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Kids React to Meghan Trainor - All About That Bass (Original Post) boston bean Nov 2014 OP
I don't know if you've read this yet. F4lconF16 Nov 2014 #1
As a 50 yr old female... I Love it !! alittlelark Nov 2014 #2

F4lconF16

(3,747 posts)
1. I don't know if you've read this yet.
Mon Nov 17, 2014, 10:34 PM
Nov 2014
http://jennytrout.com/?p=7857

It offers a rather different take on the song. I agree with it, apart from a couple of small things. I think in particular what she says about race near the end is well said.

A couple paragraphs:

“I’m bringing booty back/Go ahead and tell them skinny bitches that/No I’m just playing I know you think you’re fat/but I’m here to tell ya every inch of you is perfect from the bottom to the top”

This verse perfectly incapsulates what is wrong with this song. What could be a positive message comes out as a backhanded compliment. Sure, every inch of you is perfect from the bottom to the top, but only grudgingly. You get to feel good about yourself, but only if women Meghan Trainor’s size get to feel better by mocking your appearance. And only if you share the same weight insecurities.

And come on. Saying what you really think, followed by “just kidding,” is the most passive aggressive move on the planet. “Just playing” is like “bless your heart”: it’s a chance for the speaker to say whatever they want while forcing the target of the insult to accept what’s being said in good humor.

And then this:

Did you guess the theme? Did you guess “black women as props?” Because that’s the theme. Of the four back-up dancers in the video, one is white. Trainor is shown flanked by two black women several times, including a scene where the women seem to be enthusiastically encouraging her dancing, a la Miley Cyrus’s infamous “We Can’t Stop” video. This isn’t done to encourage body acceptance or equality of any kind; it’s to show the audience that Trainor is cool. White people can’t dance, right? So if black people cheer on a white girl dancing, that lends her points, right? Because the video strikingly recalls Waters’s Hairspray, I can’t help but be reminded of the line, “Being invited places by colored people! It feels so hip!” We white people love to see ourselves getting approval from black people. We just don’t want our societal standing challenged, because that makes us deeply uncomfortable.

Looking at the two bottom images, let’s discuss the role of “booty” in this song. Booty outside of the pirate context has long been used to evoke the stereotypical image of a black woman with a large, round butt. This particular racial trope has been used by white people to objectify, fetishize, and sexualize black women by our media and our white supremacist culture, then white girls apply it to themselves in a positive context. When Trainor calls attention to the size of her butt and calls it a booty, we’re supposed to laud her as being body positive and a strong feminist, but she can’t “bring booty back,” because it was never used to stereotype her to begin with.

alittlelark

(18,890 posts)
2. As a 50 yr old female... I Love it !!
Wed Nov 19, 2014, 02:39 AM
Nov 2014

First heard it a month or so ago, but I now hear it on almost every station I switch to.

Great beat, inspiring lyrics, makes me wanna dance!

I have always been on the skinny side, but her lyrics can cover many issues.

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