Stephen Colbert Takes Aim at ‘Accidental Racist’ With His Own Hilarious Parody

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(Reprinted from Yahoo Music)

While Brad Paisley’s duet with LL Cool J, “Accidental Racist,” has managed to spark some serious conversation about racism in America–the tune inadvertently has done a much better job of inspiring wisecracks.

The latest to hop on the “bag on Brad” train? Political satirist/comedian Stephen Colbert, who grilled the tune on his Colbert Report this week.

Calling Paisley’s song a case of “unifying suckage,” Colbert explained that he was inspired “to write my own awful song in the hopes of bridging another deep cultural rift in America…the gay marriage divide.”

He then donned a cowboy hat and announced his new composition: “Oopsie-Daisy Homophobe.” Halfway through the spoof, he was joined by actor Alan Cumming, who gamely took on the role of misunderstood gay man. Watch for yourself–but be warned, some of the lyrics are a little…colorful.

Watch video here:

http://music.yahoo.com/blogs/heard/stephen-colbert-takes-aim-accidental-racist-own-hilarious-172630880.html#more-1256

‘Bacon Makes it Better’–Dennys Turns Whack YouTube Vids into Awesome Commercials

 

Songs You May Have Missed #395

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Tir Na Nog: “So Freely” (1972)

Music is life. Or a reasonable facsimile thereof. It’s like a tinted piece of glass we look through to see the reality of our lives more colorfully, more richly.

We need a wide variety of music to accompany the diversity of our life experiences, and to complement all of our many moods. This is something I’ve repeated so often that I sound like a corrupted digital music file (another good metaphor sacrificed to modern technology…) And in fact I have trust issues when it comes to people who like only one type of music; they’re usually less in touch with themselves.

When my ears still ring with Saturday night’s thumpa-thumpa I usually want Sunday morning to sound like a soft sigh. Something acoustic, something organic makes for the ideal aural/attitudinal palate cleanser.

For a period of several weeks as a teenager, my Sunday morning routine began with side two of Tir Na Nog’s Strong in the Sun LP (see link below, and in particular the song “In the Morning”). The previous week washed away and I gathered myself for the one upcoming. There was an ebb and flow to my week, and to my year. And music marked every swelling and falling, and the passing of every season–literal or emotional. Because music is life.

I recommend Tir Na Nog to anyone who likes Nick Drake.

See also:  

https://edcyphers.com/2012/11/27/recommended-albums-30/

See also: 

https://edcyphers.com/2017/09/12/songs-you-may-have-missed-617/

Songs You May Have Missed #394

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Viento de los Andes: “Zorritos” (1999)

Viento de los Andes is effectively Jose Arciniegas, who plays indigenous music of Ecuador and the Andes regions (as well as original compositions) on bamboo flutes and harrangos, a small guitar-like instrument.

As his website puts it:

Jose began to play music at the age of ten. He sang played quitar, quena and sampona and serenaded the girls outside their windows with love songs.

In America most girls would rather be serenaded by a Chris Brown song, but it’s their loss.

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2022/03/27/songs-you-may-have-missed-725/

Songs You May Have Missed #393

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Shivaree: “Goodnight Moon” (1999)

 

Ambrosia Parsley has the perfect name and bio for a fictitious singer–but only in one of those fanciful, Benny & Joon-type Hollywood films. The details seem too strange for real life.

According to Allmusic Guide:

Parsley’s first gig was singing with a 99-piece senior citizen banjo band at a local pizza place. At the age of 13, she left home, traveling the country and pursuing her love of music.

And from her Wiki bio:

In April 2004, Ambrosia Parsley embarked on a project for the liberal radio station Air America called Ambrosia Sings the News — a short song (always the same melody), usually under a minute or so long that attempted to encapsulate the contents of the previous week’s headlines. Approximately 47-50 installments of “Ambrosia Sings the News” were aired with some being live performances. The show was successful enough that a single titled “2004 (The Year In Review…For Anyone Who Can Bear the Mere Thought)” that summarized exactly what the title suggests was sold exclusively via iTunes.

The band name “Shivaree” is a Cajun term describing a drunken serenade to newlyweds (think Bert and Ernie in It’s a Wonderful Life). “Goodnight Moon” is probably their best-known song, having appeared on Dawson’s Creek and in the films Silver Linings Playbook and Kill Bill: Volume 2, where it played over the closing credits.

ambrosia parsley

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2025/04/26/songs-you-may-have-missed-777/

Songs You May Have Missed #392

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Sarah Borges: “The Day We Met” (2007)

Sarah Borges delivers Americana with an edge on her second outing, Diamonds in the Dark. The album bounces between country, blues, bubblegum and–on “The Day We Met”–some brash, straight-ahead rockabilly.

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2012/02/26/songs-you-may-have-missed-24/

 

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