The official music video of "We The People" made it's grand entrance onto the various on-line video sites yesterday. As of this writing it's already been watched over 390 times. The play counts are usually not kept updated and so by the time I post this blog entry the video could well have been watched over 400 times. The picture of Ray here is from the mid 1970's and it's been in my on-line collection of Ray Stevens pictures for several months. "We The People" debuted as an on-line single during the last part of November and a music video soon followed.
I had the video uploaded here but it was too big!! My blog entry isn't really meant to be the official gateway to the music video since the visitors here can visit You Tube and search for the video themselves. This blog entry is simply for promoting the video's existence and it's release. So, visit You Tube and search "Ray Stevens + We The People" and it should be one of the first results that shows up. The music video is also on his Facebook, My Space, and Twitter pages.
I think the song is very funny...not that it's funny in a "ha ha" way as a lot of his songs are. This time around it's funny in a "wow, I never thought of that before" kind of way. Of course, this feeling will mostly come from those who've not really been paying attention to the health care battle and perhaps don't even realize that there's a bill being bandied around in Congress which has the potential to dramatically change the way that health care is handled. I predict that the music video will appear later on in 2010 as part of a DVD release of some kind, as a bonus music video, unless it's going to remain as an on-line exclusive. I also predict, as I did in my other blog entry about the song, that those who are in agreement with what's billed as 'Obama Care' are likely to speak badly of Ray and this song. It comes with the territory if one sings something that's topical in nature about a subject matter that's clearly controversial and divisive.
Although I just wrote that it comes with the territory, it's also highly unfair at the same time, though. An artist, this case Ray Stevens, will always run the risk of getting the attention of people who don't even really know or care who "Ray Stevens" is, and off these people will go with one insult or personal attack after the other about an artist they barely know. All of it rooted in the simple fact that "someone doesn't like Obama's visions".
Believe it or not, one doesn't have to believe in Obama's visions if you stand on opposing sides politically. A lot of people for eight years didn't like Bush's visions and their criticisms were heard loud and clear but Obama's critics are usually labeled as "closet racists", "ignorant individuals", or "angry mobs". Funny, though, Bush's critics weren't labeled as such. They were instead referred to as "concerned Americans", "dissenting Americans", and "a war-weary nation".
Isn't it interesting that Obama's critics don't get the same level of positive coverage and haven't yet been called "concerned Americans" by the media? If anything, the media and the spin from the media on the Obama critics is that they are "paranoid Americans" instead of the more accurate "concerned Americans". I think the Bush critics were far more paranoid, than concerned, if truth be known.
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