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The Real Meaning of “Girls Just Want to Have Fun”

admin February 22, 2011


Cyndi Lauper and Lou Albano, who played her dad in the 'Girls Just Want to Have Fun' video. The 1980s were just better.

Mine is a strange, obsessive-compulsive mind. A few weeks ago, out of nowhere, I got the urge to hear Cyndi Lauper’s “Girls Just Want to Have Fun.” A normal person would have gone to YouTube, had a listen and been done with it. Not me. I played the track 30 times, then began working my way through every cover version I could find, ranging from The Chipettes‘ take to Lauper’s own ‘94 remake titled “Hey Now” (I defy you to play the track and not immediately think of Hank Kingsley). This segued into researching the song’s history, which lead me to an astounding discovery: Cyndi Lauper neither wrote nor was the first artist to perform “Girls Just Want to Have Fun.” It was created by Robert Hazard, a guinea out of Philadelphia. And the song, when sung from a man’s point of view…well, it takes on a whole different meaning.



The defining feminist pop anthem of the 1980s is actually a song about a guy who spends so much time crushing loose vag that his parents begin to worry. Just take a look at the lyrics. It isn’t exactly cracking the Da Vinci Code.


Phone rings in the middle of the night.


My father says,
My boy, what do you want with your life?


Father, dear, you are the fortunate one.


Girls just want to have fun.



Can’t you picture it? A cramped, Philadelphia row house. Papa Wop, half asleep and livid that he’s been awakened at 3am on a work night by a booty call for his son, who’s 23, jobless and still living with his parents. He screams, “You lazy piece of shit, when will you stop messing around with these whores and get a job and a good woman?” Junior replies, “Pop, consider yourself lucky. Ma’s a classy woman. These girls today, they’re just a bunch of putanas. But, I must oblige them. Peace out.”


And how about verse two? Does it also further my theory that the song is about a world-class poonhound? You tell me.


Come home in the morning light.


My mother says, My boy, you got to start living right.


Don’t worry, Mother, dear, you’re still number one.


Girls just want to have fun.


These girls just want to have fun.



Why, yes. Yes it does. Mama Wop hasn’t slept a wink and has been pacing in the living room for hours because Junior has yet to come home. An hour after dawn, he finally struts in, disheveled, lips covered in more glaze than a Krispy Kreme and smelling like a can of Fancy Feast. “Junior, you are my son and I love you, but you disgust me,” she says with a sigh as she marches back to bed. Drunk on pussy, Junior laughs and shouts up the stairs “Ma, they’re nothing. I’ll always come back to you,” before walking to his room and collapsing on the mattress, awash in a stew of DNA. I rest my case.

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  2. Nyssa23 on February 22, 2011

    Papageorgiou, this is what keeps me coming back to you…your hard-hitting social commentary and scholarly insights.

    Also, we have similar taste in women. (Yes, I said taste. Ha ha ha.)

  3. MB on March 8, 2011

    Ahhhhh! This changes EVERYTHING! Now this is an “inconvenient truth.” Awesome post tho.

  4. Agagooga on April 20, 2011

    Thanks for the transcription

    I’d been intending to transcribe it for at least a year, but the sound quality was just too bad

    Could you help with the rest please?

  5. Ellen Mashburn on November 3, 2011

    Brown Eyed Girl – Van Morrison – Key Double Lyric of song:”Slipping and a-sliding….. with you, my brown-eyed girl” (1) “Brown eyed girl” is drug slang for brown heroin and the song is about the love for the drug.”slipping and a sliding” is a description of using a needle for injection….. But if you know how the song was first written and titled* by Morrision, then that isn’t likely; (2) Main/real meaning: The song is about a interracial relationship, a white guy making love to his black girlfriend. *Note: The original title was “Brown Skinned Girl”, but because the song was being released in the 1960s, Morrision’s new record company made him rewrite the song so radio stations wouldn’t have a problem with the song’s story of an interracial relationship (a big deal back then). The song ended up being banned by some stations anyway for the lyric “Making love in the green grass”.

  6. Vincent on October 5, 2012

    I am not having any luck finding lyrics for the Robert Hazard version of the song. Lauper clearly changed it.
    It’s still empowering though. It’s not just about him playing the field, the girls do too. It’s against monogamy and for open relationships. For instance:

    “Some guys take a beautiful girl
    And try to hide her away from the rest of the world
    All my girls are gonna walk in the sun
    Cause girls just want to have fun
    Yeah girls just want to have fun”

    I haven’t been able to figure out the last stanza entirely, but it changes to him talking to the girl, but still strongly against monogamy:

    “I know your love for him
    is deep as day is long
    I know you’ll never be ….. to do him wrong
    but when I knock on the door
    (you come out into the cold?)
    It wasn’t really important
    Cause girls they want to have fun
    Yeah girls just want to have fun”

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