"Lonely Swedish (The Bum Bum Song)" is a novelty song by Canadian comedian Tom Green, created in 1999 for The Tom Green Show. When the show moved to MTV, Green released it as a single, encouraging visitors to download the song (an mp3) for free from his website, burn it onto CDs and distribute it to friends. The music video was filmed by Jeff Boggs in Seattle, Washington.[1]
"Lonely Swedish (The Bum Bum Song)" | ||||
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Single by Tom Green | ||||
Released | 1999 | |||
Recorded | 1999 | |||
Genre | Comedy | |||
Length | 2:38 | |||
Songwriter(s) | Tom Green | |||
Producer(s) | Tom Green | |||
Tom Green singles chronology | ||||
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This song's nonsensical, comedic lyrics and video deal with various objects upon which the narrator's buttocks are placed, such as a step, a taxi, a railing, a table, cheese pizzas, bubblegum, a dog, a cat, a telephone, an old man, a boat (inaccurately described as a battleship), and the letters SWEDISH in front of the Swedish Medical Center, from which the name of the song is derived. He claims that the objects become lonely when he is not there to put his bum on them before asking the listeners to "get the poo off my bum".
The full music video which aired on MTV's The Tom Green Show shows Green in a variety of costumes and settings, placing his bum on objects and doing stunts, such as grabbing onto a moving vehicle while skateboarding. He arrives at Lake Washington where he wades in to find a loon which is actually a duck decoy. The video ends with Green screaming “None of this is real!”[2]
The song's lyrics were interpolated in the first verse of "The Real Slim Shady" (2000) by Eminem and again in “Without Me” (2002). The video also featured Eminem in a superhero outfit similar to the one worn in Green's video.[1]
Overview
editThe song came about when Green recorded a comedy sketch on a cruise ship as he wandered the decks bothering people. Following an altercation with a ship employee, he began rubbing his bottom against a rail, singing, "My bum is on the rail, my bum is on the rail." The incident inspired Green to compose the full song.[1]
Green filmed a music video and aired it on his talk show, encouraging viewers to call MTV's Total Request Live (TRL) and request the song. The song became so popular it went to number one on TRL and executives of the program made Green retire it from the show the following week, a decision that Green agreed upon but regretted.[3][1]
Legacy
editThe song's promotional music video was a great success on Total Request Live. It was retired the day it reached number one on the countdown (27 August 1999), and after just five total days on the show. Green stated that the reason for retiring the video was that "it's not fair to 98 Degrees." Later, in his autobiography Hollywood Causes Cancer, he revealed that MTV had pressured him to do so in order to maintain the image that Total Request Live was, in fact, a live show. The next week's episodes had already been taped on-location, and the producers of the show were completely unaware of the song at the time.[4]
See also
edit- Hollywood Causes Cancer – Autobiography of Tom Green
- Total Request Live – American music video television program
References
edit- ^ a b c d Greene, Andy (23 July 2015). "Flashback: Tom Green's 'Bum Bum Song' Tops 'TRL'". Rolling Stone Magazine. Retrieved 24 February 2018.
- ^ Kurp, Josh (30 July 2015). "How Tom Green Royally Pissed Off MTV With 'The Bum Bum Song'". Uproxx. Retrieved 24 February 2018.
- ^ Green, Tom (2004). Hollywood Causes Cancer. Three Rivers Press. p. 152. ISBN 1-4000-5277-7.
- ^ Greene, Andy (2015-07-23). "Flashback: Tom Green's 'Bum Bum Song' Tops 'TRL'". Rolling Stone (in Kinyarwanda). Retrieved 2019-08-26.