Britney Rejected! The All-American Rejects One-Up "Womanizer"
"Womanizer"
has undoubtedly been very, very good to Britney Spears. In October 2008,
her comeback single skyrocketed from #96 to #1 on the Hot 100 chart, amazingly
becoming her first #1 hit since 1999's "Baby One More Time" and
reviving a career that was all but over. Finally, with "Womanizer,"
Britney was doing well.
But you know who can do it better? The All-American Rejects.
This intrepid powerpop combo recently entered the Yahoo! Music/Pepsi Smash studios with just an arsenal of toy instruments and a simple, all-American dream: to one-up Britney and perform "Womanizer" their way. A better way. And they succeeded.
So this is the latest Pepsi Smash Cover Art created for
Yahoo!, and it's a totally compulsively watchable, totally viral insta-hit,
maybe the most ingenious Cover Art yet. Not only is frontman Tyson Ritter's Ted
Bundy-ish gaze at the camera lens even more bone-chillingly memorable than the creepy-crazy
glint in Britney's eyes on the infamous evening she shaved her head; not only has
AAR created "pirate rock" music using found objects (a cheapo plastic accordion, empty beer
bottles) that somehow sounds more sophisticated than the over-Autotuned, over-Protooled
pop fashioned by uberproducers in Britney's million-dollar studio; not only
are AAR's adlibbed shoutout to K-Fed and sly inclusion of the soundalike
Turtles classic "Happy Together" totally inspired...but it's a Cover
Art that makes previous awesome entries (like New Found Glory's version of Justin Timberlake's
"Cry Me A River" or Bowling For Soup's remake of Fergie's
"London Bridge") seem about as staid and serious as, say, Bob Dylan
covering Leonard Cohen.
And yes, it is better than Britney.


The whole point is to show how anyone can be dragged into the media nonsense with enough tech equipment and talent to make #1 hit songs.
Both songs are great , but talent preceeds
F'n relax... and don't forget to laugh at some point in your "life"
Sex appeal 0 ... sorry guys!
Britney barely has the creativity yet she is well positineted for pop culture by her music videos and private life.