What It's Like

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“What It's Like”
“What It's Like” cover
Single by Everlast
from the album Whitey Ford Sings the Blues
Released 1998
Format CD single
Recorded 1998
Genre Alternative rock
Alternative hip-hop
Blues
Length 5:03
Label Tommy Boy Records
Writer(s) Everlast

"What It's Like" is a song by Everlast. This song was recorded in 1998.

The song is typical of the style Everlast embraced after leaving hip-hop trio House of Pain, being a combination of rock, hip-hop and blues with a strong sense of characterisation and empathy towards the working-class protagonists.

Structurally, the song consists of three verses, a chorus and a bridge. The last line of the chorus was varied in accordance with the particular situation faced by the character in the preceding verse. The characters were:

  • A beggar (an old man at the liquor store beggin' for your change)
  • Mary, a pregnant girl considering an abortion (Mary got pregnant from a kid named Tom who said he was in love)
  • Max, a young man with violent friends and a drug problem (He liked to hang out late, he liked to get shit-faced and keep the pace with thugs)

Each character was presented in a sympathetic light as something of a victim of circumstance and as being an object of derision. Each verse ended with the line God forbid you ever had to walk a mile in his/her shoes and Cause then you really might know what it's like to, with the action varying depending on what the character has to do (sing the blues, have to choose, and have to lose, respectively).

At the end of the music video for the song, all of the characters (along with other people) are crowded around a window. Behind the window, an idyllic family is having an enjoyable dinner, oblivious to the less fortunate that are outside.

Screenshot from the music video.
Screenshot from the music video.

The song went to #1 on the Mainstream Rock Tracks for 1 week and #1 on the Modern Rock Tracks for 9 weeks. It also peaked at #13 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Everlast performed the song on Saturday Night Live in 1999, on the show hosted by James Van Der Beek.

[edit] In the media

Preceded by
"Never There" by Cake
Billboard Modern Rock Tracks number-one single
December 26, 1998 - February 20, 1999
Succeeded by
"Every Morning" by Sugar Ray
Preceded by
"Every Morning" by Sugar Ray
Billboard Modern Rock Tracks number-one single
February 27 - March 16, 1999
Succeeded by
"Every Morning" by Sugar Ray