Some songs you hear on the radio beg you to hate them. With
catchy tunes and shallow lyrics, they squirm their way up the charts. Before
you can say “Carly Rae Jepson,” they have a claimed a spot on your favorite
radio station again. And, the worst part? You can’t get them out of your head.
Call Me Maybe was
one of those songs. But like most radio garbage, my boyfriend picked it up and
claimed it as his favorite. Personally, I believe Daniel has an unexplainable
attraction for the cheap and tacky. {I’m not sure what that says about me.}
But, when most of our friends declared it too silly, too pop or too mainstream
for their ears to handle, Daniel immediately latched onto it.
One breezy July night, Daniel and I went on a relaxing golf
cart ride through the neighborhood. It was a night to remember, driving through
sprinklers, racing down the hills and chasing off geese. Our first weekend
together not traveling to some wedding or other fancy event, it was nice to
just let loose and have fun. Of course, it wouldn’t have been the same if we
hadn’t been accompanied by Carly Rae Jepson and her overplayed single Call Me Maybe.
“I just met you, and this is crazy, but here’s my number, so
call me maybe!”
The number one complaint I hear about this song is the stupidity
of the lyrics. “Come on, Carly. Do you want the guy to call you or not?” But it’s
actually pretty brilliant. This guy has caught her attention. She is
interested, so she takes initiative. But instead of going all out, she throws
in a “maybe” just to let the guy know it’s not going to end her world if he
doesn’t. It’s making a move and playing hard to get all at the same time.
Take those stupidly brilliant lyrics and put them to a clean
yet up-tempo beat and you’ve got yourself a hit. I’m not the only one to think
so. The song went viral when pop royalty Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez and all
their friends donned fake mustaches and filmed themselves dancing around the
house. The Harvard baseball team also got some media attention when they created
and performed choreography for the song in the bus on the way to a game.
Gawker labeled the labeled the 26-year-old Canadian’s single
“flawless” with its “strident disco strings and horribly catchy hook.”
“Resistance is futile, people: As much as I want to hate
this song, I have listened to it seven times today (maybe more like 10 times) and I am not yet sick of it,” the gossip
website stated.
And they’re right. Months later I’m still bouncing my head
to the bubbly beat.
Call me, maybe?
What do you think? Will you still be singing this song for
years to come or did you hit the thumbs down on your Pandora station long ago?
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