Bad Romance: Fear of love, specifically loving someone so much you not only tolerate all the bad stuff, but you crave it.
Alejandro: Fear of men/commitment, what they might do to get her for themselves.
Monster: Fear of the realization that she might not be able to have a safe, secure relationship with a good guy for her need of an aggressive, philandering, dangerous guy with a huge **** ("I've never see one like that before . . .")
So Happy I Could Die: Fear of alcohol and its consequences; also, fear of pride/loving ones self so much. (Don't worry about anything, just drink and ********** and it'll be ok).
Speechless: Fear of death, specifically that of a loved one (she did write the song for her Daddy afterall, who was going through heart problems before Gaga finally convinced him to go through with the surgery). In particular, it's about a loved one who thinks he/she is invincible and who don't realize the affect his/her death might have on others.
Dance in the Dark: Fear of fame (though Gaga might dispute the idea that this album has anything to do with fame). More specifically, what affect the public eye has on the insecurities of someone (corruption, self-esteem, suicide, murder). Fear of being watched, or just wanting to have some privacy.
Telephone: Fear of commitment; just wanting to have fun and be free/sleep around--the dance is her freedom, but this freedom is always under attack.
Teeth: Superficially about oral sex; really, it's also about fear of the truth, and wanting to confront this truth no matter how harsh it might be.
Alejandro: Fear of men/commitment, what they might do to get her for themselves.
Monster: Fear of the realization that she might not be able to have a safe, secure relationship with a good guy for her need of an aggressive, philandering, dangerous guy with a huge **** ("I've never see one like that before . . .")
So Happy I Could Die: Fear of alcohol and its consequences; also, fear of pride/loving ones self so much. (Don't worry about anything, just drink and ********** and it'll be ok).
Speechless: Fear of death, specifically that of a loved one (she did write the song for her Daddy afterall, who was going through heart problems before Gaga finally convinced him to go through with the surgery). In particular, it's about a loved one who thinks he/she is invincible and who don't realize the affect his/her death might have on others.
Dance in the Dark: Fear of fame (though Gaga might dispute the idea that this album has anything to do with fame). More specifically, what affect the public eye has on the insecurities of someone (corruption, self-esteem, suicide, murder). Fear of being watched, or just wanting to have some privacy.
Telephone: Fear of commitment; just wanting to have fun and be free/sleep around--the dance is her freedom, but this freedom is always under attack.
Teeth: Superficially about oral sex; really, it's also about fear of the truth, and wanting to confront this truth no matter how harsh it might be.
link
"It’s adorable when Lady Gaga punches at the air with her fist like a sexy child. But then her face is heavy as a meat puppet or a painted mask with a card stuck between its teeth, a thing made by crude animation to flick the card from its lips onto the table or raise its arm in a wide arc and bring the card down while other holograms dance around it in fevered jerking motions..."
Check it out, and sign up while you're at it:
link
Ga ga!
Not since Madonna squeezed into her conical corset has the music world produced such an experimental fashion icon. With the emphasis being on 'mental'
Everything about Lady GaGa is big - hair, personality, sunglasses and, yes, pants. It's no wonder Just Dance became an instant anthem, followed by the equally catchy Poker Face and Paparazzi.
Super-talanted
GaGa - aka Stefani Germanotta was playing the piano by ear from the age of four and writes all her own songs. This year she has sold 20 million digital singles!
And our March 15 fabulous magazine cover star has earned the seal of approval from Madge, who says GaGa ''has that 'it' factor '.
We can't wait to see what she's got in store for 2010....
In the documentary “Inside the Outside” which is out on MTV in the USA, Lady Gaga tells a story about a sad part of her life:
As you will see in the video below, she tells about how a group of boys from her school picked her up and threw her in the trash on the street while a bunch of other girls sat around and watched
She tells also, how she held back the tears because she didn't want to seem weak in front of everyone. Later, she told no one, not even her parents.
See her tell the rest of the story in the video below. Honestly, it is pretty sad. However it does have a happy ending which is that Lady Gaga is now an amazing super star, and those other kids who bullied her years ago are probably regretting treating her so darn bad!
I WILL POST THE VIDEO......NOW