By Nick DeRiso
Mark, late last week, said he didn't get the whole guilty-pleasure thing.
Excuse me, as the ageless line in Blazing Saddles" once went, while I whip this out: Escape," a Rubert Holmes tripe that includes the helpful addendum (as if any fool, ahem, who knows all the words, cough, could forget): The Pina Colada Song.
I know. I shouldn't like this. The reasons are many: The silly premise, that passive-aggressively lazy beat, its easy cynicism.
It's true, he was nobody's poet.
Then it comes on the radio.
You have to hate this song, I keep telling myself. The reasons, as I say, are many:
BECAUSE I've never bought the idea that this dude's wife, upon hearing that he also placed an ad looking for anonymous love, and snuck out to meet this person at a local dive, would simply sigh and say: Aw, it's you." Not unless a certain pejorative involving making love to your own mom followed.
BECAUSE it's subtitled the Pina Colada Song," for goodness sakes.
BECAUSE Mystery Science Theater 3000 had a point: How come neither spouse knew about this deep-seated longing for fadish umbrella drinks? What, would they always panic and order Manhattans or something?"
BECAUSE every time I think I've wrenched myself free of Holmes' undead hit, it shows up again on my TV. (Note to self: Be ready to fast forward during Shrek, Bewitched, The Shield, Dirty Work, the Taco Bell commercial with the cockatoo, The Sweetest Thing, Detroit Rock City, How Stella Got Her Groove Back, Tommy Boy, American Splendor and Mars Attacks!, among many others.)
BECAUSE Rupert Holmes, who recorded the vocal for this eventual decade-ending charttopper on the first take, reportedly doesn't even like pina coladas, for goodness sakes.
BECAUSE doing it in the dunes at the capeat midnight, or any other timeis probably kind of scratchy.
BECAUSE that Super Bowl commercial from a few years back with this song and Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger seems kind of creepy now, after that thing involving the girl and the bar, and all.
BECAUSE I'm not believing that anyone would agree to meet up for a blind date with a stranger from the personals at any of the O'Malley's I've ever been to. If you're looking for a beer-soaked pool table, and maybe a fight, you go to a place called O'Malley's.
BECAUSE this song actually went to No. 1 again in the first month of 1980, supplanting the appropriately named Please Don't Go," by K.C. and the Sunshine Band. I know, as Holmes sings, that it sounds kind of meanbut seriously, K.C., please don't go.
BECAUSE Holmes actually argued with record executives over releasing the song at all. He wanted to go with the mawkishly annoying Him" from the same album, Partners in Crime. (Yes, we were just that close to avoiding the whole thing.) Of course, the success of Escape" (Holmes' first and, so far, only No. 1 hit) meant that Him" would later go to No. 6, despite its similarly laughable implausibility. This time, Holmes has a cuckold becoming thoughtfully pensiverather than furniture-smashingly violentafter noticing another man's cigarettes on the nightstand.
BECAUSE guys who look like that are supposed to design my computer software, not make my hit songs.
BECAUSE guitarist Dean Bailenseemingly doomed to play the same aneurysm-inducing riff, over and over and over and overis then given a chance to solo. So, he plays a different aneurysm-inducing lick. You guessed it, over and over.
BECAUSE nobody ever likes getting caught in the rain. I mean, c'mon.
BECAUSE now I've got myself singing the damn thing again.
I shouldn't like it.
But I do.
Mark, late last week, said he didn't get the whole guilty-pleasure thing.
Excuse me, as the ageless line in Blazing Saddles" once went, while I whip this out: Escape," a Rubert Holmes tripe that includes the helpful addendum (as if any fool, ahem, who knows all the words, cough, could forget): The Pina Colada Song.
I know. I shouldn't like this. The reasons are many: The silly premise, that passive-aggressively lazy beat, its easy cynicism.
It's true, he was nobody's poet.
Then it comes on the radio.
You have to hate this song, I keep telling myself. The reasons, as I say, are many:
BECAUSE I've never bought the idea that this dude's wife, upon hearing that he also placed an ad looking for anonymous love, and snuck out to meet this person at a local dive, would simply sigh and say: Aw, it's you." Not unless a certain pejorative involving making love to your own mom followed.
BECAUSE it's subtitled the Pina Colada Song," for goodness sakes.
BECAUSE Mystery Science Theater 3000 had a point: How come neither spouse knew about this deep-seated longing for fadish umbrella drinks? What, would they always panic and order Manhattans or something?"
BECAUSE every time I think I've wrenched myself free of Holmes' undead hit, it shows up again on my TV. (Note to self: Be ready to fast forward during Shrek, Bewitched, The Shield, Dirty Work, the Taco Bell commercial with the cockatoo, The Sweetest Thing, Detroit Rock City, How Stella Got Her Groove Back, Tommy Boy, American Splendor and Mars Attacks!, among many others.)
BECAUSE Rupert Holmes, who recorded the vocal for this eventual decade-ending charttopper on the first take, reportedly doesn't even like pina coladas, for goodness sakes.
BECAUSE doing it in the dunes at the capeat midnight, or any other timeis probably kind of scratchy.
BECAUSE that Super Bowl commercial from a few years back with this song and Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger seems kind of creepy now, after that thing involving the girl and the bar, and all.
BECAUSE I'm not believing that anyone would agree to meet up for a blind date with a stranger from the personals at any of the O'Malley's I've ever been to. If you're looking for a beer-soaked pool table, and maybe a fight, you go to a place called O'Malley's.
BECAUSE this song actually went to No. 1 again in the first month of 1980, supplanting the appropriately named Please Don't Go," by K.C. and the Sunshine Band. I know, as Holmes sings, that it sounds kind of meanbut seriously, K.C., please don't go.
BECAUSE Holmes actually argued with record executives over releasing the song at all. He wanted to go with the mawkishly annoying Him" from the same album, Partners in Crime. (Yes, we were just that close to avoiding the whole thing.) Of course, the success of Escape" (Holmes' first and, so far, only No. 1 hit) meant that Him" would later go to No. 6, despite its similarly laughable implausibility. This time, Holmes has a cuckold becoming thoughtfully pensiverather than furniture-smashingly violentafter noticing another man's cigarettes on the nightstand.
BECAUSE guys who look like that are supposed to design my computer software, not make my hit songs.
BECAUSE guitarist Dean Bailenseemingly doomed to play the same aneurysm-inducing riff, over and over and over and overis then given a chance to solo. So, he plays a different aneurysm-inducing lick. You guessed it, over and over.
BECAUSE nobody ever likes getting caught in the rain. I mean, c'mon.
BECAUSE now I've got myself singing the damn thing again.
I shouldn't like it.
But I do.





