Read The Douchebag Bible Online
Authors: TJ Kirk
devoid of anything as intelligent. We went from this:
The time to hesitate is through
No time to wallow in the mire
Try now we can only lose
And our love become a funeral pyre
Come on, baby, light my fire.
The Doors, Light My Fire
To this:
If I was your boyfriend, never let you go
Keep you on my arm girl, you’d never be alone
I can be a gentleman, anything you want
If I was your boyfriend, I’d never let you go, I’d
never let you go
Justin Bieber, Boyfriend
Am I the only one aware of this precipitous
decline or am I just the only one who cares or sees it
as culturally significant. Even beyond the
mainstream, I have found very little worth justifying
the existence of the generation’s music. Perhaps you
have some suggestions that could change my mind,
but I doubt it. I’ve looked pretty extensively for new
music that’s worth a shit and come up empty-
handed thus far.
To think, I used to feel like Limp Bizkit was the
worst band ever. Fred Durst seems like a genius by
modern standards. Everything is shit. Shallow,
uninteresting, boring shit. I thought that the older
generation was supposed to look at what the kids
were listening to and think it too crazy and extreme.
I look at what kids are listening to and think, “What
a bunch of unimaginative little pussies.”
Perhaps I'm just spoiled, however, since I grew
up listening to the great, under appreciated lyrical
master of our times: Marilyn Manson. A good
understanding of lyrical content is far more vital for
a Manson fan than it is for most fan bases (unless
you’re just some fan girl who wants to fuck him
because he wears make-up—not that there's
anything wrong with that). For instance, let’s look at
the lyrics to GodEatGod, the first track from the
album Holy Wood (In the Shadow Of The Valley Of
Death):
Dear god do you want to tear your knuckles down
And hold yourself
Dear god can you climb off that tree
Meat in the shape of a ‘T’
Dear god the paper says you were the King
In the black limousine
Dear John and all the King’s men
Can’t put your head together again
Before the bullets
Before the flies
Before authorities take out my eyes
The only smiling are you dolls that I made
But you are plastic and so are your brains
Dear god the sky is as blue
As a gunshot wound
Dear god if you were alive
You know we’d kill you
Before the bullets
Before the flies
Before authorities take out my eyes
The only smiling are you dolls that I made
But you are plastic and so are your brains
If you’re not aware beforehand that Manson is
juxtaposing Jesus Christ and John F. Kennedy, then
the lyrics can be a bit impenetrable. To fully
understand the song, you have to know going in that
“Meat in the shape of a T” is Christ on the cross. You
have to know that “Dear John and all the King’s men
/ can’t put your head together again” refers to the
Kennedy Assassination.
Why is Manson juxtaposing these two men?
Because they’re both revered figures in America who
were made all the more famous because of their
grizzly deaths. They're both martyrs.
The album’s title, Holy Wood, is not just a play
on Hollywood—it also refers to the tree of
knowledge in the Garden of Eden, to the cross upon
which Christ was crucified and to the wooden barrel
of Lee Harvey Oswalt’s rifle.
In Manson’s own words, “I make references to
the Zapruder film (of the Kennedy assassination)
being the most important movie ever made in
modern times. And the irony that anyone could
complain about violence in films and entertainment
when that was shown on the news. Growing up, I
saw it so many times—and I’ve never seen anything
so violent in my life. And that’s reality. To me,
Kennedy was a second Christ because he died and
enough people were watching, and so [he] became a
martyr.”
Further: “It’s strange that we accept the
crucifix as if it were an everyday part of our