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The World is Yours Come election time, a revolutionary will take office. Prepare yourself. (This is nothing against (More) Come election time, a revolutionary will take office. Prepare yourself. (This is nothing against Clinton, just a mock on how much people adore Obama).
Lyrics:
Intro:
I'm restless, lying in my bed, cause I just can't sleep with my thoughts unsaid, I've been looking for someone to raise the bar, I need a man who'll be my shining star, But just this night I saw that glow, I walked the streets with love in tow, And I spread the word that I found the answer, Mr. Obama cured my cancer, I walked outside and smelled the flowers, Man, that smile has so much power, Yeah, I believe in change and I want the war to cease, But I can't hold back when he's in that one piece, When the phone rings loud at 3 a.m., I hope Obama picks up again, Gandhi or Jesus? You tell me, the next messiah will set us free, You know it will be Mr. O to the B, Obama
Chorus 1:
On top of the world, yes we can, the next revolution has just began, We believe in change, something needs to switch, As Tracy Morgan said black is the new b****, Clinton is the appetizer people don't endorse, Celebs surely know Obama's the main course, When he comes to campaign, we all know his fate, On top of the world 2008
Verse 1:
I wonder what will happen, I wonder if it will, I hope are next prez ain't H to the Ill, It's not how she's bad, but it's how he's great, Obama's like Moses in a basket on the banks, Wake up in the night cold sweat and drama, Who you gonna call? Gonna call Obama, there's no better name than the name Barack, How long till he's prez? Come on, tick tock, Obama is everywhere he's always on the news, Where is Mrs. Clinton, what's her excuse? As he sits in his throne, sheltered from the rain, Looks up at his people, looks down on McCain, The media calls it the amazing race, I know who will win, I can see it in his face, All of his hopes are close in range, He wants to do better, you know it's gonna change
Chorus 2:
On top of the world, there's one word on our lips , he'll be here for years you can't shake him from your hips, The man's never mocked for he's got that magic touch and he's cooler than Snoop Dogg in Starsky and Hutch, Our sights are set high, but there's no better match, I'll pick up some Elmer's so we'll always be attached, In my dreams I'm in the white house and with you I procreate, And you know it won't be long before you own that estate
Verse 2:
Your heart is earnest, but your body so loose, so uninhibited I wish you put it to use, In The Audacity of Hope, you're higher than a priest, but not like Pastor Wright, he's vain to say the least, I know you'll win New York McCain faults in his endeavor, You're perfect all around, in interviews you're always clever, You've been living in Chicago so I got this one wish, You be mozzarella, I'll be your deep dish, Will.i.am sang, Obama girl did it later, but my love for you's just absurd like Ralph Nader, Never have we had a candidate so conformed, I get so excited about you my pants warm, And it's not in a weird way cause my brothers do it too: Tom Hanks, Jamie Foxx, and most of all David Wu, We'll be gettin' health care and economy so stella, That's why you deserve a song from my band, Barackapella
Breakdown
When you get upset, I'll sing you Lionel Richie, I'll be there to scratch you when your back gets itchy, If you ever need to hide, I'll pick you up I'm limba', If you ever need your pride, I'll lift you up like Simba, And I pray my wish comes true, My man, It's time you take this land
Chorus 3:
On top of the world, your presence is needed, We're restless and we really need our illness treated, Gas prices are rising and Bush is looking to his dad, Now we want a prez who spells correctly in his ads, I'm a betting man and I bet you will rise from your bed in the White House to the people's eyes, The world is yours and I'm convinced this is fate, You'll be makin' history 2008
Chorus 1 (Less)
THE GRADUATE ANNE BANCROFT 1967 (RIP BY ENORME72) THE GRADUATE ANN BANCROFT 1967 (RIP BY ENORME72)
Mrs. Robinson dies at age 73
By Jerry Tallmer
(More) THE GRADUATE ANN BANCROFT 1967 (RIP BY ENORME72)
Mrs. Robinson dies at age 73
By Jerry Tallmer
There are only six of us left on this earth who remember a movie called "Don't Bother to Knock." It was released in 1952 -- script by Daniel Taradash and Charlotte Armstrong (from her novel), direction by Roy Ward Baker -- and it was the flick in which Marilyn Monroe, as a sub-psychotic baby sitter, gave the best performance of her life, or, if you like, second best to what she did in "The Misfits."
"Don't Bother to Knock" is set in a New York hotel, where a husband and wife from squaresville need somebody to keep an eye for a few hours on their young daughter, Bunny, while they, the hicks, attend a banquet of some sort. A slightly off-center hotel elevator operator (Elisha Cook, Jr.) has just the answer, his teenage niece, Nell — and they go for it!
Nell of course is quite a bit farther off center. After fingering all the perfume and soaps and jewelry in the place, she stares out the window at a man in another room of the same hotel. On the house phone they strike up a conversation. He (Richard Widmark) is an airline pilot who has just had a fight with his girlfriend, the thrush -- the cabaret singer -- in the bar and lounge downstairs.
This glamorous young woman is played by an actress who in that year must have been 20 years old (Monroe was 25) and in the very first of some 65 motion pictures she was in from 1952 to 2002. Her name was Anne Bancroft. At the end of the picture, when the baby sitter is being escorted off the premises, Monroe looks at Widmark and Bancroft, who have reunited, and murmurs, with wonder: "People who love one another."
In 1952, Bancroft's performance would have been six years before "Two for the Seesaw" on Broadway, which is where her fire and talent and sexuality first hit most of us between the eyes; would have been seven years before "The Miracle Worker" on Broadway, which deepened and strengthened the foregoing; ten years before the movie of "The Miracle Worker"; and 15 years before the film that forever more would imprint her upon the world as Mrs. Robinson, sneering seducer of a kid who will fumble his way out of bed with her and into bed with her daughter.
But before "The Graduate" -- three years before "The Graduate" -- there was a movie that those six of us left on earth who saw this one, too, will surely never forget. I first saw it that summer of '64 in London -- at a screening also attended, as it happens, by Eli Walach and Anne Jackson, which complicates things for people who say "Anne Jackson" when they mean "Anne Bancroft," or "Anne Bancroft" when they mean "Anne Jackson."
"The Pumpkin Eater," script by Harold Pinter from the novel by Penelope Mortimer, direction by Jack Clayton -- is set mostly in London, and it is in fact smack in the middle of Harrods department store in the middle of London that Jo Armitage (Bancroft), simply gorgeous in a big side-of-the-head picture hat, has a full-blown nervous breakdown because her husband Jake (Peter Finch, the one and only) is carrying on with the reckless, nerveless young Philpott (Maggie Smith, the other and only) while she, Jo, gives tender loving birth to child after child after child.
The moment in Harrods is almost topped by Bancroft's throwing a cup of coffee or tea or soup or something all over the obnoxious businessman (James Mason) who's trying to move in on Peter Finch's lost ground. If you need one more big talent, it's Sir Cedrick Hardwicke as Bancroft's father.
In 1994 she was nominated for an Emmy for her TV performance as the 99-year-old heroine of Allan Gurganus's "Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All." Gurganus was on the set daily in a small part. "She was fantastic, totally professional," he says. "With the energy of a 26-year-old" -- though she was then 63. "Everybody, even the extras, felt easy talking with her. She bought tremendous stature to the role, and obviously had read all 800 pages of the book."
Each of us has our own Anne Bancroft. The Pumpkin Eater's was mine and will remain mine. William Gibson, who wrote "Two for the Seesaw" and "The Miracle Worker" and "The Seesaw Log," that 1959 memoir about, among other things, how Broadway newcomer Bancroft held her own against the royal aloofness of Henry Fonda, probably has two or three Bancrofts in his head, or more.
Anna Louisa Maria Italiano was born in the Bronx on September 17, 1931. She died on June 6, 2005, in Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York City. Mel Brooks has lost a star, and so have we. (Less)
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