We start off with
a loving shot of some vixen’s rear as she high-tails it away from us and joins
a bunch of her pals on a beach. (Was it something we said?) All of her little
friends are sporting bathing couture from the 1960’s, and there are several
surfboards around, shoved in the sand in that startlingly-phallic manner than
shoved surfboards have. While credits splash on the screen, some of the folks
are dancing about and performing those self-satisfied moves that have little to
do with the actual rhythm of the song and more to do with the possible
appearance of a rash in an uncomfortable location.
We also get our
first shot of a woman in a pink bathing suit with an excess of fringe, wiggling
her hips with a frenzy. She may look innocent at the moment (although a bit
over-accessorized), but we will soon start to fear her a little bit since she
makes a number of increasingly-aggressive appearances as the video progresses.
She clearly has a dark agenda of some kind, and no one is safe from her and her
lethally-whipping fringe.
Cut to the band
members standing in a line in front of an old-timey car. They are wearing
matching striped shirts, which is initially cute and wholesomely-nostalgic, but
something about their body language gives off a slight “Children of the Corn”
vibe, a foreboding that will grow along with our unease about Fringed Frieda
and her pelvic gyrations. Oh, and one of those surfboards has joined the
lineup, but since he doesn’t appear to know any of the lyrics or dance moves,
his musical career might be a little shorter than the other four.
And we’re back to
Frieda (see, I told you, she eventually ends up everywhere, like bad shag
carpeting), who does a hip solo, then we visit with her other little friends on
the beach, with everyone trying to do white-people dances and appear festive. There’s
also some mess with a hula hoop, but the person trying to do the hooping
obviously watched the wrong instructional video, because that hoop is not doing
what it should. But everyone is smiling and having a swell time, so the
skill-set of some of the participants is really less important than, say, the
complete lack of same-sex couples doing The Frug.
Back to the
foursome in front of the Ford, or whatever kind of car that is. They are very
happy to finally be singing the lyrics of the song, after that extended intro
where they didn’t get to do much other than stand there and be pretty. The
camera pans down the line, so we can fully appreciate their individual
happiness and very-fine dental work. (Why is that one guy playing a guitar the
size of a sugar packet? Maybe I should save that for the Q&A session at the
end of the video.)
Oh wait, we’re
suddenly getting some more title credits. I’m not sure why we need a second
round, but maybe we’ll learn something. It seems that this video is starring
Family of the Year, news that comes as a total shock, this being a Family of
the Year video and all. Then we get some snippet cameos from the band members,
with each of them waving about a prop with borderline manic glee, followed by a
Brady Bunch-style intro to a gaggle
of people known as “The Gang”. It’s not clear who these people are, but most of
them are clutching vessels of fruity alcohol, so I’m sure we’ll get along just
fine.
There’s a quick
series of vignettes, with the Pinstripe Quartet performing on a deck, some of
the guys being very friendly with surfboards, the perusal of trashy pulp
novels, and some business concerning a sandcastle with self-esteem issues. Then
we’re back to more credits, because somebody up in this grill really has a
fondness for fonts. We are introduced to three of the band members (at least I
think they’re in the band, we really have a lot of people running around) who
will be playing characters with odd names that usually only happen in the south
of France or on California communes in 1967.
We head back to
the quartet on that deck thing, a gig that they must greatly enjoy because we
spend a considerable amount of time there. Christina, the lone female in the
otherwise testosterone-heavy lineup, appears to be very invested in doing an
interpretive dance about an escaped convict not knowing which way to run.
Then we kick off
our little mini-story, one that initially involves “Lou Simpatico”, a mustached
man who is selling a love-potion concoction at a little hut. As he stands there
and makes us think of someone involved in cheap pornographic films (sorry, it’s
that mustache), our other two featured starlets, “Rita Haricot Vers” and “Vince
Schoenhauser”, come running up from wherever they were standing before the
director hollered “Action!”. They each snatch a drink from Porno Lou, and then
turn to gaze upon one another whilst they guzzle.
This leads to a
gauzy dream sequence where our two chemically-altered lovers make goo-goo eyes
and smile dreamily, followed by the four band members also chugging the
chupacabra juice. This makes the libation an official trending topic, and
suddenly everyone on the entire set is racing to get them a glassful. Two
seconds later, the inevitable dance-off begins, with people pumping their hands
in the air and doing squat thrusts. The celebration is capped off by the band
members trying out for the local cheerleading squad that doesn’t really exist.
Now that hormone
levels have been maximized, we proceed to a montage of several couples sucking
face with a fierce determination. First we have the couples perched atop an odd
fence, because nothing is more erotic than wooden supports poking at your butt,
then we have the couples strewn about a pile of seaside rocks, like a bunch of
seals at the height of mating season. We cap this section off with Vince and
Rita, post-coupling, racing into the ocean waters to wash away their sins.
Quick image of
the band members running along the beach carrying a surfboard over their heads,
then we cut to the members riding said board in a lovely tribute to the art of
obvious trick photography, complete with mismatched film stock and over-acting.
There’s also some mess with what appears to be a three-way taking place between
a discreet set of surfboards, but we are only allowed to see body parts that
are uninteresting, which lowers the titillation factor.
The final part of
this epic love story involves a voyeuristic lifeguard using binoculars to spy
on Vince and Rita as they do that “beast with two backs” thing, wallering
around on the sand. Well, apparently the lifeguard is a Republican, because he
can’t stand it when other people are happy, so he blows on a whistle to make
them stop. But instead of seeing a reaction shot from Vince and Rita as they pull
away from each other with an audible pop, we cut to a fisherman snagging a
bikini top with his pole. (Which sounds rather eye-opening, but isn’t quite
what you think.)
There’s some
minimal choreography involving beach balls and a Busby Berkley tribute, and
suddenly Fringed Frieda is back on the scene, standing front and center and
ready to lacerate us with her dangly mini-whips. Luckily, the band members
dance their way in between us and Certain Death, creating a life-saving barrier
so that our last image on Earth isn’t a human weed whacker from hell.
To celebrate the
fact that everyone survived the video with only a bit of sunburn and some
possible surprise pregnancies, we close things out with folks sitting around a
charming bonfire as the day fades, people reflect, and libidos recharge. Then
we roll into the closing credits, with more images of beautiful people being
far more happy than reality and non-alcoholic beverages would normally allow…
Click Here to Watch
this Video on YouTube.
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