Weird Al Gets Critical with New Parodies

Sometimes a person in power does something surprising; instead of making us cringe, weep, or shake our heads, s/he uses that power for good. Weird Al Yankovic surprises us regularly. 

Sure, his parodies are meant to make us laugh, but often they do much more. Take, for instance, “Word Crimes:”

Weird Al’s interpretation of Robin Thicke’s “Blurred Lines” is informational, educational, humorous, and, well, not sexist. I loved “Word Crimes” so much that I included it on my syllabus for Teaching Writing in Secondary Schools this fall, as I think Yankovic took a problematic song (“Blurred Lines”) and turned it into something good

After all, isn’t that part of what teaching social justice is: taking something prejudiced and transforming it? Or, using something biased against itself to raise awareness for the cause? By reconstructing Thicke’s sexist track into an educational tool, Yankovic removed some of its harmful power, recreating it into something positive. 

Another one of Weird Al’s newest projects, “Foil” parodies Lorde’s “Royals:”

While the beginning of the video is light-hearted and funny, it takes an odd, serious spin toward the middle, which is the part I appreciate most. People — especially young people — are heavily influenced by their musical icons. It is dangerous for them to believe something just because their favorite musician says so.

“Foil” forces us to think about conversations regarding conspiracy theories critically. By making fun of the illuminati, Yankovic removes some of its commercial power, allowing us to see it for what it is: a fictitious money maker

Weird Al Yankovic is set to release eight songs in eight days — five of which have already made their appearance. I appreciate his craft and hope others will join him in not taking things too seriously. 

One thought on “Weird Al Gets Critical with New Parodies

  1. The following comment was left on my social networking account. I received permission to post it here. I wanted to do so because I believe it adds depth to today’s post, and discusses something I overlooked:

    “Interesting take on Word Crimes. I understand the parody and the appeal but I didn’t like it bc it privileges the language of power. Don’t we already have enough things privileging “standard” lx already?”

    Thank you, Jaye Johnson Thiel, for keeping TSJ grounded!

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