The Black Eyed Peas’ “My Humps” changed my outlook on life.

TODAY A FRIEND OF MINE sent me a spoof version of the Black Eyed Peas’ “My Humps.”

The parody by Peaches, called “My Dumps,” is pretty funny if your humor skews toward the scatological.

The Peaches song seems to be patterned after the Alanis Morisette version of “My Humps,” a slowed down, Tori Amos-style cover that brings the absurdity of the song into even crisper focus.

I remember hearing the original song for the first time. I used to drive around Louisville with my car radio on scan. My tape player was broken, almost everything on the radio was shit, and so I’d just let the scan function reveal the depths of the garbage out there in the world three seconds at a time, stopping if I heard a snippet of something interesting.

“My Humps” caught my attention. I heard Fergie’s repetitive insistence, “My hump. My hump. My hump. My hump. My hump. My hump. My hump. My lovely little lumps.” I stopped the scanning and let it play out. The lyrics were so stupid, I was sure it was some kind of a joke. The word “hump” as it applied to the female body only called up images of old crones with osteoporosis, and “lumps” in reference to breasts only made me think of self exam cards hanging in the shower and mastectomies.

“What the fuck,” I said out loud, alone in the car. The part where she says, “Check it out,” made me laugh an incredulous chirp. I waited for the DJ to cut in afterwards and say something about how funny it was, but the station went right into the next song.

I was energized in my disbelief. When I got home later that night, I said to my roommate Chad, “Have you heard that lump song? Is that shit real?”

He didn’t know what I was talking about.

I’d ask people, “Have you heard that lump song?” Most of my friends are not big on popular music. No one knew what I was talking about, and I almost started to think I must have imagined or dreamed the song.

Then one day, I was on my way to the movies with my friend John. He was one of the only people who could handle my radio scanning habit, and as we sailed into the theater parking lot in my Olds 88, I heard the Shasta commercial, “Ah-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha,” of the opening of the song.

“This is it! This is the lump song. Listen to this shit. I can’t believe it’s real,” I said.

“Turn that shit off,” he said.

“No, no, no. Listen. Is this real?”

John tolerated the song, unimpressed. He looked lethargic and bored. I was there with my head cocked and my eyes wide, as incredulous as I’d been the first time I heard it. I’d laugh once in a while. When the part where the guy goes, “I said hey, hey, hey, hey, let’s go,” came on I could barely contain myself.

“It can’t be real. It can’t be serious! Whatcha gonna do with all that breast? All that breast inside that shirt?”

“Who cares? It sucks,” John said.

We went into the movie.

Was this the moment that I became an adult? There were plenty of stupid songs that got airplay while I was growing up — songs that were vapid and silly — like “Pour Some Sugar on Me,” or “Abracadabra,” or “I’m Too Sexy.” Some of these were songs I hated, some I just didn’t pay much attention to, but none of them seemed to have the mixture of dead-seriousness and profound idiocy mixed with a hefty dose of braggadocio that delighted me about this song.

I had turned a corner. Something this dumb wasn’t something to get angry about. It was something to be examined, to be savored and enjoyed. It was a testament to the silliness of our times, to the depths of consumerism we had sunk to, to our culture’s complete lack of shame and self-examination as a whole. And I could laugh at it.

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About The Author

Kate Sedgwick

Editor-at-large, Kate Sedgwick, works from Buenos Aires where she organizes her live storytelling project, Second Story Buenos Aires. Read more about her than you might want to know at her blog YesThereIsSuchAThingAsAStupidQuestion.com, and follow her infrequent tweets @KateSedgwick.

  • http://twitter.com/flyingknuckle C. Noah Pelletier

    Laughing at you laughing about Fergie talking about her humps. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/veronicalinlogan Veronica Lin Logan-Williams

    I thought she said “my lovely lady lumps.  “

    • Anonymous

      Sometimes she does, and then she says, “my lovely little lump.”

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Joshua-Johnson/100001526442445 Joshua Johnson

    That’s all well and good Kate but what I really want to know is -

    What you gon’ do with all that ass?

    All that ass inside them jeans?

    • Anonymous

      I’m uh uh uh make you scream, make you scream, make you screeeeammm!

  • Candice Walsh

    I remember my dorm wallmate was this tiny little chick who was like a Fergie wanna-be. One night she went out and she kept her music playing, and this song was on repeat. All hours of the night. Over and over and over again. And I remember thinking, “Who is this preteen boy singing this song?” 

    But damn, I STILL dance to it. 

    • Anonymous

      Jesus, that sounds like the end of the world. :(

  • http://matadornetwork.com Carlo Alcos

    A rite of passage? “Listen to this song. Do you like it?” “No” “Congratulations. You are a woman.”

  • Rosie Hilder

    Oh wow. You didn’t mention yesterday My Dumps was a slow version. I was imagining some fast moving nappy aerobics. This is way better.

  • Debi_11

    I still love listening to and singing aloud to “Pour Some Sugar on Me.”  But I can now see my parents cringing every time it came on the radio in the car. 

  • Jonny Watson

    I do like the move from the double entendre early in the song to the straight-up bare-naked single entendre. From lumps and junk to ‘all them breasts’ and ‘all that ass’. But these questions are as relevant today as they’ve always been. That said, Fergie’s riposte is a lightning rod and rallying call for female empowerment the world over. Check it out.

  • http://tinyurl.com/affiliate-ressurection Janet Johnson

    I predicted this would happen years ago, and no one listened or they just mocked, saying it was impossible, but this is just the start. Come on folks, let’s give Black Eyed Peas’ “My Humps.” her props. Just to add insult to injury, The uncertain future of Ukraine’s illegal mines! It’s easy for people to comment, but I doubt if any or very very few are party to actual information, by doing so you comment out of sheer misinformation, hence many stated posts are just made out of pure tortured ignorance with no relativity to facts.

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