Her inhibitions. I think it's a play on the fact that Britian is known as a very reserved and conservative society though it takes a liberal view on nudity and sex on TV and public toplessness.
2006-12-05 02:15:00
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answer #1
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answered by Magnus01 3
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"London Bridge" has been everywhere. I have to ask myself, what else is interesting about it? I mean, for one thing, there is the fact that it wears its intertextuality on its sleeve, which is the academic way of saying it rips a lot of other songs off. There is the lyrical allusion to "Me So Horny," which, interestingly enough, can be found in two or three other pop songs on the charts right now. There is the more subtle nod to Missy Elliot, particularly the Missy of "Work It." (Really, go listen to the Missy track--it's hard to tell the two apart, except that of course Missy can eat Fergie for breakfast any day.)
But London Bridge? Hard to say. There is, of course, the titular object. As is well-known now, both the cover and the video for this song feature Fergie dancing in front of a bridge in London (see above). Unfortunately, it's not actually the London Bridge, but rather the Tower Bridge, a Victorian construction that is very pretty and elaborate, and suitably old-looking (the Victorians could collapse historicity like nobody's business), but is unfortunately quite different from the London Bridge.
2006-12-05 10:15:11
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answer #2
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answered by ~Peachy~ 5
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Any woman who has ever been "loved" (hee hee hee) the right way can answer that question for you. I think I just did.
2006-12-05 10:20:13
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answer #3
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answered by babygyrl_nyc 5
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