- Blame Canada
"Blame Canada" is an
Academy Award nominated song from the film ' (byTrey Parker &Marc Shaiman ). In the song, the fictional parents ofSouth Park , led by Sheila Broflovski, decide to blameCanada for the trouble their children have been getting into since watching the Canadian-made fictional movie ' and imitating what they saw and heard in the movie. The parents refuse to accept that by not preventing their children from watching Terrance and Phillip in the first place, they are themselves to blame for their children's misbehavior (on the obvious grounds that they do not want to look like bad parents). Thus the South Park film satirizes scapegoating, and the reactions the creators of "South Park" expected to receive from the very movie the song was featured in.Fact|date=February 2007"Blame Canada" is also the title of a book about "South Park" written by Dr.
Toni Johnson-Woods , who is an Australian academic and expert in contemporarypopular culture . In it, South Park is examined as a modern popular culture icon and described ascarnivalesque within the theoretical framework ofMikhail Bakhtin .Reception
The song was nominated for the
Academy Award for Best Song (1999), creating controversy because all nominated songs are traditionally performed during the Oscar broadcast, but the song contained the word "fuck ", which is profanity and as such forbidden in prime time broadcasts. ComedianRobin Williams performed the song with chorus who gasped when the word was to be sung (Williams turned around at the crucial moment, and did not actually sing it). He included ribs atCeline Dion andBryan Adams (also famous Canadian singers and singers of Oscar nominated songs), partially taken from lyrics ofSheila Broflovski 's reprise of the song in "La Resistance".Mary Kay Bergman , the voice actress who sang the female parts in the song, committed suicide months before the performance, forcing the organizers to search for a replacement for her and Trey Parker, who did the male voices. Williams introduced the song by speaking withduct tape over his mouth so that his speech resembled that ofKenny McCormick , then tearing it off and finally sayingStan Marsh 's trademark line, "Oh my god! They killed Kenny!"There was also some concern about the fact the song referred to well-known Canadian singer
Anne Murray as a "bitch", but Murray indicated that she wasn't offended by the tongue-in-cheek lyric (Murray was even invited to sing the song herself on the Oscar telecast, but had to decline due to a prior commitment). When asked, the CanadianConsul General (and formerPrime Minister )Kim Campbell noted that she was not offended by the song since it was clearly a silly satirical piece not intended to insult her country. This is made clear in the final line of the song:"We must blame them and cause a fuss Before somebody thinks of blaming us!"
Coincidentally, the Canadian Oscar telecast in which Robin Williams sang the song included the premiere of the famous "
I Am Canadian " rant advertisement, which counters many perceived Canadian stereotypes.References
* The
Academy Award was instead awarded toPhil Collins ' song "You'll Be In My Heart " which was parodied on an episode ofSouth Park released the following year, "Timmy 2000 " as "You'll Be In Me"Bibliography
* cite book
last = Johnson-woods
first = Toni
authorlink = Toni Johnson-woods
year = 2007
title = Blame Canada
publisher = Continuum International Publishing Group
location= New York ISBN 978-0826417312*
ee also
*
Scapegoat
*Moral panic
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