Hello all!! I spent most of Friday writing about the new Ray Stevens comedy album on several online sites. I mean that I was writing commentary and replying to people on various social media sites concerning Ray's album and his songs, etc. I left some comments on Ray's Facebook page. His page over there and this blog page is where the bulk of my commentary about Ray is posted. Now, for most of Friday, the music video of "Hoochie Coochie Dancer" was kept available through an embed on People magazine's webpage. It wasn't posted on YouTube for a general audience to see until several hours ago...and once it became available to a general audience the unique views began to add up. As of this writing the unique views of the new music video is already over 1,000. The specific unique view total is 1,171 and I suspect the majority of those unique views were accumulated within the last couple of hours once the video became publicly visible on YouTube rather than as an exclusive on the People magazine webpage. In the video you'll see a fortune teller and her crystal ball...she also reads special cards. Ray's carnival buddies are with him throughout most of the video. Someone on Facebook identified one of the men as Ben Surrat, Ray's album engineer and production assistant of Ray's CabaRay Nashville television series. In addition to all of those people there's the dancer herself and later on a policeman shows up.
The thumbnail image that they chose to use for the YouTube cover tells just one part of the story and the fun of the video. The point of the video isn't to hammer any sort of opinion or require deep, emotional reflection. It's simply an escapist music video filled with silliness and deliberate hamming for the camera. The album has it's share of gentle comedy like what you see and hear in the music video but there's also pointed social commentary and other forms of comedy sprinkled throughout the album. "Hoochie Coochie Dancer" is escapist, gentle comedy.
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