

Gangnam Style might be about style, yes, and the area in Seoul where people with it go, but it's also a lot about death, and a lot about life, too.I Dont Ever Want to See You Again Lyrics by Uncle Sam as requested. It's harder to see where Psy's Gangnam Style plays with the concepts of time, space, the brief glimmer of life that lives inside all of us, and the clanging metal sound of the abyss, but it does: essentially every shot of the Gangnam Style video – from a child breakdancing on a beach to Psy killing two dancers with a controlled explosion – is an extended analogy for what waits for us all after the sun sets, with Psy as God and the Devil both. See You Again does have the most overt references to death and life thereafter: it closes, as Furious 7 does, with Vin Diesel and Paul Walker engaged in some sort of purgatorial death race, where the road splinters and Walker roars smoothly off into the sunset, and Vin Diesel stays here, corporeal and gruff, driving cars and doing double-agent missions for Charlize Theron whose villainous layer in a radar-proof aeroplane, and everyone watching at that exact moment shuts the laptop lid when their mum comes in and goes "I'M NOT CRYING, YOU'RE CRYING". And if you don't believe me, literally search Facebook for " Paul Walker memorial", to find the next nearest 16-Saxo caravan of #respectful #lads, sombrely convoying down the M1 absolutely blasting out Wiz. Charlie Puth, because it is the only commercially produced sort-of-about-cars songs made since Jump In My Car. His initial exposure came through the viral success of his song videos uploaded to YouTube.

And all of those lads love Fast & Furious, and they all #love and #respect Paul Walker RIP, and they all love the song See You Again by Wiz Khalifa feat. an American singer, songwriter, and record producer. Thing about See You Again is that half the views are from legitimate, actual people, and the other half are from those lads in car gangs who go around every single provincial town in England and open their doors on the big roundabout every Friday and Saturday and always talk about lowering their car another half-centimetre and are constantly looking in actual print catalogues for new valves and lighting systems to put underneath them, always prising their car's badges off with a screwdriver and smoothing the holes out with polyfilla, basically constantly either talking about fingering or purple glow paint. Released 11 September 1964 on Columbia (EMI) (catalog no. CAN U ABSOLUTELY BLAST IT OUT OF A SUBWOOFER SYSTEM IN A FIESTA I Dont Want to See You Again / I Would Buy, a Single by Peter and Gordon.
