Eat It

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the Humble Pie album, see Eat It (Humble Pie album).
"Eat It"
"Eat It" cover
Single by "Weird Al" Yankovic
from the album In 3-D
Released February 28, 1984
Format 7", 12"
Recorded December 13, 1983
Genre Comedy
Length 3:19
Label Scotti Brothers
Producer(s) "Weird Al" Yankovic
Chart positions
"Weird Al" Yankovic singles chronology
"I Love Rocky Road"
(from album "Weird Al" Yankovic)
(1983)
"Eat It"
(1984)
"King Of Suede"
(1984)

"Eat It" is a song by "Weird Al" Yankovic. It is a parody of the song "Beat It" by Michael Jackson. The single reached #1 in Australia, and until the October 21, 2006 issue of Billboard Magazine, it was his highest-charting US single on the Hot 100.

According to Yankovic, when he presented his lyrics to Jackson for permission for the parody, he didn't know what kind of reaction he'd get. But it turned out that Jackson has a sense of humor, and agreed to the parody.

The video for "Eat It" is remarkable in that it is a shot-for-shot remake of Jackson's video for "Beat It", except that in Yankovic's version, elements are parodied in various silly ways, like the gang members fighting over a rubber chicken. The last shot of the video, where Yankovic turns to the camera and his eyes have turned yellow and the frame freezes, is a parody of Jackson's epic "Thriller" video.

"Eat It" is the first song on the In 3-D album and the eighth song on disc 1 of Permanent Record: Al in the Box. A live medley performance of "Eat It" is located on "Weird Al" Yankovic Live! (DVD and VHS). The music video of "Eat It" is on "Weird Al" Yankovic: The Videos (DVD) and on The "Weird Al" Yankovic Video Library (VHS).

Contents

[edit] Track Listing

The following tracks are on the single:

  1. "Eat It" – 3:19
  2. "That Boy Could Dance" – 3:32

The promo single only contains "Eat It". The single was reissued in 1985 under the "Golden Oldies" label. It was reissued for a third time in 1993, also under the "Golden Oldies" label. Both reissues replaced "That Boy Could Dance" with "I Lost on Jeopardy".

[edit] Music video

This is a list of the parodied elements in the "Eat It" video, as compared to "Beat It".

  • Before the music starts, the first gang member in the diner slaps a second gang member to indicate it's time to go. In "Eat It", the second gang member has just taken a mouthful of coffee, and does an exaggerated spit-take when he gets slapped.
  • Not a joke, but notable: the diner's doors are in a completely different location in "Eat It" than they were in "Beat It", due to Yankovic reconstructing the sets rather than using the originals. In "Beat It", the two gang members walk out the exit. In "Eat It", they just disappear off-screen to the right, because the doors simply aren't there.
  • The gang members at the beginning of the video make different noises after clicking their fingers (in the original, the sounds are animal-like howls; in "Eat It", they're Curly Howard-like "woob woob" noises).
  • When the gang members are coming out of the manhole, Michael Winslow opens the sewer cover and comes out. As he does, he imitates the sound of the sewer cover being opened. Then an overweight gang member gets stuck and Winslow has to pull him out.
  • A gang member, played by bassist Steve Jay, grabs his girlfriend's hair and pulls her head off to kiss her, as opposed to just pulling her head back as in the original video.
  • The gang leader in the white jacket has a large yellow smiley face on the back, with "Have A Nice Day" embroidered beneath it, instead of a dragon in the original.
  • As the gang with the white-jacket leader walks, various things happen to their trousers. The first long shot of them reveals that they're only wearing boxers. Later, they are seen adjusting their flies on longer pants, suggesting that they'd forgotten to put their pants on for the earlier scene and were just putting them on now.
  • A picture (of Dr. Demento) behind Yankovic falls off the wall not long after he sits up. The room is also littered with half-eaten foodstuffs - a pizza on the bed, doughnuts on the nighttable, etc.
  • Instead of a person, as in the Jackson video, an alien, played by drummer Jon "Bermuda" Schwartz peers through the blinds.
  • In the original video, the second gang rode in the back of a pick-up truck. In "Eat It", the gang is waiting for a bus that never seems to arrive.
  • As the gang with the white-coat leader walks to where the meet is to be, the other gang is still waiting for the bus. In the original video, these were parallel scenes of the two gangs walking down separate alleys - here, the second alley is empty. Off camera, the second gang somehow manages to get to the fight scene on time anyway.
  • Guitarist Jim West is seen in one of the gangs playing a guitar. He plays so fast that his guitar later explodes (literally going up in smoke).
  • The gang leaders do not tie their hands up in rope, but rather hold a rubber chicken. Instead of switchblade knives, they have a switchblade fork and spoon.
  • Yankovic gives the gang leaders something to eat before they burst into dance.
  • When one of the gangs appears from a large garage door, one of the doors does not completely open. The gang crawls under it.
  • Throughout the video, Yankovic imititates Jackson's dancing. Yankovic's dancing is purposely much less coordinated than Jackson's:
    • When Yankovic dances out of his bedroom, he takes a bite out of a banana.
    • In the diner, Yankovic pushes the doors open just like Jackson does, but knocks someone over in the process. Yankovic also flails his arms wildly as he dances spasticly down the aisle, knocking over chairs as he goes, and hurls himself bodily through a gap in the countertop, instead of neatly sliding through as Jackson did.
    • During the pool hall scene, Yankovic fogs up the camera lens with his breath during a zoom-in shot to exaggerate Jackson's similar facial expressions.
    • When Yankovic is dancing among some boxes, he drops far more abruptly than Michael Jackson did.
    • One of the gang leaders elbows Yankovic as they dance. The dance scene is cut mercifully short after that, as it appears that none of these people can actually dance.
  • At the end of the video, Yankovic drops two antacids in a glass of water, referencing a stomachache from overeating.
  • Also at the end of the video, Yankovic is depicted with bulging yellow eyes, in reference to the ending sequence of Michael Jackson's "Thriller."

[edit] Trivia

  • These foods are mentioned in the song.

Cap'n Crunch
Raisin Bran
Egg
Chicken
Pie
Tuna casserole
Yogurt
SPAM
Banana

[edit] See also


“Weird Al” Yankovic
Band members
"Weird Al" YankovicJon "Bermuda" SchwartzSteve JayJim WestRubén Valtierra
Discography
Studio albums: "Weird Al" Yankovic (1983) • "Weird Al" Yankovic in 3-D (1984) • Dare to Be Stupid (1985) • Polka Party! (1986) • Even Worse (1988) • UHF (1989) • Off the Deep End (1992) • Alapalooza (1993) • Bad Hair Day (1996) • Running with Scissors (1999) • Poodle Hat (2003) • Straight Outta Lynwood (2006)
List of singles by "Weird Al" YankovicList of songs by "Weird Al" YankovicComplete discography
Filmography
Music videos: "Ricky" • "I Love Rocky Road" • "Eat It" • "I Lost On Jeopardy" • "This Is the Life" • "Like A Surgeon" • "Dare to Be Stupid" • "One More Minute" • "Living With A Hernia" • "Christmas at Ground Zero" • "Fat" • "UHF" • "Money For Nothing/Beverly Hillbillies" • "Smells Like Nirvana" • "You Don't Love Me Anymore" • "Jurassic Park" • "Bedrock Anthem" • "Headline News" • "Spy Hard" • "Amish Paradise" • "Gump" • "The Saga Begins" • "It's All About The Pentiums" • "Bob" • "Don't Download This Song" • "White & Nerdy"
Feature films, TV shows & Long form videos: The Compleat AlUHF"Weird Al" Yankovic Live! • "Al TV" • "The Weird Al Show"
Related articles
SinglesSongsSongs ParodiedDr. DementoParodistsParody musiciansComedy musicians
This box: view  talk  edit