At last, these two towering talents come together. On one side, you have the explicably huge phenom Justin Bieber, who can make a tweenage girl rocket into womanhood within seconds. On the other, you've got the one-time ruler of watered down metal, Slipknot, who appeared on the t-shirt of nearly every chubby high school outcast in the late 90s. Feast your eyes on the beauty that they create, then marvel at the creepiness coming from Ludacris rapping about getting it on with a schoolgirl.
By Big Sus (Email Sus) At last, these two towering talents come together. On one side, you have the explicably huge phenom Justin Bieber, who can make a tweenage girl rocket into womanhood within seconds. On the other, you've got the one-time ruler of watered down metal, Slipknot, who appeared on the t-shirt of nearly every chubby high school outcast in the late 90s. Feast your eyes on the beauty that they create, then marvel at the creepiness coming from Ludacris rapping about getting it on with a schoolgirl.
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Here's the catchy tune that tearing up the clubs all around Libya...literally. The song, "Zenga Zenga" was put together by an Israeli named Noy Alooshe, a member of Israeli techno group Chovevei Tzion (what, you've never hear of them?). Although the song was meant to be a parody of Ghadafi and lampoon his somewhat nonsensical speeches, it's become a huge hit in the arabic speaking world. Try and compete with that Lady Gaga. You'll have to do better than a meat suit.
Here's the translated lyrics: [Chorus]: Inch by inch. House by house. Home by home. Alley by alley. Forward, forward! Revolution! (Revolution!) I got millions on my side, not from the inside but from other countries. From here I send a call to all the millions in the desert. From desert to desert the millions will march and no one will be able to stop them. Fast, fast! The bell to work has rang! The bell to march has rang! The bell of victory has rang! No turning back! Forward, forward! Revolution! (Revolution!) I'm not sure where the dancing girls come in, but maybe that's the 'bell' that's being referred to. Bonus Trivia: This song contains a sample from the theme to Fantastic Planet, amazingly trippy French cartoon from the 70s about giant aliens taking in humans as pets and the human revolution that follows. Big Pun also used the sample in the song "Boomarang" |