of the world isn't as bleak as this song, but I find it strangely comforting. So thank you Bo. :)
I think Bo Burnham impacts so much because he represents a portion of the humanity that exist and shouts to be heard. The humanity that is financially stable and safe but mentally and emotionally destroyed. Is a mixture of the calm and the chaos. Sometimes I feel sad, and I see everything good I have around me, but I feel empty, despite the abundance (I am not rich btw, just middle class) but anyways, things simply don't fill a person, and apparently, people and kindness also don't fill a person. A constant disconfort with life. I think Bo Burnham represents that. I feel thankful for discovering him and his music.
I’m glad we had this special during the lockdown. I felt like I was losing my mind, and when I watched Bo’s “Inside” for the first time, it made me think “well, at least I’m not the only one feeling like this.”
March of '24, and this song remains relevant as ever, and the perfect song for a tear-letting session. It's like an emotional hand-job; get those silly emotions out of me, so I can human around, doing human stuff for the rest of the day. Great song.
Bo has always pushed music & comedy to the fullest. He never misses & I hope we're able to get much, much more from him in the years to come. As real as it gets.
Gift shop at the gun range, a mass shooting at the mall This line is legitimately my favourite from the entire special and its truly inspired. Thank you Boseph Burnham.
the lines that hit the hardest for me: “20,000 years of this, 7 more to go” “that unapparent summer air in early fall, the quiet comprehending of the ending of it all” “a gift shop at the gun range, a mass shooting at the mall” “total disassociation, fully out your mind, googling derealization, hating what you find” “hey, what can you say, we were overdue, but it’ll be over soon, you wait”
@@lodougherty 20,000 years ago is about when the latest ice age peaked in coldness. 7 more years very likely a reference to Al Gore predicting 5-7 years of polar ice left (i.e the ending of the current ice age we are in) in 2009 or something (also a possible interpretation of a line in all eyes on me about having thought the world already ended being a reference to these types of predictions). It's just another part of the song that's adding to the funny feeling that I think is the one mentioned in the "That feeling" part of the inside outtakes, that things are ramping up to this big long coming conclusion or collapse or something but that nothing seems to be happening ('we were overdue, but it’ll be over soon, you wait') and that nothing happening might be even worse.
This song is such a perfect depiction of depression. The whole special is, but especially this song. It perfectly encapsulates mindlessly scrolling through your phone with all of these random headlines popping up, none of them fully registering. Yet real thoughts also seem to creep in.
That funny feeling is his anxiety of the things in the song and yes this special talks a lot about mental help but he even said he got help and got better so I think he is depicting how we all felt during the lockdown mixed with all the other political and media bs
@@ceciltuttle743 Bo is completely sane and describing the world with perfect clarity. Modern life is totally irrational and any sane man should have difficulty accepting it. "We're all mad here."
NOTHING could explain this sensation, I thought I was making it up. Just “anxiety disorder” or “depression disorder” didn’t cut it because it was a specific part of it all. And I still can’t explain it, but hearing this makes sense and feels like “hey, this is real, you’re not … I don’t even know what
After a year or two of letting this special cement itself in my brain, I genuinely can't decide whether this song or "All Eyes On Me" is the better one. They're both practically the same thing presented in different tones. This one is more big picture, more descriptive. The other is more overtly personal and emotional. Either way, they are both peak human creation.
That "funny feeling" seems to be a feeling that everyone has: a feeling that the world, that humanity, is headed in the wrong direction, and that no matter what you do you can't seem to change anything. So you sit here, in the quiet, comprehending the ending of it all. But hey, what can you say, we were overdue? But it'll be over soon, one way or another....
Bold of you to assume that. Obviously all those who benefit greatly from the status quo think we're doing awesome. Sadly trying to change is akin to trying to alter the course of an oil tanker with a plastic oar. Not even COVID, the most traumatic event in 100 years did anything other than making all the already rich and powerful even more rich and powerful.
This is "we didn't start the fire" if instead of feeling like fighting back, you just... accepted it and gave up. Just accept that it's happening and we can't do much about it.
whenever i come to this song to sing along, i always start crying. i think everyone feels it at "20,000 years of this, 7 more to go". and also at "A gift shop at the gun range, a mass shooting at the mall" but once he mentions "civil war", all of the nice, the bad, the confusing, painfully bleak, and heartbreaking start blending together. and by the time the line about "the silent comprehending of the ending of it all" comes, i'm absolutely destroyed. i love how much this song makes me feel. Bo is a true artist.
i never imagined the perfect soundtrack for the apocalypse would be this depressingly upbeat this song tears me to pieces as i giggle on the verge of crying
Well, he knows nothing about the apocalypse. It's coming, but in God's timing and for his purpose. Br ready,..cause those in Christ will be saved and those who choose not to accept Jesus, they will be weeping for the fate that awaits them. Make fun of this at your peril.
lyrics: I can't really, uh, play the guitar very well, um, or sing So you know, apologies Stunning 8K-resolution meditation app In honor of the revolution, it's half-off at the Gap Deadpool's self-awareness, loving parents, harmless fun The backlash to the backlash to the thing that's just begun There it is again, that funny feeling That funny feeling There it is again, that funny feeling That funny feeling The surgeon general's pop-up shop, Robert Iger's face Discount Etsy agitprop, Bugles' take on race Female Colonel Sanders, easy answers, civil war The whole world at your fingertips, the ocean at your door The live-action Lion King, the Pepsi Halftime Show Twenty-thousand years of this, seven more to go Carpool Karaoke, Steve Aoki, Logan Paul A gift shop at the gun range, a mass shooting at the mall There it is again, that funny feeling That funny feeling There it is again, that funny feeling That funny feeling Reading Pornhub's terms of service, going for a drive And obeying all the traffic laws in Grand Theft Auto V Full agoraphobic, losing focus, cover blown A book on getting better hand-delivered by a drone Total disassociation, fully out your mind Googling "derealization", hating what you find That unapparent summer air in early fall The quiet comprehending of the ending of it all There it is again, that funny feeling That funny feeling There it is again, that funny feeling That funny feeling Hey, what can you say? We were overdue But it'll be over soon, you wait Hey, what can you say? We were overdue But it'll be over soon, just wait Ba-da-da, ba-da-da, ba-da-da-da-dum Hey, what can you say? We were overdue But it'll be over soon, you wait Ba-da-da, ba-da-da, ba-da-da-da-dum Hey, what can you say? We were overdue But it'll be over soon, you wait Ba-da-da, ba-da-da, ba-da Hey, what can you say? We were overdue But it'll be over soon, you wait Ba-da-da, ba-da-da, ba-da-da-da-dum
3:33 Is such an underrated line it literally sums up the whole song in one line and does it so perfectly that most people don't notice and when they do it soothes them
That funny feeling. Not quite anger, not anxiety, not frustration, overwhelmed by all the crap in the world that seems obvious/backwards/insane/ironic, and just having to accept it. Knowing we are only ever pushing forward and it isnt going to change so accepting that it is what it is.
I was diagnosed with breast cancer in October 2021 and listened to this song on repeat (along with Phoebe Bridger's version) throughout the process leading up to my double mastectomy. It's hard to find the words to articulate exactly why or how this song resonated so poignantly with me during that time. I guess maybe there was some morbid comfort in the reminder that we're all fucked.
The line "the quite comprehension of the ending of it all" hits hard. For the past 2 years we've been in isolation to ourselves and feeling like the world is over, and with the current world crisis it feels like that 2021 March panic is back.
That’s tough. Why does it have to be over? Why can’t we just start over? Have you ever been in the middle of something so epic but all you can think about it is how bad it’s gonna feel when it’s over? Why am I like this? There it is again.
If you’ve come into the new year listening to this, you aren’t alone. I feel it too. We were overdue, but it’ll be over soon. Enjoy the time left while it’s still enjoyable to do so.