This song hits home with me because I know girls my age (24) and younger sexually harassed while this song is playing. A dirty straight white man walks up to a girl, starts talking to them with a beer in their hand, I intervene everytime not to go with him. The girls always told me to "fuck off". Little did they know, they would be sexually harassed in a night club 2 minutes later on the dance floor.
Girls at a young age should not be sexualised, it usually starts with disrespect such as cat calling or sexually suggestive comments and it get worse from there out.
LR1, re:
>A dirty straight white man walks up to a girl, starts talking to them with a beer in their hand, I intervene everytime not to go with him. The girls always told me to "fuck off". Little did they know, they would be sexually harassed in a night club 2 minutes later on the dance floor.
What if the white man wasn't "dirty" and had recently had a wash?
What if the "dirty" man was black; would that be ok?
As "gender fluid" are you sometimes the "dirty" man?
LR1 wrote:
This song hits home with me because I know girls my age (24) and younger sexually harassed while this song is playing. A dirty straight white man walks up to a girl, starts talking to them with a beer in their hand, I intervene everytime not to go with him. The girls always told me to "fuck off". Little did they know, they would be sexually harassed in a night club 2 minutes later on the dance floor.
Girls at a young age should not be sexualised, it usually starts with disrespect such as cat calling or sexually suggestive comments and it get worse from there out.
i get where you're coming from - but unless you're more specific, you're coming off as extremely prejudiced and biased. also me too vs. a song is really not the same thing.
Early 00's R&B had more influence on your culture than Queen's Fat Bottomed Girls.
And nothing in the song suggests male harassed the female. It's actually the opposite. The female nanny sexualized the innocent male influencing him to later in life objectify women. And nowhere in the song does the male actually harass a female. In fact, he asks "can i take you home tonight" - never once does Brian May condone harassment in the song. Yes the lyrics are lightheartdedly dirty - in fact the titel itself is the most suggestive lyric - which may be all you understood from the song to get your incredibly vague point across.
Read lyric then critique is always a better approach than read title and come off as an imbecile ;-) (i hope you enjoyed my rhyme)
dudeofqueen wrote:
LR1, re:
>A dirty straight white man walks up to a girl, starts talking to them with a beer in their hand, I intervene everytime not to go with him. The girls always told me to "fuck off". Little did they know, they would be sexually harassed in a night club 2 minutes later on the dance floor.
What if the white man wasn't "dirty" and had recently had a wash?
What if the "dirty" man was black; would that be ok?
As "gender fluid" are you sometimes the "dirty" man?
I could tell because of his white male privilege because they can get away with any crime in the world, including sexual assault.