Showing posts with label David Lee Roth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Lee Roth. Show all posts

May 26, 2011

Van Halen, "(Oh) Pretty Woman"

Cowboys and Tarzans and Napoleon, Oh My! Van Halen, Pretty Woman 

THE VIDEO Van Halen, "(Oh) Pretty Woman," Diver Down, 1982, Warner Bros. SAMPLE LYRIC "Oh you look love-ly, as you could beee / are you lonely just, like meeeeeee? / [Growl]" 

THE VERDICT Van Halen's first video that isn't just performance taped for Musikladen or one of those kinds of shows, and zoinks, it's a total WTF-fest. I find a lot of people aren't familiar with it unless they're either a) serious David Lee Roth fans or b) serious viewers of Vh-1 classic, since MTV wouldn't air it back in the day. 

Considering that by their fourth album you'd assume Van Halen were making decent music video money, this low-budget weird-off makes no sense. Seriously, it's like the Manos, The Hands of Fate of music videos. 

Lord only knows where this was filmed. I'm guessing it's winter in California — there aren't leaves on the trees, but there are leaves on everything else, and it looks sunny but kinda cold, so we'll go with SoCal winter. The main action appears to take place in I don't even know what — a ghost town? A long-abandoned girl-scout camp? Seriously, I've got nothing here. 

But wait, I'm getting ahead of myself. I should note that in a bizarre touch, the video starts not just with the camera panning around this strange landscape, but also by establishing what we're watching (something you almost never see, except in much later high-end rap videos, where it's usually meant more to imitate movies). First we see "Van Halen" written in giant stone letters, a la Monty Python's Life of Brian logo. Then we get "in", done in Western-looking rope letters. Finally, "Pretty Woman," done tiki-style. These type treatments give us some idea of the narrative consistency to come. 

With the song's lengthy instrumental opening, we move through this weird empty town (or whatever it is) to find a very slim woman in a white dress, nylons, gold heels, and a white headband who has been bound by her hands between two posts. She's struggling, and being aggressively fondled by a pair of little men who appear to be clad in red long underwear. I want to say this is the weirdest part of the video, but honestly it's probably not. It is, however, the part that MTV was not down with at the time.

Van Halen, Pretty Woman 

We then go inside one of the shacks, where the little-person-bondage action is playing on a TV set that's covered in sort of security guard detritus (a bunch of empty coffee cups, what appears to be a plate of partially-eaten chicken). There's a little Quasimodo-type guy dressed in colorful clothing watching the TV from across the room. He jumps up and races toward the camera, and we see him bending in to twist knobs (as if we were behind the TV's screen). 

Some people claim it's David Lee Roth playing the hunchback, but I think that's just 'cause both make exaggerated faces. The hunchback sort of freaks out and spins across his little garbage-strewn room (which is illuminated by a bare light bulb — weird that it's this crap-looking but still has full-color surveillance capabilities, isn't it?). He climbs up a very rustic-looking ladder — apparently he has a better view of the lady being tortured from his second floor than he does from his TV. 

He runs back downstairs and — of course — gets on the phone. 'Cause yeah, even though based on the buildings' appearances this place wouldn't even have running water, they have electricity and phone service. Who ya gonna call? (Oh crap, now I'm gonna have the Ghostbusters theme stuck in my head all day. Whatever, I've brought it on myself.) 

Anyway, he calls Michael Anthony, who's elaborately dressed as a Samurai. This video is Michael Anthony's golden hour. Normally he kind of reminds me of George Costanza, but in this video he is almost reminiscent of Chris Pratt. And not of Chris Pratt as Che, the final nail in The O.C.'s coffin, but as Andy Dwyer, the swoon-worthy buffoon on my beloved Parks and Recreation

Anyway, Michael Anthony is standing next to a concrete wall and a bored-looking palomino horse, practicing swinging his sword around and yelling. He notices his phone — since of course, he also has a phone right there — and picks up, we assume talking to the hunchback. He puts on a hat and heads for the horse.

Van Halen, Pretty Woman 

Next Quasimodo calls Alex Van Halen. Wow. Now speaking of being in your magic hour. This video is definitely Alex's finest moment. He looks like some kind of sexy Jeff Goldblum here, glad in a tiger-skin loincloth. He's squatting on top of a zebra skin in a reed hut, surrounded by random bones and, naturally, a phone. He's also wearing aviator sunglasses and a big necklace. Alex picks up the phone, doesn't say anything, and just throws the phone aside, runs out of his hut, and gives a big Tarzan yell. 

We then cut to Eddie Van Halen, already on the phone. He's a cowboy, sitting beside the remains of a campfire. Eddie has on a Richie Sambora-style black, flat-top cowboy hat, a red bandanna, black vest, one black glove (why?), and what appear to be black leather pants. He finishes his call, throws his cigarette into the fire, and then his stunt double does some gun-twirling (I mean, if Ed were doing it himself, we'd probably see more than just his hand in the shot, right?). 

And speaking of stunt doubles — we then see "Michael Anthony" riding his horse. Later we also get shots of "Eddie Van Halen" riding his horse through some water — they don't mess around here, putting a bandanna over the rider's face. 

But we must set that aside for a moment, because, at last, David Lee Roth has entered the video. And of course, is Diamond Dave squatting outside in the dirt? Oh hell no. He is sitting at a long tale in a fancy, formal dining room, and he is dressed as (naturally) Napoleon Bonaparte. He's writing in a ledger with a feather pen when suddenly he pauses, and — we cut to Alex running through a field. 

Oh, but then we're back with Dave. He's making a studiedly expressionless face while on the phone. And his phone is red — he couldn't even have the same phone as the other guys. Dave stands up, and then we see him walking through his giant house, which has an elaborate checkerboard floor. 

Suddenly, it's night, and the lady in white is still battling the little people. One is now wearing sunglasses and a Native American-style feathered headdress, while the other has on a cape and a top hat. Eddie, Alex, and Michael simultaneously walk up to face this little scene. 

Their arrival greatly alarms the little people, who let the woman go momentarily. Somehow in the confusion of all these reaction shots, the woman is suddenly untied, though she doesn't run toward the band, she just kind of jumps around.

Van Halen, Pretty Woman 

Next thing you know, a white stretch limo comes roaring in through the fog (which has also mysteriously suddenly appeared). The Quasimodo guy (who was driving it?) runs around to open the passenger door, and of course, you know it's Dave. Too good for a plain phone, too good for a horse. I know I sound like I'm being harsh on DLR, but if you read this at all regularly, you know the man is like my patron saint, so I say these things in love. 

Dave looks at everyone else in the band, then sort of makes this lascivious chin jerk at the camera. Even keeping as much of a straight face as he does in this video, Dave still manages to throw off a slutty vibe. Then he turns, somewhat alarmed. 

Why? Because we've hit what may be the weirdest part of the video. The untied woman runs toward him, and as she does, she pulls off her hair and headband — apparently it was a wig. Not only that, but her face is ghastly pale, and her eyes appear sunken. She walks toward the camera, smirks, and — so wait, is she dead? Is she a zombie? No wait, on closer examination — is that a dude? WTF is up with this video? 

So, so many questions, and basically no answers. If I had to put where I liked this video, I'd still put it behind the late version Roy Orbison made (since obviously music videos weren't a thing in 1964), but well ahead of the Julia Roberts hooker-princess movie

P.S.: It was either this title or "Oh Bondage, Up Yours!", and quite frankly, I get enough hits from people searching for p*rn as it is.

Feb 10, 2011

David Lee Roth, "Just Like Paradise"

Paradise Lost David Lee Roth, Just Like Paradise 

THE VIDEO David Lee Roth, "Just Like Paradise", Skyscraper, 1988, Warner Bros. 

SAMPLE LYRIC "This must be just like livin' in paradise / just like para-di-ise! / and I don't wanna go ho-ooommme" 

THE VERDICT I know, I know — this video is coming close to the nadir of Roth-dom. But I've had this song in my head a lot lately. Why? Hmm, let's think. It's the middle of winter. Most of the country is covered in snow, with more snow being dumped on it all the time. And here I am, jogging outside in shorts, 'cause it's 76 degrees and sunny. No humidity, palm trees, warm breeze. Yes, this is just like living in paradise. And I actually do live here! 

The downside of this, of course, is that this song is pretty rough. I think that if this were Van Halen, they could've possibly pulled it off, but solo Diamond Dave not so much. Skyscraper is probably Roth's most straightforward, non-campy solo work, and it makes you realize that if Eddie Van Halen's not there, he probably needs to stick to the "ze-bop!" 

The video features a lot of footage of Dave rock climbing, which according to his autobiography is a big hobby of his. Actually, he seems to be pretty into extreme sports and travel in general — like half the photos in Crazy from the Heat (the book, not the album) are of him in places like Papua New Guinea doing outdoorsy stuff. 

The ads for this album also were all about the rock climbing. I have the April 1988 issue of Hit Parader (which features an amazing Dokken cover, btw) and the back cover is an ad for Skyscraper with the tag line "EXTREME ROCK" over a photo of Dave rock climbing that's clearly from when this video was shot. 

If only he had stayed super-successful a couple of years longer, Dave could've totally guested on MTV Sports. 'Memba that one? Come on, you know you thought Dan Cortese was cool at the time. 

Actually, no. Dan Cortese was never cool. He's got the Diamond Dave all-crazy-all-the-time personality, but none of the charm. Though I do give the guy credit for basically spoofing himself in the Seinfeld episode where Elaine dates him just for his looks, and he takes George and Kramer rock climbing. See?! Rock climbing!

David Lee Roth, Just Like Paradise 

In retrospect, I'm surprised Dave was never in any of MTV's "Rock N Jock" specials (I mean, Sammy Hagar was). Apparently MTV2 has a more recent series called Rock N Jock, but it's not the same thing as the old "Rock N Jock B-Ball Jam", trust. (Okay if you click that last link, I'm not sure which is the more amazing part — watching all those awkward white women sing along, or the four times that Marky Mark Mark Wahlberg pulls his pants all the way down and raps in his tightie-whities.) 

Or I mean look at the 1991 Rock N Jock softball game — Bret Michaels, Kip Winger, and Steven Adler all play in the game, and Steve Vai plays the national anthem! Wow, this is the most fun I've had with Youtube in a while. I know I'm preaching to the choir on this one, but dang I miss old MTV. 

Anyway. Besides Dave's penchant for extreme sports, what else gets indulged in this video? Uhh basically all of it. It's just Dave and friends playing on a stage with tons of colored lights. Dave changes outfits a bunch, but he's mostly wearing what I would describe as a sort of Tyrolean-inspired vest and chaps ensemble. 

Steve Vai is there, and he's definitely bringing the cheese. One thing I notice is I make fun of Steve Vai pretty regularly on here, but he's the one person who fits in that category whom I've never gotten a single email defending. Maybe everyone else finds his constant guitar-humping as unappealing as I do. Steve takes this to a new level in this video with his heart-shaped, three-necked guitar. 

For real, guys. I remember seeing this video as an eight-year-old and thinking that that was stupid. And that was when I was eight. Which was in the 80s. I mean if there was one time in history when someone such as a naive little child could have been persuaded Steve Vai's heart-shaped guitar was cool, that was it. Then again, considering I was watching David Lee Roth videos, I wasn't that naive I guess.

David Lee Roth, Just Like Paradise 

This video also features (just barely) a random bassist and a keyboardist, but Dave and Steve really run the show here. Gregg Bissonette is occasionally visible, wearing what appears to be a neon wetsuit, in keeping with the extreme sports theme. At one point he climbs on top of the drum kit, sort of the drummer equivalent of all the Steve Vai guitar antics. 

Every time you think this video is just them prancing around the stage and making faces at the camera, something completely ridiculous happens. Dave does some slow-mo jumps in silky pants. Everything goes into super-saturated colors, or skips frames, so the motion looks jerky and weird. So much crotch thrusting you can't believe it. 

And then next thing you know, the drum kit has lifted off the stage into the air. Dave is in an effing boxing ring flying over where the crowd would be, if one were there. He punches at the camera with his glittering, rhinestone-covered boxing gloves. OMG, now Dave's got a samurai sword. 

Seriously, it's like every idea they had, no matter how cheesy, got the green light for this one. They're synchronized dancing in dry ice fog. And this isn't half-assed "Hot for Teacher" dancing. You can tell Steve Vai is 100% down with the dancing. 

Just when you think it can't get any cheesier, Dave rides a flying surfboard off the stage. According to a photo caption in his autobio, the flying surfboard can be explained thusly: "It starts with tiny multi-colored chaser lights around your rear license plate. But eventually you graduate to this sort of thing." He actually brought the flying surfboard on tour with him. 

Once Dave has the headband on, you know it's all downhill from there. He can re-join Van Halen, or not re-join, but it's never going to be the same again. Something about that headband signifies that a bridge has been crossed. 

Maybe it's that he's admitting he's aging, and his hairline isn't what it used to be? Maybe it's that it seems to lead to more over-the-top costumery? I'm not sure. All I can say is that once the headband comes out, there's trouble in paradise.

Jun 24, 2010

David Lee Roth, "California Girls"

Katy Perry Is No Diamond Dave
David Lee Roth, California Girls
THE VIDEO David Lee Roth, "California Girls," Crazy from the Heat EP, 1985, Warner Bros.

Click here to watch this video NOW!

SAMPLE LYRIC "[I dig them girls!] I wish they all could be California / [Ow!] I wish they all could be California / I wish they all could be California girrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrls"

THE VERDICT As someone who has now lived in California for four years, and who -- while inevitably growing older -- still considers herself more or less a "girl," I've got to tell you, I freakin' hate this Katy Perry and Snoop Dogg "California Gurls" song. Every time I hear Perry doing the "oh-OH-oh-OH, oh-OH-oh-OH-oh-OHHHHH" part I want to scream. It's so overproduced, so calculated, so... inaccurate. I mean women out here don't even bother with the short-shorts. I've seen girls walking around the Gaslamp (which is like the Times Square of San Diego -- disgusting, touristy, overpriced, etc.) wearing just bikinis paired with high heels. Bear in mind now this is nowhere near the beach -- just near San Diego harbor, where you can't exactly swim, let alone tan -- and that the one downside to Cali (besides no Dunkin' Donuts -- don't even get me started on that) is it gets COLD here at night! Damn girls, put on some clothes!

Or since that's probably not going to happen, can we just turn off the Katy Perry, and turn on some David Lee Roth? I know he doesn't add much to this song besides all the "Ow!" and "Ze-bops!", the eye-rolling, and of course all the roundhouse kicks. But can we please acknowledge that the Beach Boys wrote a great song, and that Diamond Dave is an amazing showman? I think we can.

This video begins -- amazingly, not with David Lee Roth or any of his associates in fat suits -- but, of course, with a creepy and bizarre panoply of racial stereotypes. I know Dave fancies himself quite the comedian, but these are not his strengths, and there's a reason why these often get stripped off the beginning of his solo videos that doesn't have anything to do with the running time. But since obviously I'm a completist, we're going to talk about them here.

We kick off with a titular quote from "Thank Heaven for Little Girls," attributed to Maurice Chevalier who sings it in Gigi. DLR continues the lecherous tradition with the addition of "and some of the other sizes too." I wish they'd actually taken it more literally (it means "little" in the sense of age more than size), so we could have a whole conversation about David Lee Roth, cougar hunter, but alas.

Following the words "somewhere in California" (uhh, I'm going to go with Venice), we get a creepy version of the music, and an even creepier voiceover that I'm guessing is meant to evoke Rod Serling and the Twilight Zone: "Submitted for your approval, a busload of tourists on a road a travel agent never told them about, a road leading to the shadowy tip of nowhere, to the land of the different, the bizarre, the unexplainable. They thought they were headed for fun in the sun... not quite. These visitors are trying to go home again, but where they're headed is another dimension entirely, one of wonder and imagination. Fasten your seatbelts, signposts up ahead, as they take a turn into the Sunlight Zone."

David Lee Roth, California Girls

Who's on this journey? We've got old friends, and new friends and even a bear... okay, no bear. But get familiar, 'cause come "Yankee Rose," you're going to get to see a bunch of these all over again:

- Obviously, we've got Dave, looking extra-crazy. He's wearing a white tour bus operator's uniform that makes him look like an extra-spiffy ice cream truck driver, or maybe a milkman.
- We've got a fat lady dressed in loud, bright colors (even for 1985), heavily made up and smearing on more makeup as the bus travels (I should mention, everyone's bouncing up and down to emphasize that they're on a moving bus).
- Waldo from the "Hot for Teacher" video, looking extra-disgusting and messily eating a doughnut.
- Beginning the racial and ethnic stereotypes section of our tour bus, we've got a black couple. Both are dressed loudly, with sunglasses. The man is wearing a big hat and is picking his teeth while grinning broadly; the woman has on red sunglasses and is applying and reapplying bright red lipstick.
- A vaguely unhinged-looking plus-size lady, who appears to be dressed as a bride. She's gripping a large bouquet of fake flowers and looking around nervously.
- The next couple are either stereotypical Italians or Hispanics -- it's hard to tell with David Lee Roth videos. I'm going to go with Latinos here, since Dave usually stereotypes Italians as Mafiosos. This is a guy in a hairnet and mirrored glasses smoking a cigarillo, and a woman with big hair and sunglasses holding a baby (or something we're meant to think is a baby anyway).
- A shifty-looking Arab man, sweating profusely in a suit and a shemagh.
- A pair of nerdy Asian tourists, photographing everything. Real original, Dave. Sheesh.
- Okay this one I'm less sure about. A very tired-looking old white man who appears to be wearing some kind of costume ears.
- Next a more stereotyped white guy -- a fat bearded man in a flannel shirt and a cowboy hat sucking down a beer wrapped in a paper bag.
- Another sweaty, vaguely Arab guy. I think he's also wearing a keffiyeh but it's harder to tell.
- Last we get a vaguely Rick Moranis-looking, super-nervous white guy wearing big glasses and a sailor suit.

I guess they didn't trust Dave to actually drive the tour bus (one of those ones you ride around theme parks or country clubs, with just a little canopy roof and open sides) with the occupants in it, because when he pulls it to a stop on the boardwalk, there doesn't seem to be anyone in it (though we do get reaction shots of people looking nervous). The beach they're on is deserted and looks freezing, or maybe like it's early morning. Or like it's freezing and it's early in the morning.

As Dave's spangly shoes step out onto the pavement, the actual song finally starts (a minute and twenty seconds in to the video!). Everyone gets out of the bus, and heads for the beach, walking through fog and some weird stuff -- fallen-down fences (the kind they use to shore up dunes back east, but which I've never seen at a beach out here), caution signs, and white crosses buried in the sand as if it's a graveyard. The significance of this never becomes clear, so don't get excited, I don't have any insight for you.

David Lee Roth, California Girls

Finally, the meat of the video! Dave and babes interspersed with reaction shots of Dave and various of the passengers, all of which are shot with what seems like a little bit of a fisheye lens, to make their appearances a bit more exaggerated. The first four segments illustrate the lyrics of the first verse, which I love! We've got:

- East Coast Girls: Love this one! An Elizabeth Berkley-looking woman in a white bikini and sunglasses gyrates with a pole in front of a brick wall covered in graffiti. She's holding something unidentifiable -- a cheeseburger? A cheesesteak? Ungh I totally want a cheesburger now. Great. Dave's wearing all black on top -- leather jacket, scarf -- with pink and blue spandex on the bottom.

- Southern Girls: Wow. Dave is standing with a model in front of a vintage red truck, with a confederate flag hanging behind them. She's wearing a pink bikini, a big hat, frilly white socks with heels, and gloves while sipping a drink through a long straw. In an effort to outdo her, Dave is wearing boot, jeans with the thighs cut out of them, a red bandanna, an open jacket, a hat and gloves. He may or may not be wearing a holster as well. Okay, no, it's some kind of leather fanny pack.

- Midwest Farmers' Daughters: This one is my favorite! I don't care about the girl... I could watch David Lee Roth peel that ear of corn and make sexy faces all. day. LONG. I should make an animated gif of just that and put it on every part of the web ever. Mmm, when Diamond Dave has got it, he's got it. Also this is a great montage. Dave is wearing overalls and a bandanna, and standing in front of a woman with pigtails in a brown, fringed bikini who's sitting on top of some bales of hay. There's a wagon wheel, some milk jugs, and maybe a picnic table in front of her. And behind her, a fence, and a cow! They went to all that extra trouble with the Humane Society and whatnot just to put a cow in the video for two seconds. Awesome. Oh and the girl is chewing on a piece of straw. Point, Midwestern Girls.

- Northern Girls: For this one, Dave gets two girls, dressed identically in pale blue furry bikinis and earmuffs, with white bobbed wigs. Dave's added a winter hat to his wardrobe arsenal, and in addition to the backdrop of pine trees, it's fake snowing on them. At the beach.

For the chorus, Dave's tour guide suit has suddenly become bright orange, as he leads the tourists down the abandoned boardwalk (which also looks very windy). We then see Dave making more sexy faces over the shoulder of a brunette in sunglasses who looks like she's not feeling it at all. Don't hate lady, 1985 if a great vintage of David Lee Roth. The chest hair is thick and the head hair is hangin' on.

We then see two more obliging brunettes in bikinis posing for the sweaty Arab guy and the sailor guy before going to more illustrative vignettes. We see Dave in another all-orange outfit and zinc oxide next to a busty woman enthusiastically applying sunscreen to her friend. Next Dave is wearing stirrup pants (remember those?) and a big straw hat while drinking out of a pineapple. He's in a hammock outside a palapa-roof shack, with a female bodybuilder striking poses right next to him.

David Lee Roth, California Girls

Then we see Dave dancing around on the boardwalk while the tourists try to make do. Most of them are wandering around aimlessly, but some seem to have built a fire on the boardwalk. Also, how have I forgotten to mention the sunset shots of DLR? We keep also seeing shots of Dave singing and performing in his white outfit next to a palm tree, with a purple-y sunset behind him. Those I also love.

More Diamond Dave antics: In his orange tour guide outfit, Dave slides (as if on a conveyor belt, but probably just being pulled on some kind of cart) past all the women from the video, who are sitting on boxes and doing synchronized hand motions and kicks. He splashes around by a pier with two girls in sunglasses and one-piece bathing suits, while wearing a Body Glove wetsuit (dang, remember Body Glove? I mean, they're still around, but remember when Body Glove was really cool?). Then Dave lies on the sand, with women's legs doing synchronized kicks beside him. I wonder how much of this video he choreographed. Or how much of it was his idea, anyway.

We then get a genuinely bizarre meta-segment. Dave in his white tour outfit leads the tourists past an abandoned-looking gas station. Then the camera pulls back slightly, and we see it's a set -- there are lights, and a boom mic, etc. But then the camera pulls back further and we see DLR is filming this all himself, even though we can still see tour guide Dave dancing away in the distance. I'm going to guess that Dave did come up with this part himself.

Next comes the sort of breakdown part of the song, which is what most people remember from this video. Dave has shed the jacket and hat from his white suit, and is dancing down the boardwalk while the tourists watch. All of the women from the video are arrayed on either side, pretending to be mannequins, more or less, while Dave leaps and roundhouse kicks and "Ow!"s his way down the boardwalk. Personally I would find it hard to hold still while 1985 David Lee Roth was singing right next to my crotch, but that lady pulls it off. Unlike the lady he grabs sunglasses from, who at minimum moves her hand but who it kind of looks like gives him the finger!

Dave finally makes it all the way to the end, and jumps around looking ridiculous. It's finally really sunny now, so like I said either it was really cold because it was really overcast, or it was really early in the morning and the sun is just coming up. The camera pulls back away from him and down the boardwalk, past all the women posing. The tourists walk around amid all the women, and, oh great, the voiceover is back, as the camera continues to pull away.

"For you, the viewer, this is the end of the video. But for them, this is only the beginning." Of what? A bunch of them are hugging. A couple have fallen over. But wait, maybe they mean the beginning of getting to play ridiculous and often offensive characters in David Lee Roth videos. It may well be the beginning of that.

Oct 30, 2005

Van Halen, "Hot for Teacher"

School Daze
Van Halen, Hot for Teacher
THE VIDEO Van Halen, "Hot for Teacher," 1984, 1984, Warner Brothers

Click here to watch this video NOW!

SAMPLE LYRIC "I've got it baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaad / got it baaaaaaaaaaad / got it baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaad / I'm hot for teach-ah!"

EXCESSIVELY DETAILED DESCRIPTION A mom with a bad 80s perm and big dorky sunglasses leans down toward the camera (she's shot from beneath, a rooftop and a palm tree are silhouetted in the background). She's sort of "hmm"ing to herself and laughing in this weird way as we hear screams and gunshots in the background. The viewpoint switches to over her shoulder, and we see her straightening the hair of a mega-dorky kid wearing a button down shirt, a knit vest, a bowtie, and the same giant glasses. Her fingers smoothing down his hair make an excruciatingly loud sound.

Mom: Sweet, sweet Waldo…

The camera switches back to the previous angle, and the mom points a finger and says…

Mom: Now Waldo, I hope you find some friends this year.

She begins polishing his glasses with the hem of her shirt, while he speaks (as a voiceover -- his lips don't actually move. He has the voice of an adult nerd, not a kid.)

Waldo: Aw mom, ya know I'm not like other guys. I'm nervous and my socks are too loose.

The mom keeps sort of oohing and aahing to herself the whole time he's speaking, and as he puts his arms out to either side in desperation a school bus pulls up and he backs into its open door. The kids on the bus are all going absolutely apeshit and having a wild paper fight, and the driver -- Mr. David Lee Roth -- turns to face the camera, grinning maniacally. He points at Waldo and gestures backward, saying, "Siddown, Waldo!"

Waldo gets on the bus looking hella nervous, and as the kids on the bus all turn to see him they stop what they're doing and stare. The drums that begin the song are just getting loud as the bus door closes. As the bus pulls away, we see Waldo pressed up against its back window, screaming plaintively.

Van Halen, Hot for Teacher

The next shot is just amazing. I feel like it is a lost scene from some 80s teen movie (although these kids are a lot younger). The camera pans left to right across a row of kids sitting bored in a classroom. The first kid has spiky bleach blonde hair and is wearing tinted glasses with weird frames. Next up is an amazing looking girl with long dark hair wearing big sunglasses with what look like neon frames, then a pudgy boy with a Mohawk that's been shaped into a sort of fountain on top of his head which he's staring up at. The girl next to him, who's also kinda pudgy and has giant curly hair, is also looking at it.

We then get two boys wearing flannel shirts and bandannas tied around their foreheads, the one on the left (who's wearing sunglasses), gestures and whispers something to the other boy. They're followed by two amazing looking girls, both of whom look very bored and have on heavy makeup and giant, teased 80s hair. The one on the left just looks down, the one on the right (who's also wearing a studded leather cuff) is teasing her hair out even more. The last kid is, of course, a twitchy Waldo.

Next we get our first glimpses at the mini Van Halen boys. All are posed in a dark room with some smoky light filtering in. First we have Diamond Dave and Little Diamond Dave. Little Dave is sitting at a desk, and Dave is leaning against a ladder. We then see all the kids sitting in the classroom looking bored at their desks, from overhead. Then we meet Alex Van Halen and little Alex. Little Alex is standing with his arms crossed, and Alex is smoking and sitting in a backwards-turned chair. More bored kids.

Next is Michael Anthony and Little Michael. Little Michael is sitting on a stool, and Michael is standing behind one. They're the first pair that are dressed exactly the same, and both have their arms crossed. Little Michael pulls a toothpick out of his mouth and tosses it offscreen. More bored kids, but Little Van Halen are now clearly visible sitting in one of the middle rows of the classroom. Last, we have Eddie Van Halen and Little Eddie. Both are sitting on the edges of school desk and holding guitars.

As the intro to the song ends, we see Waldo wiping his brow, sitting at a desk in an empty classroom. He grips the edges of the desk and looks around, and we see him from a bunch of different angles. As DLR yells, "Ooh-ooh!" (the response to his question, "So what do you think the teacher's gonna look like this year?"), Little Van Halen jump out of their seats in enormous excitement.

Van Halen, Hot for Teacher

Suddenly we switch from black and white to color as a short-haired blonde wearing a blue string bikini, a tiara, heels, and a pink sash that reads "Miss Chemistry" jumps from behind a glittery silver curtain of streamers which has been hung from the ceiling at the front of the classroom (you can see the chalkboard behind it), with footlights visible in the foreground. She begins to parade across the stage carrying a little scepter (to go with the tiara, one supposes), and Little Eddie and Little Michael, having run to the front of the room, show a level of excitement that makes me feel a little uncomfortable.

Michael is onstage sitting on a stool announcing over a microphone (though he's just dressed in street clothes, nothing special) while Miss Chemistry trots around, and Little Dave gleefully throws handfuls of confetti into the air. Michael nearly falls off his stool following her with his eyes, and Little Michael makes an aside to Little Alex, who removes his sunglasses and whistles (honestly, these kids were not bad actors). The curtain is mostly gone now, so she's walking back and forth in front of the chalk board, which has random numbers written on it.

For "don't wanna be no uptown fool," we're back in black and white, and Dave is right in close to the camera on the right. Little Dave and a girl are visible sitting around in the background on the left. The camera pans from the ground up the legs of the same teacher from before, now dressed in heels, stockings, a short tight skirt, a wide belt, and a white buttondown shirt with a little tie. She's sort of leaning over a desk at the front of the room.

It then turns around and we see between the desks of Waldo and one of the cool girls, where in the next row Little Eddie and Little Michael are leaning against each other bored. Eddie jumps up from behind them, pushing their heads apart and singing "teacher needs to see me after scho-ool."

The camera then follows the teacher's butt and legs as she walks between the desks, and from the left Dave sings "but then my homework…," and then on the right, Little Dave mirrors him, singing "… was never quite like thi-i-is." The teacher leans against her desk at the front of the room, and Eddie is visible standing beside the blackboard.

Suddenly in color (and beneath a disco ball), Michael, Alex, and Eddie (left to right) begin doing a dance in orange tuxes and sunglasses, and Dave swings in on the right wearing the same outfit and singing and doing a more elaborate version of the same dance. Now as for me, I love this part of the video (clearly, because I love David Lee Roth), but for others, I understand how you could watch this and be like, "so that's why they kicked him out."

When the chorus ends, we're back in black and white and we next see Waldo from above getting his tray in a filthy cafeteria, with the real Van Halen sitting on some kind of elevated thing (possibly a salad bar) in the background. Waldo turns every which way with his tray, unsure where to go, when suddenly the camera faces Little Van Halen.

Little Michael leans in and says, "Hey, I heard you missed us," and Little Eddie says, "we're back." We then jump back to the shot of Waldo sitting nervous at the desk, then Little Alex leans way in, and, demonstrating, says, "I've got my pen-cilll." We see Waldo, then Little Dave, who now has on a big white hat and really bizarre 80s sunglasses, chimes in with, "gimme something to write on!" We briefly see all the kids sitting down in the cafeteria, but before we can do much a much less teacherly-looking woman with lots of eyeliner and teased bleach blonde hair, wearing a patterned, loose minidress type of thing, steps forward.

Van Halen, Hot for Teacher

And of course, as she tears it off, revealing half a blue bikini, a pink cropped tank top thing, and a blue sash that reads "Phys Ed," we're back in color, as all the kids jump up and a spotlight highlights the teacher. She dances around, swinging the dress over her head and tossing it into the crowd. We see her from above and underneath, then we see Dave very close to the camera on the left (wearing one of my favorite outfits of his, a bandanna and a bunch of bangle bracelets), and the stripper… uh, make that teacher, going nuts in the background with the very appreciative Little Van Halen crowded by her feet. We then randomly see Miss Chemistry again. Phys Ed is now on her knees, and Michael, now in the foreground, looks over his shoulder at the camera and sings "how did you know the golden ru-ule?"

Dave, in a brownish tuxedo, stands on the stage with the lights and silver curtain holding a pad and sings, "I think of all the education that I missed" then throws the pad off camera, grabbing Miss Chemistry for "but then my homework was never quite like thi-ii-iis." He dips her and smiles mischieviously at the camera. All the Van Halen boys then dance beneath the disco ball again for the chorus.

For the solo, we first see Little Eddie sitting at one end of a long library table holding a guitar (in black and white, p.s.). Eddie steps over him and walks down the length of the table while playing, stepping over books and papers and passing Little Michael and Little Alex about halfway and Little Dave toward the end, where he leans down and gives us mad guitar face. Ed then continues the solo on the silver curtain stage in a brown tux (in color, obviously), with the other three members of the band behind him. We finish the solo in B&W, as Ed then walks down the same library table again, this time with no one there till he reaches the end of the table and finds a very sweaty Waldo gripping the edges of the table and grimacing before two large, open books.

Next we see the members Van Halen and Little Van Halen sitting together in a cobweb-covered jail cell patrolled by a big-haired babe with a whip. Dave pops up in front holding an hourglass and says, "Aw man, I think the clock is slooow." The babe bares her teeth, and Little Dave pops up and says, "I don't feel tardy" before the babe pushes him back down again. We then see Waldo standing, super-sweaty, with a look of panic on his face, then Dave (with the jailer posing seductively behind him) yells, "class dis-missed!"

With much exuberance, we return to color as Little Van Halen burst out of the front doors of the school, followed by lots of other students. A banner over the door reads "graduation." They sort of high five each other as DLR pulls up in a …I have no idea what kind of car this would be, I'll be honest. Halfway between a like 1920s car and a hot rod (the engine is exposed). It's a yellow convertible with "Hot for Teacher" painted in red on the back and a little sign beside the license plate that says "VH." Dave puts out his hand to gesture them to get into the car, and he high-fives Little Dave, who sits behind him. They peel out and drive off.

Van Halen, Hot for Teacher

The video concludes with brief shots of each adult band member that turn into stills with words over the screen. Each tells us what the members of Van Halen have wound up doing with themselves.

First Alex, dressed as a doctor and adjusting a stethoscope around his neck (but still smoking), turns toward the camera, and we learn "ALEX WENT ON TO BECOME DR. VAN HALEN Gynecologist, Los Angeles, CA."

Michael faces off against a sumo wrestler, and as he gets ready to throw his opponent down we learn, "MICHAEL ANTHONY IS CURRENTLY A CHAMPION SUMO WRESTLER IN TOKYO, JAPAN."

Next we see Eddie sitting in front of a tv in a straitjackets while an orderly leads another patient by behind him and another one sits on a bed. As the camera focuses in on him, we can read that. "EDWARD VAN HALEN IS TEMPORARILY 'RELAXING' IN BELLEVUE MENTAL WARD AND MAKING PROGRESS."

Waldo, still tiny and possibly even still a kid, stands beside a super fancy car which has his name written on the spare tire (it's one of those cars where there's a spare on the running board). He's wearing a big fur jacket and takes off a wide-brimmed white hat. Three ZZ Top video-looking women stand arrayed about him, and it says, giving us a black and white inset picture of Waldo, "NO ONE'S REALLY SURE WHAT BECAME OF WALDO AFTER GRADUATION."

Last, we see Dave spinning a giant glittery wheel beneath a flashing sign that reads "20 BILLION JACKPOT" while a lady in a glittering black dress looks on and an Ernest-looking guy behind a music stand jumps up and down excitedly. Dave freaks out and jumps around excitedly, and the last thing we learn is that "DAVID LEE ROTH WENT TO HOLLYWOOD AND BECAME AMERICA'S FAVORITE T.V. GAME SHOW HOST." Not that far from the truth, honestly. The boys, in their tuxes, take a sort of bow, to much applause.

THE VERDICT Now, I sing this song karaoke a lot, and no one seems to agree on the lyrics. Have we "got it bad" or have we "got it made"? The world may never know. And what is that random interjection toward the beginning? Is it just DLR whooping with glee? Or is it, as many crappy lyrics sites would have it, "my butt!" Much confusion. Nevertheless, "Hot for Teacher" remains a pre-eminent sing-along song, and nothing, not even it's notorious connection to Varsity Blues can take that away from it. It still rocks.

In spite of the fact that I basically hate kids, I've got to admit that I'm a sucker for videos where random little kids play adult musicians. I can't think of many more examples than this one (except for a vague recollection of their being a video where the Notorious B.I.G. and Sean Puffy, among others, are played by kids). Possibly it's not the kid component at all, it's just the idea of getting to dress up as the members of Van Halen and do as they do. Clearly, the stylist on this video was a frickin' genius. The logic these kids' parents used in allowing them to participate in this video, slightly more fuzzy.

None the less, we must thank them, because without their showbiz moms and dads-style instincts we wouldn't have this video. I remember seeing this on Pop-Up Video (try to imagine how much I miss that show. Just try.), and I feel like the pop-ups dealt with that issue somewhat. Anyway, point is, a lot happens in this video, but I don't feel tremendously qualified to comment. Although really it's just that writing that crazy intense description took a hella long time, and now I'm kinda "Hot for Teacher"-ed out.

Apr 1, 2005

David Lee Roth, "Yankee Rose"

Gimme a Bottle of Anything, and a Glazed Doughnut
David Lee Roth, Yankee Rose
THE VIDEO David Lee Roth, "Yankee Rose," Eat 'Em and Smile, 1986, Warner Brothers

Click here to watch this video NOW!

SAMPLE LYRIC "Show me those / (bright lights!) / and those / (city lights!) / all right! / I'm talkin' bout a Yankee Rose"

EXCESSIVELY DETAILED DESCRIPTION And so the adventure begins! Okay, just kidding. But seriously, that's what it says when this video begins, and Diamond Dave indulges his penchant for theatre... of the bizarre. Following this text screen, the video begins with a shot of the entryway to a... well, I always think of it as a bodega, but I guess it's run by an Arab dude. Anyway. The walls are decorated with a painting of those sort of onion-top looking towers (I promise, this will get better). Otherwise, it's pretty much full of, you know, small grocery stuff. In the 80s there was a small grocery in the West 70s that totally looked just like this (I remember freaking out thinking that it was this grocery, but it's probably just a set in L.A. somewhere). Anyway. I'm not off to a strong start.

Pseudo-arabic sounding music plays as the door swings open. The first people to enter are a couple. The woman is wearing a wedding gown and is extremely pregnant, giving her the appearance of an obscene, lace encrusted parade float. The man has the build of Captain Lou Albano and is wearing a stained wifebeater, suspenders, and some sort of pants. She has long hair and frightening makeup, and she tosses her veil and bouquet around a bunch. He's balding but has shoulder-length hair and a heavy beard.

He picks up a basket as she begins throwing candy bars into it and berating him in heavily accented (Spanish, I think) English: "I cahn't beleeve eet okay, my cchhhhoneymoon night okay! I weeell probably only have tree or four more of dees in my whole entire lifetime! And chu, chu check me into dat dump your brothhhherr calls a motail!" He finally intervenes: "But Consuela, I gave him two dollars extra for the fantasy suite!" She mocks him: "Tooo bad hhhoney, tooo bad! Becos I veeell not sleep there so tonight you veell have to fantasize that you have a wife, okay?" And she pats him roughly on his paunch. He trails after her past the counter saying, "But Consuela, mi amor..." and we finally see the store's proprietor.

He's very skinny, with a greasy sort of pompadour thing, and he's smoking a cigarette and standing but resting one leg on the counter. He has on a dirty brown shirt knotted at the waist (the better for us to see the wifebeater and large gold medallion beneath) and gray pants. He leans forward, leering, and says, "Can I help you?" as another customer approaches.

This time it's a black woman wearing an outfit (shorts and some kind of bustier) made entirely of red, yellow, purple, and pink fake flowers. She also has on multiple neon wristbands, bright sunglasses with funky 80s frames, large green earrings, and bright makeup. Her hair is the ever popular teased on top and rat-tail in back, and she's swinging a straw bag as she approaches the counter, snapping gum and carrying with both hands a huge amount of the dark green Tic Tacs which she unceremoniously drops on the counter.

The clerk looks at her and says, "Oh! Breath meent!" opening a box and shoving several into his mouth. He leans toward her and says, "Our leeps, they are so close," while wiggling his eyebrows. She makes a horrified face and whips off her sunglasses, exclaiming. "Ewwwwwww-eeeee! Not if you was the last immigrant grocer on earth, honey" and puts her glasses back on and strides out of the store.

David Lee Roth, Yankee Rose

The grocer says something like "son of a biscuit, my ancestors spit on your haircut" and spits on the ground to his right. We then see the store from his point of view, and coming down the aisle toward him an immense woman screams in a Sam Kinison-like voice, causing him to become very alert: "Can you help me? My doctor says I have to take a laxative!" while swinging and knocking boxes off of the shelves. She's wearing green sunglasses, a silvery brocade housedress with a matching hat covered in bows, and some kind of furry shrug. She slides on the boxes she knocked down while she comes toward him.

He yells, "Not een my store you don't!" but just as quickly he is distracted by the arrival of a man with a teased, salt-and-pepper mullet wearing sunglasses, a plaid, pastel-colored jacket, khakis, and a pink shirt. Why is this man so distracting? Because on one hand he has an especially pneumatic blonde in a purple and pink bikini and on the other an equally absurd specimen wearing a white bikini bottom with an extremely highly cropped t-shirt on top. They've both got on headphones, sunglasses, and white heels.

The girls kind of bop along beside him as the man tells the clerk, who's making googly eyes at them, "Ooooh my friend, I always hang out with two of 'em 'cause it's better for conversation. See if there winds up bein' any, I don't have to be involved! Fuhgedaboutit." As he exits, he comments, "it's humid in here tonight, isn't it girls?" while adjusting his pants. On a side note, this man is Dave's real life business partner at the time, the other half of the Picasso Brothers.

The clerk stares adoringly after them resting his chin in his hand, when suddenly a spear comes down beside him. Uhoh! It's Dave, dressed in the makeup from the Eat 'Em and Smile album cover. He announces, "Give me a bottle of anything. (pause, look around) And a glazed doughnut. To GOOOOOOOOOOOOOO." (Sorry, trying to type the "to go" as echoing).

Now, this particular part, I must say I try to reference all the time and no one, but no one, gets it. I've never seen this video shown without this completely irrelevant prologue so... I guess everyone else just hasn't seen this video. But Beavis and Butthead watch it! Sigh... I just don't know.

Anyway, ninety-jillion words later, the video begins in earnest. But ohhh, lest we forget: this song actually opens with still more dialogue, as Dave talks to Steve Vai's guitar. It basically sounds like he's talking to Scooby Doo, only kind of digital sounding. Dave does a spread-eagle leap from the drum risers, and Steve's guitar says (loosely translated), "Ri Rave."

David Lee Roth, Yankee Rose

Dave says, "What?" as he strides across the stage in medallion-festooned chaps, an assless metallic leotard, and a purple spandex off-the-shoulder top. Steve's guitar says uhhh...something unintelligible (no, it's not "roar rooby racks"). But Dave leans toward the camera and says, "Wellll let me roll up to the sidewalk and take a look...Whoa! [Steve: "Ro!"] She is beautiful! [Steve: (wolf-whistle)] Ah'mmmmm talkin' about a Yankee Rose!" etc, etc, as the song finally begins.

During all of this, Dave has changed his spandex ensemble three times, first pairing the metallic leotard thing (which I can't figure out-it has a thong aspect to it, and it covers him entirely in front, but thong aside it's utterly backless) with yellow and black striped spandex, then pairing a different leotard thing with red and black pants. During this we do see Steve Vai, Billy Sheehan, and Gregg Bissonette (who's drumming standing up while wearing what look like post-op shades), but their outfits don't change.

The only other notable outfit in this vid is Steve Vai's. He's pairing white boots, magenta sequined pants, and a painted jacket worn with no shirt beneath, and his entire stage presence seems to be based around convincing the audience that at any moment he might go down on... his guitar. He's such a weirdo, I find. Anyway.

Steve makes the guitar "laugh" as Dave finds a novel use for a large, inflatable microphone (just try to guess what he does with it). Dave does a final flying kick and then starts dancing like crazy as he sings. He's wearing eyeliner in this video, which I hate on him, and his hair is a bit shorter than in the Van Halen days and has heavy bangs. Yes, I hate to say it, but this video is definitely the beginning of the Decline of Dave. It is a slippery slope from here to "Just Like Paradise."

Did I mention he's wearing little white gloves with this whole ensemble? He turns and shakes his black and yellow spandex-clad ass (bisected by the thong on that damn leotard) for the camera, creating a shot for VH1 to put in all of the montages they play right before the voiceover starts talking about how everything was about to end and "Smells Like Teen Spirit" was about to come out. If that doesn't put it in perspective for you, I don't know what will.

Anyway. Most of this video is performance, and though some shots show there being a crowd there, they don't try to convince us this is a real concert, and most of the time they definitely seem like they're just dancing around on a set with tons of colorful lights on it (a la Poison). However, unlike Poison, they don't seem effortlessly happy doing so. One gets the impression certain people were kind of, you know, waiting for the check to clear on this one. Dave goes through more costume changes than even I can keep track of, though they all consist of layering spandex in different ways (pants, leotard-thong-things, and off-the-shoulder crop tops) and include some or all of the following colors: turquoise, purple, yellow, black, pink, and more turquoise.

David Lee Roth, Yankee Rose

With the second verse, they start adding crowd noise into the song, which is kind of weird. Dave can't stop running, dancing, and kicking, nor can Steve or Billy stop swinging their guitars around and catching them (maybe they were trying to challenge Eric Brittingham for the world record?). The best moment of the video comes before the bridge, when Dave slides up the microphone all sexy and if I squint I can pretend he is not wearing all of that spandex and he's still in Van Halen and everything's still good in the world.

But no. During the bridge itself, everyone hams it up to the extreme. Gregg tosses his sticks in the air and (surprise) catches them again, Billy gets intimate with his bass while Dave lies down on the stage, and Steve Vai holds his guitar in one outstretched arm, staring at it like he's about to ...ugh, I don't even want to think about it. This only intensifies as we head into the solo. Anyone who doesn't get the whole guitar prowess as symbolic phallus thing has never seen Steve Vai play. As he reaches his frantic zenith, he repeatedly shoves the guitar between his spread legs. You know, when the video started I kind of wished I had those pants, but now I'm glad I don't. Anyway, shortly after, Dave wraps it up by kicking a large balloon, which bursts to reveal... lots of other balloons. Okay. As we fade out, Steve's still thrusting that guitar. Sigh.

THE VERDICT While, unfortunately for me, I said most of what I was going to say in my excessively detailed description, so yes, this will probably be mostly rehash. Let me say that I do indeed love this song. It's no "Runnin' with the Devil" or "Jamie's Crying" or even "Hot for Teacher," but it's still rather excellent. If one only heard the song, one's prognosis for Mr. Roth's career would have been rather excellent as well.

However, seeing the video, and the fact that a man who played such a crucial role in my psychosexual development (not only is he one of the hottest men ever, he's also my personal celebrity - we share the same birthday!!!) and who was at this point still in the prime of his life is already wearing makeup (and not in a Mötley Crüe pseudo-kabuki way) and falling victim to the whims of a demented stylist (who may be him himself) is just... well, it's a bit depressing. Especially when you consider that circa the same time, Van Hagar were putting out songs like "When It's Love" and "Dreams," both of which are great enough songs to penetrate my deep, deep loathing for Sammy Hagar.

I just feel bad for him! He's David Lee Roth, for pete's sake. He is the most endearing man ever. If you've never had the pleasure of reading Crazy from the Heat (his autobiography), I strongly suggest you pick it up. If you're looking for stories of out-and-out debauchery, it's no The Dirt, but if you just want insight into what DLR was thinking when he made decisions like this, what the constant kicking is all about, and, of course, what a tool Eddie Van Halen is (utterly destroying the little part of you that acknowledged both his hotness and his talent) this is the book for you. Geez, I'm sorry. This is reading like one of those especially strained Paula Abdul, "You took a risk. I'm really proud of you," assessments. And now, ashamed that I made an American Idol reference, I must quietly scurry out the door.