This song always bring me to the brink of tears, and then it goes "A GOAT CHEESE SALAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAD"
@ParallaxHearts3 жыл бұрын
Lmao that is so true
@teaandcrochet3 жыл бұрын
So true 😂
@t.h.mcelroy65973 жыл бұрын
🤣
@aaronhartley93093 жыл бұрын
Look at the frame ratio....it expands when it get real showing that "this is the truth in my life" and then swaps back once it goes but to the "fakeness"
@ISavant3 жыл бұрын
@@aaronhartley9309 where did i say i was confused?
@randomutubr2223 жыл бұрын
"One does not simply walk into Mordor" - Martin Luther King
@turkeygravy02 жыл бұрын
I’m dead
@rightonrivers5672 жыл бұрын
Lmaoooo
@saphcal2 жыл бұрын
"Fly you fools!" ~ Martin Luther King
@vhufeosqap2 жыл бұрын
@@saphcal “I am a servant of the secret fire, weilder of the flame of Anor…” MLK
@pepijnwauters63012 жыл бұрын
"Meat is back on the menu boys" -Martin Luther King
@Apollo9898LP2 жыл бұрын
I love how the line "Is this heaven?" is ironic the first time, but comes across a lot more genuine at the end when it's just going through this woman's happiest moments, like hearing "I love you" and getting proposed to, and you realize it was always that. It was always just a collection of the things that make this woman happy.
@dammitmars2 жыл бұрын
this
@myheartwillstopinjoy81422 жыл бұрын
Oh great, now I'm emotional
@phatymcdaddy Жыл бұрын
I always felt it was more mocking the pretentiousness of ppl on IG and the thirst for validation due to peer pressure thus making ppl more disconnected and mentally unhealthy in the long run when you find out no one cares about you really
@jordanledoux197 Жыл бұрын
I always thought of it as the happy times that she wished she could share with her mother instead of the internet. Like, that she doesn't actually care about the people who follow her on instagram, it's just her little fantasy of sharing these moments with her mom. That the public participation with her moments is almost an intrusion instead of the point.
@bonnie_rabbit74911 ай бұрын
Omg this comment made me cry. 🥲
@angelamalicoate27983 жыл бұрын
I think very simply it’s: behind every cliche is a real person with real life issues
@Might.B.Housey_3 жыл бұрын
Bo is a genius. Without the personal part in the middle, this bit would be almost hack. But with it in, it’s a masterpiece and I can’t get though it without tearing up.
@Lenny-bi4zv3 жыл бұрын
behind every personal attack theres someone who felt personal attacked by a cliche :D this song is fuckin amazing, only hurts when youre this white woman xD
@daveduncan5183 жыл бұрын
I've noticed the the camera shot widens (opens up) when the lyrics get serious and the "white woman" opens up. And then it closes back up as the lyrics become more closed off again. Not sure if that's anything but...I noticed it
@Lenny-bi4zv3 жыл бұрын
@@daveduncan518 Same. Maybe its really what He Said, showing that they are persons and that those Things do hurt them, allthough that might not bei visible If you Just read those Things over and over again
@jaysonsiebold3 жыл бұрын
Exactly this
@xSilverxshadowx3 жыл бұрын
One thing I haven't seen anyone mention is the few lines near the end: "three little words, a couple of doves, and a ring on her finger from the person that she loves" plus the wedding bells in the background. That part really stands out as kind of a nice little epilogue to the mom part. Her boyfriend that she's crazy about obviously proposed and she's moving on with her life and finding happiness. People could easily see an instagram post like that and think "oh someone posting about their wedding again, boring" but because we know a little more about this woman and her struggle we're happy for her instead. It really paints a contrast between our feelings about her before the mom segment (mocking, critical) and after (sympathetic).
@fletcherhunt43743 жыл бұрын
definitely didn't see it that way... bo burnham has always been a comedian who laces his seemingly face level act with sarcasm and satire. i think the overall theme of this one is that he's making fun of a ridiculous stereotype because most of these influencers have become caricatures of themselves... just my opinion though and i might be wrong. that's the value of art is that it provokes thought from people with all kinds of different views/lenses.
@enchantdos10583 жыл бұрын
Holy shit i have goosebumps
@niko-ni6ps3 жыл бұрын
I feel ashamed for not being aware of that after listening to this song for 50-ish Times. Thanks, dear random stranger on the internet
@Frostbite083 жыл бұрын
Those parts are what makes it seem so weird to me that this song is getting labeled as an attack on people. He never actually says anything negative. It's just a list. It's a mirror held up to part of our society. If someone feels uncomfortable after hearing this, it should trigger some introspection.
@louieclark70013 жыл бұрын
My own interpretation of the song is that it's mostly parodying the performative nature of instagram influencers and the stereotypical fashion through which they try to convey the perfect life. The aspect ratio opens up when the song becomes a less filtered message to the subjects dead mother, then starts to close in again as the message becomes more performative and "show offy". It feels as though the three little words a couple of doves etc is imagery you might associate with a typical show-off influencer wedding post, as many people online will feature their relationship in their content to deepen the depiction of a perfect life. There are a lot of layers to this special though and the meaning is somewhat supplemental given how the pandemic and our online lives are a very shared experience.
@JpuddN3 жыл бұрын
I agree, the middle section is just a reminder that people on social media are real people even if they are incredibly shallow on their social media
@barneyfromblueshift3 жыл бұрын
I think it's even more than that. I think another part of the message is this need I think most of us feel to project a perfect, unfailing version of our lives, if we are going to share them. I think it's a commentary on the performative nature of social media and how it ultimately is used to mask how we feel from on and another.
@paigefryzelka75723 жыл бұрын
I feel like it also speaks to those people who do like really long, super personal posts. You know the posts that seem to go on for a bit longer than they should. I guess I related it to people that overshare on Facebook about their lives.
@fletcherhunt43743 жыл бұрын
eh, i saw it as making fun of how ridiculous it is to feel that internal need for everybody to see your woes in life because you can't just live through them and/or want a bunch of people you don't know to sympathize with you. but, probably projecting my own bias into it a ton!
@paigefryzelka75723 жыл бұрын
@@fletcherhunt4374 dude that's a bit of how I feel. I'm more of a private person though.
@JpuddN3 жыл бұрын
@@fletcherhunt4374 Yeah the reason I don't think it is this is the nifty way he widened the shot out of that Instagram-style framing when talking about the parents and then back into the Instagram frame when he goes back to the shallow post descriptions. Widing it out there shows that we are seeing this person through a different lens than just the Instagram page. We're seeing the real person, even if it's just for a single post, before going back to the latte foam art and tiny pumpkins.
@El1ne___3 жыл бұрын
The section dedicated to the mom always makes me cry. I don’t know why, because both of my parents are alive, but still…
@Anonymous-wy5dc3 жыл бұрын
Because deep down we all know that one day it'll be us. I wonder how I would I cope.
@JeanineFollette3 жыл бұрын
Amazing how Bo was able to wedge that little part in there and have it be so powerful. Just so talented. I also cry every time.
@mariabezymyannaya42193 жыл бұрын
Yeah, same. I remember the first time I watched this song it didn't feel nice at first, like "ok, some white dude makes fun of women again - what's new here, that's not fun", and then this part about mom started and I realized that it's actually a much deeper song than it seems at first. Love this song now actually.
@CovertPheonix3 жыл бұрын
same
@chantalwiebe5343 жыл бұрын
Absolutely me too.
@ericmontiel32343 жыл бұрын
I like how Bo is all like "I'm gonna make you laugh at this person" and 2 seconds later is all like "now, I'm gonna make you cry for them.......bitch"
@connienoland84002 жыл бұрын
Bo: let me tell you something funny! Us: hahaha! Funny man! Bo: now let me show you how much you suck for enjoying that joke! Us: oh... That was... Sorry. Bo: you look sad. Wanna hear another? Us having learned nothing: hahaha!
@Tulip_bip Жыл бұрын
@@connienoland8400 i love that bo's comedy style is just making you laugh at something and then making you feel bad for laughing at it lmao
@zacharyanderson68363 жыл бұрын
It is very important to note on the scene where the "white woman" talks about her mom, is the only time the aspect ratio opens up away from the Instagram size. The only time she isn't "filtered". You are correct that is is the only time we see the real woman. It is there to remind us they are human, remind us that life is not perfect, not "heaven", that things are happening to real people, regardless of what they post. It goes into the great topic of how we compare ourselves to other lives that have been curated to make things look like "heaven". And a small reminder, that we are not alone, we are all people. Maybe we should spend a bit more time with the wider aspect ratio, nothing against the curated posts. Both the authors and the consumers need to remember we are all people.
@ryanking82463 жыл бұрын
Yes but it also starts to pan back in again when "she" becomes narcissistic again making the post about her instead of about her mom. It started as a tribute to "her mom", then ended up becoming all about what "shes" doing instead.
@zacharyanderson68363 жыл бұрын
@@ryanking8246 I didn't take it that way, it was more posed, but not necessarily narcissistic. This of course is open to interpretation. I interpreted as a perfect world, a.k.a "heaven", and for that glimpse when it is about her mom, it is real. I never considered the others narcissistic, just staged. But I can for sure see how it would be interpreted as narcissist. Though, I would think, if that was what Bo was going after he would have included likes in some aspect, or the character looking at their own Instagram. We see the character Bo looking at the song after it is done, but I think that speaks to something different, but of course, I can be COMPLETELY wrong.
@bee45903 жыл бұрын
@@ryanking8246 is it really narcissistic to talk about yourself to your dead mom using an instagram caption as your medium? i get what youre saying but i think youre being too negative at this point. what is this character supposed to do, just post a sad ass caption saying 'i miss you, my life is so hard with you gone' and leave it at that? is that what our loved ones want for us when they die, for us to not move on? I interpreted it as the character speaking directly to her mother about how she's overcoming the loss of both her parents, and I really don't think that's narcissistic
@SkelechickenLives3 жыл бұрын
@@ryanking8246 I would say rather than narcissistic it is more performative. It's the sort of grief that you show because you are expected to grieve in certain ways publicly. It comes across as less sincere than the more real pain of the first part, but it is still grief.
@ryanking82463 жыл бұрын
@@bee4590 i find it narcissistic to turn a post about missing your dead mother, into how well you're doing. Yes. Lol its a comedy reflective song. Why would you think in ANY way that hes being sincere? Hes making fun of "creative and thoughtful" white chicks.. In other words generic basic broads. The whole thing is making fun of them
@r2-3po243 жыл бұрын
"We make people feel bad for enjoying things." Thank you for saying that.
@tempestarro3 жыл бұрын
“You know how this was gonna be comedic and we were gonna laugh? Okay so what was that?” Bo in a nutshell
@NickKlose3 жыл бұрын
Literally laughed out loud. Exactly!
@lashedsuns45292 жыл бұрын
Nailed it.
@pepethefrog68092 жыл бұрын
The part hits a little harder too when you catch the end of that part where he says "Mama I love you, give a hug and kiss to dad".
@AluraAlua3 жыл бұрын
It makes us feel ashamed for making fun of this woman's coping mechanism and outlet for positivity. We take our lives on the internet too seriously and think it's okay to ridicule people when usually you'd pass them by and let them live their life irl.
@oscair84683 жыл бұрын
Please, shut up
@sketchyartz51673 жыл бұрын
@@oscair8468 no hbu
@Scratpac473 жыл бұрын
@@oscair8468 no u
@danaknight6473 жыл бұрын
Yes! We pretend we are so much better than basic and forget that no one is basic. Maybe predictable....but not basic.
@KristTheriault3 жыл бұрын
@@danaknight647 The song is about how people are fake on the internet and are only "genuine" when other people see. Thats why the whole song is filmed in portrait mode until she talks about her mom. Then she starts being genuine. As soon as she talks about her boyfriend it goes back.
@abbardorengsxr3 жыл бұрын
Ive seen maybe 10-12 reactions to this song.. everyone missed the fucking point of the song except you. I love the fact that you are able to read between the lines instead of doing a stupid over-acting reaction to everything he writes. My appreciation for you reached new heights. I was just checking your channel, but now you earned a loyal follower.
@Steve3023 жыл бұрын
I love his little touches like how he changes the aspect ratio when the “woman” is opening up about her mom passing displaying real emotions, but then back to like the narrow view for the rest
@theparadisesnare3 жыл бұрын
These details are constant throughout the whole special, it's incredible. He put his heart into this, so talented
@ShaggyWithABaggy3 жыл бұрын
The aspects during the poses are accurate to IG post, the narrow view is online persona, then goes to reality, then back again for a coping mechanism.
@Steviemarie5023 жыл бұрын
Yes! Be did this throughout the entire special. How he uses camera angles, zoom, framing, lighting, all of it, is so we'll thought out. It makes the entire show so much more engaging and detailed without you even noticing while you're watching it. Then when you look back and start to think of everything he did and the fact that he did all of it himself in his room. The whole this is just so good. It still felt like Bo but so much more intimate and awesome!
@bgates873 жыл бұрын
I'm glad I first heard this song while watching the special. Part of the "joke" of this song is ruined when you already know the title before you start listening. The first verse functions as the setup where you're wondering where all of these seemingly unrelated topics are going, then the chorus comes in and lands like a punch line. By the way, I completely agree with your interpretation of the middle section where the woman is opening up about missing her mom. I was feeling kind of crazy watching so many people react to this song and not really have that part phase them at all, like "well that was weird, let's get back to the jokes."
@lost_in_conversation79883 жыл бұрын
Agreed. As excited as I am that the songs are up on KZbin for my existential pleasures, watching it in the special with the element of surprised made this and Unpaid Intern land so well. Plus theres more Bo time which is always a plus.
@Ian-nj4ix3 жыл бұрын
Agreed. And one super unfortunate thing that happened when the audio album came out is now the subtitles say [White Woman's Instagram by Bo Burnham plays] as soon as the song starts.
@SuperUnluckyGuy3 жыл бұрын
But thats how bo wants it to be, laugh, hopefully get it, and move on.
@spannycat22 жыл бұрын
I saw everything with close captioning. So I already knew the titles.
@twennysebben3 жыл бұрын
Bo's forte is getting us to laugh at something and then immediately making us feel guilty for laughing.
@davidspalla95353 жыл бұрын
Your breakdowns are great. So many others just laugh at the pictures with a quick “aw” to the mom post. The mom post is the key to the whole song. “Give a hug and kiss to dad” In the video we see him (as her) celebrating a 27th birthday. It’s been 10 years since her mom died so we’re seeing someone who lost both her parents right as she entered adulthood. With that in mind, the rest of the video comes off as a person who is trying to project happiness so that some of it can enter her life. The cinematography was perfect. So many great shots and the aspect ratio changing from IG’s 1:1 to a widescreen while real talk was happening helped emphasis the break between your Internet life and the real world. What a genius Bo is.
@PoemJunkie3 жыл бұрын
Also, when the aspect ratio changes, the “picture” is no longer perfect, and you see some of the mess on the sidelines, which again plays into both the message of “What you’re seeing is curated” and “these are real people behind these posts, and their lives aren’t perfect.”
@Bogwogponk3 жыл бұрын
The age part is really good I had never thought about it that way.
@Wawagirl173 жыл бұрын
Oooh, I had never considered the age part either, had just thought of these as random, but if all of the "photos" are implied to be the same "woman" / person / account, then losing her parents by age 17 puts everything else into a much different light.
@melindamuller44662 жыл бұрын
It makes the rest so much sadder, because it seems like a toxic coping mechanism to seek the short term empty happiness and validation of others.
@CodyTaylor1152 жыл бұрын
Great point!
@ajurado8003 жыл бұрын
The "favorite photo of her mom" segment in the middle of this song absolutely knocked me back on my heels the first time I heard it. I think your interpretation is exactly correct, and I think Bo Burnham is a genius for doing it like that.
@jamezbond00743 жыл бұрын
Can I just say that your harmonizing was just a gift. Beautiful voice brother.
@Brooke-rw8rc2 жыл бұрын
Except his thirds were kinda flat. But otherwise v. nice. His voice blends really well with Bo's.
@Schmidhead5163 жыл бұрын
I think the middle section has a dual meaning. It’s a reminder that they’re still real people, but it’s also a criticism of how all the silly, frivolous, content (IG performance) drowns out real moments where we can truly connect with one another represented by the change in aspect ratio.
@spannycat22 жыл бұрын
It's the same person. She's 27 and lost her parents at 17. She has a post of holding hands. Then she tells her mom she has a boyfriend she loves. Then she has a post with a wedding ring. It's called a White Woman's Instagram. That titling was specific. The song is scrolling through her feed and viewing her as a real person during that middle part. The rest of the posts are her trying to cope with life. The joke is that is the viewers are judgemental about them. Watch it again.
@Schmidhead5162 жыл бұрын
@@spannycat2 that’s an interesting perspective that it’s all one white woman’s Instagram rather than an amalgamation of basic tropes. That said, Bo has been quite vocal on his opinions on perfectly curated posts vaingloriously grasping for other’s approval. He values authenticity over a desperate ploy to get more money, likes, fame, etc. Even the engagement post is back to the perfect lie that we represent our lives as to our respective audiences. That’s why the aspect ratio only changes when she’s talking about losing her parents because it’s the one part of the song where she’s not trying to pretend that her life is perfect. We’re all human and should be more willing to let people see that we’re humans and not just a collection of perfect moments. Then people will be more likely to treat each other like humans and be less judgmental. But what do I know? I’m just a random guy on the internet
@spannycat22 жыл бұрын
@@Schmidhead516 I agree. I think the song has multiple meanings. I also think the posts are racially tone deaf. For example the derivative political street art, the LOTR quote actually by MLK, the dreamcatcher from Urban Outfitters, and the feather headdress. I'm trying to look for more meanings in the song.
@iantaakalla81802 жыл бұрын
The tone deafness could also be deliberate, because as a supposedly-stereotypical white woman, she would not care about racism seriously, and while she is still humanized she is probably just as prone to racism as any other white person is. It is indeed a complex pictures of a supposedly stereotypical Instagram user who is a white woman. It would also tie into the more overtly depressing songs, in that while she is trying to live her life she also contributed to the problems that led up to the wild year of 2020. We are not just being mocked for mocking a person just being, but in context we also are being mocked for thinking just living our life has no consequence, and how both culminate in laughing at a stereotypical Instagram user.
@Nanoqtran3 жыл бұрын
One thing I love is at the begining it starts with alot of "haha this is silly" but then you hit the middle about her mom and all the following content feels less of silly and more of a coping method. The content is "just as silly" as the earlier lyrics but all of a sudden it has a whole new meaning when you know about the person just a little.
@NeliaMTulik-nc2ht3 жыл бұрын
Yes, kind of like the White Woman really is looking for Heaven. Is this Heaven? Yep, it's her way of finding Heaven and coping.
@royce72003 жыл бұрын
I love how all the perfect poses are followed by another shot of Bo in the same pose and the area around him is showing a dirty or clutered area. Showing that people try to make their lives look perfect, but when you see behind the veil you see how messy all of our lives really are when no one is around to judge.
@royce72003 жыл бұрын
Note the middle part where he is singing about momma, the camera pans out to show some clutter then pans back in.
@foolishdonut3 жыл бұрын
9:56 ok but putting analysis aside, THAT HARMONY WAS SO GOOD
@CollinGerberding2 жыл бұрын
just hit that part and oh my god you are very correct
@orangenkruemmeltee2 жыл бұрын
Nobody mentions that during that mum-section the picture is expanding to the side, giving us A BIGGER PICTURE of the person. Thats my favourite detail
@pepethefrog6809Ай бұрын
Yep, and right when we were back at the instagram cliches, the aspect ratio returns to what it was.
@d.s.96923 жыл бұрын
I think you nailed it. He drops the heavy stuff on you in this song as a way of letting you know that this person we're all mocking here is a real human being, and maybe her white-girl insta shit is her way of bringing a little beauty into a world full of horror and grief. Sh*t on her all you want, you have to admit that while you were staring at the carefully posed kittens you weren't thinking about the end of the world for a minute
@TheKyfe3 жыл бұрын
At the end of thr mom part, he casually throws in "Tell dad I love him." Both of her parents are dead. (And it was prolly her mom who helped her get through her dad's death)
@sickturret35872 жыл бұрын
yeah, cause men are first to go. even to the dates.
@MarkusNapp3 жыл бұрын
What this song does so beautifully is disarmingly humanize someone that you were making fun of. It's actually really powerful stuff in a fluffy comfy shell.
@momentofzen3 жыл бұрын
One thing I love is how lovingly he seems to have recreated those “cliche” images, really knocked it out of the park. And I agree with your assessment. Primarily I think it fits in with the general thesis of most of his work, that everything we see on the internet is a performance, that you can’t take anything you see at face value.
@jillydaqueen22823 жыл бұрын
Thank you so freaking much for actually acknowledging that part of the song and focusing on it. Waaaaaay too many reactions with ZERO attention paid to anything but laughing at the silly poses. *existential rage intensifying*
@auracle61843 жыл бұрын
It's amazing how Bo pulls off those outfits and poses so WELL. I suppose a lot of it can be attributed to his skill in lighting and framing.
@xanadu67843 жыл бұрын
I think this song is like a mirror to the previous song, "Comedy" In that one, he is making fun of himself for his desire to change the world, but through a medium where he gets a lot of attention and praise. In this song, he makes fun of people on Instagram that convert their lives into a self important show for the audience...but isn't that also what Bo is doing? That's why he literally puts himself in their place for this video. He knows that he can make fun of white women instagram, but he isn't better then them. He has the exact same psychological needs, he just fills them with a keyboard and jokes instead of tiny pumpkins and food photos. Him talking about this white woman's dead mother shows that there is also a real person underneath the Instagram show, worthy of empathy. And Bo knows that he needs the same.
@redherringg3 жыл бұрын
You captured this beautifully, thank you.
@raphaelschader99303 жыл бұрын
Could you please react to the song "Problematic" by Bo? It would be the very first reaction on yt and i'd like to hear someone professional speaking about it.
@LazyGardenGamer3 жыл бұрын
It's one of my favorites for sure, and no one is talking about it!! I feel like it gets me more than most people because I actually watched Bo from the beginning, whereas people that I've shown this special to haven't even heard of him. Problematic is such an important song to show his own personal growth, and I'm actually kind of mad that no one is talking about it, lol fuck
@JeanineFollette3 жыл бұрын
I haven't even found a video of that song! Maybe thats why no ones reacting??
@raphaelschader99303 жыл бұрын
@@JeanineFollette Theres not a real Video on yt, just the sound. But idk, i think nobody reacts because Netflix wouldn't allow this too.
@sharkbait3983 жыл бұрын
"Remember when I said this song was going to be comedic, and we were all going to laugh... So what happened to that?" 😂
@adiabaticwombat23523 жыл бұрын
The photo of her mom part has a few bits. First, the aspect ratio opens up as the comment is being vulnerable and it starts closing as soon as the comment becomes more about "her". Second, it's immediately followed by "a goat cheese salad" to mimic what it's like scrolling through someone's Instagram feed. You get these deeply vulnerable moments ("your inside's out") that also double as humble brags and then it's on to another random picture. Finally, the whole "is this heaven?" gets juxtaposed with the sadness of the dead parents part because all you see are great things and even in a moment where they're TRYING to show sadness, they can't help but let everyone know their life is still great.
@BMax-no9mg3 жыл бұрын
Yes the part about her mother & the “ring on her finger from the her person that she loves” I think he is just bringing back down to remind you we are all HUMAN.
@isahoofnagle58683 жыл бұрын
this is the first analysis of this song ive seen that hits it so well!! great video :] (also a note: the bit about the mom is the only part of the song where the video widens from the Instagram format, which i just think is a neat attention to detail on Bo Burnham’s part)
@BradSteele3 жыл бұрын
Very nice touch!
@partycitydumpster3 жыл бұрын
A woman cultivating a heavenly image of her life, and then speaking to her parents in heaven.
@kennyreynolds40793 жыл бұрын
Can't believe I caught this basically right as you uploaded it! The visuals are so good cause we've seen it all but that little middle part kind of reminds me that not only is it a real person behind that account, but this is kind of like an escape for them. Sure it's silly or it feels like everyone has the same 'aesthetic' but, for the people doing that, it's like therapy. Posing and setting up those little photos, the filters, and all that, it's like a real life happy place. All of the pictures are harmless and they all feel airy and light. The smiles and the bright colours, it feels like he's calling out people who mock people for having that 'happy place' or something. There's no harm coming from the White Woman's Instagram, it's her escape, but people sure still do laugh about it.
@BradSteele3 жыл бұрын
Very Well said!
@Agroveb3 жыл бұрын
A lot of people don’t see the deeper message of this song on the first listen, kudos for catching it!!
@mnstrmisha3 жыл бұрын
Can't wait to see your reactions to the rest of the songs from this special! Your takes and interpretations are definitely my favourite on KZbin right now
@coopadoop92763 жыл бұрын
6:11 notice how the screen expands from instagram’s aspect ratio to a full screen, implying that she’s trapping herself in a frame and there’s genuinely more going on on the INSIDE. Then it shrinks back to the original aspect ratio, showing us that she fell back into the cycle of cliches.
@CollinGerberding2 жыл бұрын
OR it's reminding us that there's always more going on just off frame. She's not trapped herself in anything, she's just another person on instagram. We're the ones that are being judgemental. We're the one's that make fun of a "basic" white woman instead of taking the time to consider that she's making choices based on what's happened to her. And maybe we shouldn't. Maybe instead of being judgmental, we at least accept that there's a legitimate, wholesome reason a person does a thing.
@patricke0n3 жыл бұрын
Fucking thank you for reacting how ya did to the interlude. He seamlessly transports your to a fun world of generalizations, pretty spot on and harmless ones so it's fun then BAM! Just throws that empathic anvil right on top of ya by reminding us that every pic no matter how basic comes from a real person with hopes and dreams and fear and loss. He carefully threads that needle and drops you right back into the song. Your head should be spinning, and he designed it that way. I've seen that interlude go over a lot of react peoples heads. It's genius in it's simplicity.
@rubydoobydoo90933 жыл бұрын
The mom section hits hard...it hits even harder when he says to give a hug and kiss to dad at the end. Loss of both parents.
@jcee52663 жыл бұрын
Your takes on this special so far have all been on point. Would love to see you react to the rest of the songs, I think you’ll have plenty to say about them.
@ParallaxHearts3 жыл бұрын
I've never felt so attacked and honored at the same time 🥲
@joshuaryland66443 жыл бұрын
Definitely agree with a lot of the other commenters that the “Mom” portion is showing the realness of people behind social media posts in contrast to the utopian life that is normally depicted. but I think Bo’s main goal is trying to simulate the real feeling of scrolling through Instagram on any given day. You see all these happy and harmless posts and then bam! You’re hit with a real downer of a post.
@DantheGif2 жыл бұрын
The change in aspect ratio from Instagram portrait to full screen, then back to Instagram portrait is a reflection of humanity and pain behind every photo, post, action done online. That when you look past the screen, then there's a real life.
@flyingblind56773 жыл бұрын
Just wanna point out that the harmony you nailed at the end was impressive
@PaperJoyPH2 жыл бұрын
Your harmony at the end is a gem! Thank you for your video 💖
@m.g.sailors2252 жыл бұрын
Beautiful harmonization. 🥺 loved it, and love you bro.
@siindree2 жыл бұрын
I think that bridge is very hard, for lack of a better term. It's setup in advance with one on the poses, the birthday with with the balloons. Saying 27, and when the bridge hits, in the caption it says "been a decade since you've been gone". Which then means her mom died when she was 17, and then at the end of this emotional bridge we get the "I love you, give a hug and kiss to dad" implying both her parents are gone before she herself is 30. Which hits hard man..
@Brawlogy3 жыл бұрын
If you base your life off what people post on the internet it’s impossible to compete because life isn’t always perfect poses and vacations. We never see the every day struggles because people don’t typically post that but when they do it’s a small glimpse of the emotions of the real human behind the post.
@hellaellarose62983 жыл бұрын
Loved your analysis!
@sydneyschmidt83503 жыл бұрын
TAKEAWAY FROM A WHITE WOMAN I think it’s also so important to note that he made an incredible point *visually when the serious part came along. This was something he did intentionally to show us the humanity behind the post. When the screen widens (to me) it shows that there is a full(screen) person behind the little cropped image you see on social media ❤️ I loved your interpretation so much!! Keep reacting to Bo! I love that you go into detail on his intentions 💕
@alastairtheduke Жыл бұрын
I love how the aspect ratio changes from instagram vertical photos to a wide screen as the woman opens up about her mom and we see the view into her life open up too as the screen expands, and as soon as she opens up, the screen shrinks back down to instagram ratio and continues on into the third verse. Epic and subtle
@johnbrock30103 жыл бұрын
Anyone else think when he said, "and I am back today with Mr. Bo Burnham," That he sounded like the talent agent in Bo's 'We Think We Know You' from What?
@ashleysheree70573 жыл бұрын
Could you please react to Can't Handle This by Bo? It's amazing. It starts out as just a funny song but then it gets pretty deep and sad
@rogue12113 жыл бұрын
yes!! he def should react to this
@kayleehix65212 жыл бұрын
I looked it up and Instagram is officially more then ten years old so it is technically possible that her mother followed her on Instagram and the idea of her addressing her mother’s ghost account directly in that post breaks my heart.
@NunnuS98 Жыл бұрын
What always breaks me is at the end of the mom post he says”give a hug and kiss to dad” making the poster effectively an orphan😢
@SeekinOne11 ай бұрын
I think you are spot on with your interpretation of that emotional part. Great work!
@charmer1292 жыл бұрын
The thing I love about this is he put real work into recreating all these posts.
@NiramBG2 жыл бұрын
I think one of the things Bo has always tried to convey is that social media is a performance art and usually it's about the dangers and harm of that, but here I think it's about those rare moments where you see a glimpse of a real person behind the performance and how sometimes we forget there is a real person there.
@Clovis_Rose2 жыл бұрын
Love this song and Bo's creativity and genius in expressing ideas, stereotypes, life, self, and so much more. He really gives you something to think about and to bring reality into view. Loved this special so much. Thanks for this!!
@HazelSageHP3 жыл бұрын
I'm so grateful that you talked about that middle part with her mom! I lost my mom a few months ago, so when I listened to this song, I just started sobbing when it came to that portion. And all the folks I see ranking or reacting to these songs may mention that part in passing, but in general just kind of skip past it and mention that the rest of it was a fun song. And yeah, it was, but fuck, that middle part is so important to the song and so important to me, so thank you for giving it adequate time to discuss!
@CLOWTISMS2 ай бұрын
You’re the first reactor I’ve seen actually analyse this and add something to it !
@stephenr853 жыл бұрын
In his art and even in his interviews, Bo finds a way to take a poignant place on both sides of an argument, in the same way the depressive lyrics are balanced with comedy and the comedy jabs with irony. It's really incredible.
@thejknetwork94503 жыл бұрын
I'm honestly really happy you talked about the "real moment" part of this song. I feel like so many just write this song off as just purely comedic like "FaceTime with my Mom" or "Jeff Bezos I&II" from Inside as well (I still like these songs, but they are definitely more shallow then his others). Really underrated song that so many ignore the actual meaning of just to go for the surface level meaning of "Ha ha, White Woman".
@peterhiggins29283 жыл бұрын
In the middle-8 the aspect ratio changes from 1:1 (Instagram) to normal ratio when the lyrics become real - about missing a mother and the genuine loss. But then, when all the humble brags start up; I got a job, my own apartment, a boyfriend etc it becomes superficial again and drifts back to 1:1.
@Almentikk3 жыл бұрын
The part about the mum always makes me tear up
@HMSteadman3 жыл бұрын
Love your reactions to Bo's songs! Subscribed, and followed your other socials. 👍
@raisnaix3 жыл бұрын
Perfect interpretation! Great vid!
@timothymcnerney3352 Жыл бұрын
Damn, you really nailed this one for me, 2 years after I saw it…brilliant, well done sir
@andresorm Жыл бұрын
Wow, you gave me an insight about the part of "the photo of her mom" that never came up to my mind, amazing
@insolencestar2 жыл бұрын
i love that the instagram aspect ratio changes to a movie aspect ratio when the character in the song talks about her real life.. we're seeing the real her beyond the cliches and jokes.. behind making us laugh at her stereotypes.. she's a real person with a really difficult life. she's projecting joy through her instagram and we make fun of her.. and at the end - she's engaged! building her own family..! she's "figuring out how to keep living without her.."
@rightonrivers5672 жыл бұрын
During the mom part when the screen gets wider it signifies that we see more about her and that nobody can be themselves on the internet. Also as the scene shrinks back into picture mode she starts talking about better things. So secretly she’s dying on the inside wow that was a mouthful
@SloanisSunny3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for really evaluating the song. It’s funny, when the special first came out and people started doing reactions to it, it was pretty revealing. So many people thought the mom post was Bo showing the woman ‘over sharing’-just another part of the joke. They revered Bo for his depth and meaning until this song came up and then it was all only laughs. They said the woman was shallow, over-sharing, and then shallow again. Which was funny, because like you said, the joke is more that she’s cliche-which is a funny joke and one that anyone can laugh at. But it isn’t a character flaw like her being self-centered or shallow, which is what so many people (mostly men) took away from the song. Just ‘cause she was posting typical things white woman like to post. So thank you for actually paying attention to the content, it comes through very well. It also can’t be said enough that he put a lot of effort into this song. And while he did that with the entire special, the amount of work put into it would not match a simple easy joke. I think his thoughts and ideas behind the song are deeper than we can really absorb and that’s why it’s one of my favorites.
@18JMI Жыл бұрын
Your reactions to Bo’s videos are the only ones that get it and I enjoy.
@dariajustdaria22923 жыл бұрын
You'd be surprised how many people didn't get the "there are real people behind cheesy posts" part. I've seen a lot of dudebros who behaved like they got a green light to mock women throughout the song, I've seen women feeling attacked...so thank you for being observant 😊 you interpreted it well!
@marioelburro14922 жыл бұрын
When you started singing near the end of the song, i was like "woah this guy has an amazing voice" 👏Thanks for breaking down the video, it actually opened my eyes up a bit
@martin77623 жыл бұрын
The "so what was that" got me
@pete44162 жыл бұрын
i always fall into tears after that middle part people could be sad inside even if they show a happy face so relatable
@XawwwXsugarX3 жыл бұрын
You nailed the analysis! After the bridge, the line "is this heaven" sounds less like "look at this dumb happy stuff" and more like "look at these simple things that are bringing people a little bit of joy while they deal with life's hardships just like the rest of us" (in my opinion, at least).
@stevepowell65032 жыл бұрын
I have never seen you before, but I subscribed just on the basis of this video. That was a really good reaction and interpretation. One note,normally it would annoy me when someone sings over a reaction video, but that was a spot on harmony. As an old guy, appreciate your voice and take care of it. I could have hit those notes 20 years ago, but, like with all things, that isn't forever.
@Miruzake2 жыл бұрын
You got it spot on. It may be all generic and easy to make fun of, but behind that are real people. It's emphasised through the camera ratio expanding to show the characters actual struggles, then the ratio regressed straight back to generic because they gotta keep posting that to keep the likes and shares coming in
@that1gal7237 ай бұрын
What a bonus that you naturally sang along with Bo at the end of the song. Re: the oddly specific thing regarding the lady who lost her mom, I think Bo was reminding us that not just white women - overshare on the Internet. Kinda strange, that section for me was a message I personally felt I could have shared, losing my mom exactly 10 years before this song was released. Just finding your page (again?) today. Love it!! I’ll be back to go Stan a lil. 😂🎉
@timmytrance822 жыл бұрын
Appreciate the take, man. I really think that while he's skewering this and poking fun of it - he also has a lot of empathy for the sincerity and heart that people put themselves out on the internet with
@bakedsims54782 жыл бұрын
Bo is a musical/comedic/photographic/philosophical genius
@plexus3 жыл бұрын
Damn, your harmonies at the end was on point. So is your interpretation.
@mfc13582 жыл бұрын
Hey man I actually really enjoyed your little harmony at the end, it was quite nice
@kletterle20 Жыл бұрын
The first time seeing this song in the special was such a rollercoaster for me. I've never gone from almost crying laughing to crying so fast. Bo has the incredible ability to make you feel so many different emotions throughout his specials, especially Inside.
@t.h.mcelroy65973 жыл бұрын
Bo's ability to bring out the honest heart and sad beauty of topics that he clearly finds comedic and silly is incredible. This is probably my favorite comedic song in the special, but the part about this concepted woman's mom is incredible and probably my favorite part of the song. And his ability to slide seamlessly back into the comedy is just phenomenal. Bo's a genius 💛
@umpatte03 жыл бұрын
Aspect ratio is an important part of the filming of the whole Inside special. I think the first images in this video are all what's standard in Instagram videos? (I don't use insta, so I'm not positive). I think the aspect is what you would get when you take selfies from, say, a cell phone. When it gets to the Mom section, you initially see the same aspect ratio, which shows it's still the usual Insta perspective. But when the Mom section is sung, the aspect opens up. You start to see more than what's just the Instragram perspective. You start to see more of the whole perspective. The Instagram perspective is very neat and tidy, but when you expand the aspect ratio, you start to see more of the stuff on the side of what's being presented to the world. You start to see more of the mess and clutter in the room which can represent how our lives aren't always perfectly orderly, but have some chaos that live outside of the public viewpoint. This is where you hear the lyrics about the Mom and you get to see more into the background story of the White Woman, and learn that everything in her live isn't the perfect appearance that you see on Insta. You know that the White Woman has real personal issues going on that you just don't see. And after the part about the mom is revealed, the aspect goes back to the Instagram view, where you go back to the fun stereotypical stuff you see in Instagram and resume the funny song. But even though we're back to the funny Instagram lyrics and imagery, that Mom section lingers in the back of your mind, and you start to look at the White Woman in a different perspective than possibly just thinking she's like every other White Woman on Instagram.
@Jessica-bo8rg3 жыл бұрын
As a white woman I laughed so hard at this 😋 but I absolutely love how Bo always points out the other side. This whole special (Inside) is just genius and it really hits you in the feels.
@sketchyartz51673 жыл бұрын
My god I LOVED those harmonies you put in at the end
@fernglade Жыл бұрын
I love how Bo was able to surprise even you, who is very aware of his ability to mix comedy with reality and write in some kind of twist, with this song. The first time I heard this, I wasn't particularly touched in the beginning. I thought it was a nice message, but it didn't really speak to me until I saw another person react to it and start crying, because it made him think of his little toddler daughter and everything he hopes for her and her future. Now I cry whenever it gets to that. Bo is a creative genius, and he has a very good understanding of people.
@Iron_Stigmata3 жыл бұрын
Your thumbnail for this video is very brave! 😂. I'm glad you got the actual meaningful message of the song.
@TZC23 жыл бұрын
Bo leaves this wide open for anyone to interpret it however they want and it's amazing. I love this man
@rovsea-37613 жыл бұрын
I was watching a video essay on Inside, which brought up an interview where Bo described his reaction to blogs created by young women, and he described them as simultaneously sincere, but also curated (or fake). There's a performative action to the instagram posts that he's talking about in the song, they're designed, staged, and hoping to get a specific reaction or convey one very specific thing, but the motivating factor behind them is *still sincere*. It goes back to your point about a real person being on the other side of the screen. Yes, it's a cliche, it's designed media, but the very act of designing the media by an individual instills some personal meaning, some sincerity, into it.
@KimDelGiorno Жыл бұрын
Brad just found you !!!! I'm so glad 😊😊😊😊💕💕💕😊😊😊😊
@CedanyTheAlaskan2 жыл бұрын
Me: Starts to weep Bo: "A GOOOOAT CHEEESE SAAALAAAD!!"