99% Invisible - 389- Whomst Among Us Let the Dogs Out AGAIN
Episode Date: September 5, 2023All kinds of songs get stuck in your head. Famous pop tunes from when you were a kid, album cuts you've listened to over and over again. And then there's a category of memorable songs—the ones that ...we all just kind of know. Songs that somehow, without anyone’s permission, sneak their way into the collective unconscious and are now just lingering there for eternity. There’s one song that best exemplifies this phenomenon— "Who Let The Dogs Out" by the Baha Men.The story of how that song ended up stuck in all of our brains goes back decades and spans continents. It tells us something about inspiration, and how creativity spreads, and about whether an idea can ever really belong to just one person. Whomst Among Us Let the Dogs Out AGAIN
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is a re-broadcast of one of our favorite episodes of all time if you haven't heard
it before, you're in for a real treat, even if you have heard it before, you should listen
again because it is really great.
This is 99% invisible.
I'm Roman Mars.
On any given day, there are a few different kinds of songs rattling around in my head. Some were just classics, like literal classics.
And there were songs that are just in there that are my own favorite.
Songs that have carved out a space in my brain because I listen to them over and over and over.
I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
That's the song solidarity by the band's scream.
Oh, that song is so good.
And then there's this other category of memorable songs, the ones that we all just kind of
know.
Songs that somehow, without anyone's permission, snuck their way into our collective unconscious
and now are just lingering there for all eternity.
These songs aren't necessarily good, but they usually have some undeniably catchy quality
to them, a hook that worms its way into our brains and never leaves.
Like this one.
But I think there's one song in the last 25 years that exemplifies this phenomenon more
than any other.
It's a song that I think nearly every one of you will recognize.
It is not my favorite.
You did not ask for it, dear listener, but today's entire episode is devoted to who
let the dogs out.
Don't go.
I swear, it'll be good, because this is a story about how that song ended up stuck in
all of our brains, and it's actually really complicated and it goes back decades and
spans continents, and in the end, I think it tells us something important about inspiration and how creativity spreads, and about whether an idea can ever
really belong to just one person.
To tell the story, we have brought in the world's foremost expert on who let the dogs out.
Yeah, it's an undisputed title.
This is Ben Sisto. In about 10 years ago, Ben was reading the Wikipedia entry for the song, Who Let The Dogs
Out by the Bahamian.
And I noticed this like missing citation.
The Wikipedia entry said that the Bahamian didn't actually write the song, but a British
hairdresser named Keith had heard it on a trip to Carnival in Chinatown, in Tobago,
and that he passed it along to music producers.
But it was all very vague.
And that made Ben curious, so curious that he spent the next 10 years trying to figure
out the answer to what seems like a pretty straightforward question.
Who wrote Who Let The Dogs Out?
And I just kind of got this journalism bug,
so I just kept asking people who let the dogs out.
And here we are a decade later.
Our story begins in the year 2000,
but the release of that song by the Bob, then.
Who Let The Dogs Out?
I know exactly where I was the first time I heard this song.
I saw a game at Pac-Bow Park.
It was what it was called then to see the Giants play.
And before the game, the Bahamian came out, played this song.
I'd never heard it before.
Never heard of the Bahamian.
It might have been already a hit, but it seemed like everyone already knew it.
And even if you'd never heard it before, you kind of feel you know the song already.
Like it has a kind of like,
Jungian, Ertex kind of quality to it.
So who are the Bahamas?
So Bahamas are a really hard working,
multi-generational band from the Bahamas.
And they've been playing together in one form
or another since the 70s.
They started off as a group called High Voltage,
sort of playing resorts around the islands. And they've always been known for this style called
Junkanew, and that's the music associated with a street parade by the same name. You can think
big bright costumes, hundreds of steel drums, and cowbells, and goat skin drums, just like a big party. This is kind of like the scene that Baha Menn are part of.
You don't have to worry, or even say a story
when you hear this joke can do.
They were signed by a young Ann Argy, Steve Greenberg,
and he stayed with them across multiple labels
and break even releases, and Steve actually ends up being
the guy who convinces them
to record who let the dogs out.
The song had a really amazing hook.
And I say, one of these days I'm going to figure out how to do this, you know?
Do this song right, because there's something here.
And I just never forgot about the song.
I knew that the Bahamian were the people who I wanted to record the song.
They just made sense to me.
And in fact, I used to keep a diary and I wrote in my diary,
I'm going to record that song, who let the dogs out with the Bahamen and have a big hit all over
the world. I'm certain. This sounds kind of crazy on retrospect, but Bahamen were like,
no thanks. The song was already a hit in that area and they just didn't think it would be a good
look to cover something everybody already knew. I didn't want to do the song.
That's why I have to give Steve credit.
I'm not gonna ask you to do anything else, just one song and hey, as a Steve conversation
is finished, we will do the song.
I'm extremely happy that we did.
So why did their producer Steve care so much about the song? I think Steve's
just one of these guys who knows a hit when he hears it. Steve's also given for better
or worse the world. He's given the world acts like Hanson. And if there's a song that's
going to like play well and stadiums and Disney. Yeah, he just knows. So you said the song
was already hitting the Bahamas. Is that where he heard it originally, Steve?
Yeah, so Steve heard the song via Keith Wainwright,
who's like my original Wikipedia mystery guy.
And Steve Greenberg kind of instantly knew that there was like something special about the hook
and that kind of led to him deciding to pitch it to Baham.
Yeah.
So Steve, here's the song.
Likes this song.
Well, it doesn't really like the song,
but like the hook of the song.
So who wrote the hook?
To find that out, it's the late 90s.
So Steve went and as the one did in the late 90s,
asked Jeves to the website and said,
Jeves, who let the dogs out.
And this led Steve to a message board
where people were discussing their vacations
and music played at Carnival.
And this is where Steve first learns that this track
is cut by a guy named Anselm Douglas.
I'm still amazed that after 20 years,
it's still out there and playing a new kid's,
a new generation is growing up on it.
If you don't know the song,
who let it go so that you will living under a rock.
Think about it.
What did a song you know been out there for 20 years
and kids every child knows it?
So Douglass, it was actually already a known name
in the Bahamas music scene.
And he wanted to use his platform to write kind of a
feminist anthem, like a song that could be this rallying cry for women who are fed up with like the dogs, men behaving poorly on
the dance floor.
So do you want to, how we can take a listen?
Yeah, to his B.I.O? And everybody's having a ball. Yeah, buddy, B.I.O.
Until I'm under satin' in calling.
Oh, yeah, you B.I.O.
Then I'm going to be spawn to D.Col.
I have a man shout out,
Who let the dogs out?
Who, who, who, who, who,
Let the dogs out?
Who, who, who, who, who,
That is the song.
That's it.
That's it.
Wow.
I mean, that seems very clear.
So Anselm Douglas wrote that hook and that's the thing we think of when we think of this
song, we let the dogs out.
Although I love the arrangement, actually.
Yeah, I do too.
And, you know, Douglas is obviously more in the Soca, Calipso tradition and it's more like
a take off your shirt, take off your towel, whip it at a high BPM.
And the Baja Man is just like, Americanized hip hop influence.
But the Bahamas version retains this like, junk-a-new undertone, which was really important
for us crossover movements for the genre.
So when it comes to the question, who let the dogs out?
The answer is, Anselam Douglas.
Not quite.
Douglas wrote Doggy, but it really wasn't like his idea alone.
I never tool anyone.
Hey, I came up with the phrase, never did, because I didn't.
You know, I know that my brother-in-law was the one who said,
Hey, you've got to do this song.
You've got to do this song.
Oh, that's all right.
Now we'll do it.
You know, so he was the one who encouraged me to do it.
So I gave him that credit because he was the one who said,
do this song.
So Douglas' former brother-in-law was the host of this DJ
Mix Show, Rec Shop Radio out of Toronto.
And two of that shows producers were these guys, Patrick Stephenson and
LaRoy Williams, who, you know, they're like writing promos and jingles for it.
And one of those jingles contained the phrase, who let the dogs out, followed
by the sound of dogs barking and this is late 95
early 96. And the front of the office I used to go who let the dogs out and recently I then he go
and I go who let the dogs out of here the way I was going and then we brought that and patchy was
like put that all together that's how that vibration came out.
It was very hard to track these guys down, but after years of begging and calling and
DMing, they eventually produced these original recordings. Yeah, so that's really it. That's like the chorus right there. That's it. Wow. Yeah, I mean,
that's the hook. But this part kind of gets a little fuzzy because we'll want it to 20 years
ago, but people involved have different accounts. The long short is that Stephenson and Williams,
kind of on a handshake agreement, told Douglas,
like, okay, like, use this,
write a song, go down to Carnival,
but they didn't think it was gonna become a big hit,
and they didn't really know much about
like protecting publishing rights at the time.
We were so in love with doing the music and being creative,
but we were passionate about creating
and not taking care
of the business and the business bit us in the end.
Wow.
So they like sort of handshake deal, allowed Anselm Douglas to make this carnival song
of who let the dogs out called Doggy.
And then it's the one who gets licensed to the Bahamian to make who let the dogs out. So did Steffensen and Williams know anything about
the licensing to the Bahamian?
Not until they heard it on the radio.
Oh, that's rough.
Yeah, I mean, for a song so happy,
it's a very dark moment.
Oh my God, oh my God.
I'm going to a Jamaican restaurant
and hearing this record that we did, they can leave the hook and I'm hearing it on the radio. Oh yeah, oh my God. I'm going to a Jamaican restaurant and hearing this record that we did,
they can leave the hook and I'm hearing it on the radio.
Oh yeah, we wrote that and other people
are making so much money off this thing.
That was just like, yeah, it was hard after you found out
that someone else is making money off your idea.
So there's no official ruling,
but Douglas signs in Affidavid,
asserting that Stephenson and Williams
were the original authors of the hook,
that his work was based on, that gives Douglas the rights to move forward with his own version
and licensing. Okay, so let me try to get this all straight. So when it comes to who let the dogs out,
there's Steve and the Bahamas, who made the super popular version that most people know.
who made the super popular version that most people know. There's Anselam Douglas, who made the version
from the Bahamas called Doggy that was directly covered
and licensed by the Bahammen.
And then there's these DJs who had this brilliant innovation
of bearing a rhetorical question with the dogs barking.
And so that's incredibly complicated,
set of people and versions and rights and rights holders
and people fighting, it's just kind of stunning.
Well, actually, there's more.
So what is that?
So what is that? That is a remix of a song called Yura Dog, which is by a group called 20 Fingers featuring
the singer Gillette, and that came out in 94.
It was a follow-up single to their global kind of mega hit short dick man.
Do you remember that song?
No, it doesn't.
It doesn't leave immediately to mind.
Well, I mean, as I kind of just implied, short dick man was in fact huge and this big,
big global hit and yeah, people were paying attention to these artists and stuff coming
out of the Chicago scene. They were sort of like Douglas.
They wanted a way to like make a fun record that hit back against some of the like misogyny
that was going on in dance music at the time.
Many more who is part of the 20 fingers writing and production team
just felt very frustrated by all that.
So that's kind of where your dog comes from.
So this one was released in 1994. Does that mean that they are like the legally the authors of the song who let the dogs out?
So here we kind of need to maybe shift gears and talk about copyright for a sec.
Okay.
When so when you're considering a copyright infringement claim, there's two areas you really want to focus on.
And their access and similarity, the latter similarity is pretty straightforward.
It's like, do these things look or sound the same, but even if two things seem very similar,
which of course is subjective, the courts will recognize there's a finite number of ways
to arrange notes and words.
So you also have to consider this concept of access, which, in short,
means was the alleged infringer aware of the plaintiffs' work. Like, what's the line between
copying and coincidence? Okay. And so did the Canadian DJs... Did they hear this song by Gillette?
Stephenson and Williams claimed to have never heard of a song or anything about
20 fingers.
Based on Gillette's charting and billboard and stuff, I find that a little tough to believe,
but I have to take them at their word.
And so legally, does Gillette and 20 fingers have a case that their copyright had been
infringed?
I think they did, but at the time their label didn't want to pursue it.
There's a joke about copyright being the right to be held up in court until your bankrupt.
If you're like an indie label or something like that, you might not have the resources
and assets to sue a major label who can just kind of treat their legal expenses the same way one might like marketing costs
you know it's kind of all the same pot as long as you have like a net positive result.
Okay that makes sense. So I guess the DJs are the ones with the legal claim to the song because they weren't challenged by 20 fingers
but 20 fingers can say that they are the original authors of the song.
Not so fast for a minute. Here's Kansai that they are the original authors of the song.
Not so fast, Brumant.
That's one of these people.
This is Miami Boom Productions of Jacksonville, Florida with their song Who Let The Dogs Out,
which was written and recorded in 1992.
Goodness.
This duo is Brett Hammock and Joe Gonzalez.
They're stage names at the time, Be Nasty and Miami J, who are basically just like cool
teenagers and they want to write, produce,
and perform Miami-based music, that was it.
That was everything to them.
I actually had someone call me and they're like, hey, I heard you and Joe's song on the
radio, and I was like, no, you didn't.
And you're like, oh, yeah, I swear to you, who let the dogs out?
I just heard it on the radio.
We flipped it on and I'm just thinking somebody ripped off our track.
Wow.
So this is another set of people
completely blindsided by hearing the Bahamans
who let the dogs out on the radio.
Completely.
There's actually this kind of amazing story
of where they came up with the hook.
So these guys are, they're driving around Florida
and their parents, Chevy Astro Van,
they've taken the back seats out to make
room for extra speakers, and they're blasting this album, Kings of Base, by Base Patrol.
On that album, there's a song called Demand Scientist, and very, very low in the mix.
Like you can barely hear it if you're not looking for it.
There is a sample, and Bret and Joe didn't know what it said.
They're making up lyrics, at some point they just said
Who let the dogs out and kind of stuck?
I just started throwing my arms there. Oh
I'm driving he didn't take me as mocking him. He started doing it too
So we're jumping around hopping around singing this song we just made up and I looked at him
I said, you know, it's a pretty good hook. That sample is actually saying,
who's rocking this dog's house?
And it comes from pump up the party by Hassan.
We should take a listen to this one.
It's not exactly the same.
I would argue the Miami boom stuff is transformative enough
to be considered a new work,
but you can really hear the seeds of it. Boozahiddaah! Boozahiddaah!
Boozahiddaah!
Boozahiddaah!
Boozahiddaah!
Boozahiddaah!
Boozahiddaah!
Boozahiddaah!
Boozahiddaah!
Boozahiddaah!
Boozahiddaah!
Boozahiddaah!
Boozahiddaah!
Boozahiddaah!
Boozahiddaah!
Boozahiddaah!
So this is the thing that Miami Boom heard and turned it into their version of who let the dogs out.
Correct. You can see how it's a progenitor, but it does seem like the leap between the two versions
is greater than this one, as opposed to a lot of the other ones that we've heard today.
I would say this is more an instance of influence than copying.
Right. Okay, so Miami Boom wrote this song in 1992.
And was it released?
Did other people hear it?
Very few, and I only became aware of it because they had posted it to YouTube, which
isn't really great for copyright dating purposes, because it's like, who knows when it was
recorded.
But after kind of earning their trust over a couple of years and stuff, they eventually
produced a bunch of stuff like old flyers and one of the best things they produced with
these floppy disks that had the original vocals and samples from the recording session.
In that box of floppy, there was even the original receipt from the Kmart where they
bought them in Florida. So that was like one way of dating it.
Then I took those disks to a data preservation company
in the UK called Cryoflux,
who helped me identify the hardware
that would have been used.
And then I found a DJ who had this piece of hardware
and we opened them up, all the samples were there. Who let the dogs out?
Who do you let the days out?
Who let the dogs out?
And this DJ and producer, his name is Mishna,
he's also from Florida, knows a lot about Miami-Base,
and he kind of verified for me,
there was no way that this was fake.
Wow.
The Root!
The Root!
The Root!
First, we miss the Mishna fire! fake. Wow.
Once you determine the veracity of their song that it was out there in the world, does
Miami boom also feel like they're owed something like in terms of the copyright of who let
the dogs out?
They definitely do, and I think they also want credit given to their studio engineer, her name was Mama Do. When I think about the times making this music, it was phenomenal. It was the
best times of my life. The bottom line is I know where we believe it came from. There's three names
missing from that song and they're sitting right here. We should own that song. Yeah.
We should own that song. Yeah.
The story is fun because the song is kind of funny and light and it's a carnival song.
But there's a real sadness to this.
Yeah, it's difficult as an artist to think about people who aren't given proper attribution.
You know, like being cut out of a financial deal is one thing, but to be unknown when your
song is known globally, I think, hurts.
Yeah.
Okay, so I feel like I need to recap here a little bit.
So let's go through all the versions.
So first, here's the Bahamian playing the version that we all know.
Who let the dogs out?
Who let the dogs out?
Which they got from Anselm Douglas in the Bahamas.
Which he got from the Canadian radio DJs in the mid 90s.
But before them Gillette and 20 Fingers wrote this version in Chicago in 1994. Before that, Miami Boom wrote this in 1922. Yeah, Roman, I hate to keep doing this to you, but there is more.
So what is that?
Yeah.
After I started doing some research and getting a little pressed, this guy, John Michael Davis
from Duwajak, Michigan, learned about what I was doing and got in touch.
He told me this story that starts in 1990 in Duwajak.
Then it was sort of like a down and out place.
I had this nickname, the dog patch, and the town really needed like something to rally around.
So John tells me this like Rudy, like tale of high school football, where there's like
a Hail Mary pass and he just starts chanting, ooh, ooh, let the dogs out.
And then the whole stadium starts chanting it.
And then yeah, it just happens.
I should profess and say, that's how he chanting it. And then, yeah, it just happens. I should preface and say, that's how he remembers it.
Other people from this football team don't remember it that way.
Some people told me a guy named Keith the funky bus driver came up with it.
It's kind of a mystery, but what's important is this team blew up.
They won the state champion and this chant was their motto.
So, as part of the research, we visited Duajak,
and just like locals were like,
oh, what are you guys doing here?
Oh, we're researching who let the dogs out,
and people just start giving us VHS tapes
and like old silk screens,
and there's just all this stuff there
with who let the dogs out on it from 1990.
This team's coach was named Bernard Thomas,
and he was so beloved, they called him St. Bernard,
his players were like his dogs,
and it just made sense.
So is the assertion that they're making?
Is that this football chant
traveled down to Miami to inspire Miami boom.
I think they're not sure where it traveled to next or how, but get this. Joe from Miami boom
is originally from Michigan until he was like eight years old or something. So I plotted this
Google map of all the places the chant appeared in Michigan after the
Duodjak Sheftens had this great victory year.
In that map formed a near perfect circle
around Joe's hometown.
So I was like, are you kidding me?
So it just looked so clean.
So I got in touch with Joe and he verified for me
that he was there that summer visiting family
But he says he's got absolutely no memory of hearing the chat
But also when I pressed him with the evidence he wasn't like overly defensive about it
song you know call to let the dogs out what I can say is in 1992 I heard a song call to let the dogs out if you want to hear it from YouTube. Yeah well what we know is the other song I can ever say.
So as it turns out who let the dogs out, let the dogs out, let the some dogs loose. These are all
phrases that actually pop up here and there in regionals high school sports, right, long before someone recorded a song, before
Stevie B. So I'm scouring like all these old newspaper archives. The earliest I've been
able to find was from 1986, the Austin Reagan High School in Austin, my. Yeah, that's from a pep rally.
And it's just a weird, like, couple of seconds embedded in this much longer video, chronicling
the football team.
It's been on YouTube this whole time.
And what year is that?
1986. I mean, that sounds more like the last version,
you know, like the final version than even some of the ones in between. Roman, it's a wild ride.
Oh my goodness. Oh my goodness. So is this, and we finally reached the bedrock of who let the dogs out?
Do we actually know who let the dogs out at this point?
Well, this is as far back as I can go.
The title of the Bahamian song doesn't have a question mark in it, and after looking
into it all this time, I just have to accept that maybe it's not a question. It's probably unanswerable.
I mean, when you started this, did you think it would be this hard to determine who wrote a single song?
No way. I think if I had known I would not have done this.
But you know, it is a nice surprise and there's been a lot of nice surprises along the way.
I got to meet all these cool people and producers.
Maybe I would have done it again.
Yeah.
There are all these sort of like ways in which people borrow and they take in information.
They just, it comes process in their brains.
They maybe they spit it out as an homage or maybe they don't know where it comes from.
I mean, do you think about like how a song is passed between different people,
like, are some of them lined, or are none of them lined? I mean, like, where do you sort of stand
in everyone's story in this story? I don't think anybody in this story is lying. And I actually
think people have been pretty forthcoming and open to the notion that you can hear something
and it's just in there subconsciously
until it's ready to come out.
I think one of the big myths we tell ourselves about art
is that it's made by individuals
and that myth is sort of what the art market is like
propped up on.
I mean, from my own experience,
I vividly remember
of being 20 at art school. I had this idea to like, you know, wood shop class to make a box
and the box was going to have an audio tape that contained the sound of the box being made,
just like youthful conceptual daydream or whatever. And this was my idea until like years later, I learned that Robert Morris created a work in 1961 called
Bucks with the Sound of its Own Making.
So it's like, I don't know, did I get the idea from him?
Was it coincidence?
Was it copying?
Like, I just can't tell you.
And I think that's what's cool about all the dog stuff is like,
it's just about the very nature of art and life.
And I think that all these ideas apply to like every piece of creative work ever made.
Well, that's so cool.
Well, I really appreciate you taking us on this journey.
And, you know, maybe we'll never know the answer to who let the dogs out.
But the question is still worth asking.
Well, thanks for having me.
I'm surprised anytime people want to hear me talk about this.
But yeah, it was a lot of fun.
Thank you. It certainly surprised me to learn that who let the dogs out doesn't actually have a question
mark, but titles that are grammatically questions without actually being written as questions are surprisingly common. More on that after this.
So I'm in the studio with Chris Perube and you're actually in town.
I am. I'm in Oakland, California.
That's amazing. It's so good to have you here.
It's great to be here. And you helped us put together this episode on who let the dogs out. And one of the things that is
kind of remarkable that is hard to convey in a podcast is that there is a kind of quirk to the
title who let the dogs out. Yes. And that is, is that it isn't a question. It doesn't end in a question.
Who let the dogs out is just the end of it. There's no question mark at the end of it.
Yeah, it's a statement of fact, which is really strange.
And actually it reminded me when Ben was talking about the question mark. It reminded me of something that happened to be a year ago.
So I was hanging out with my friend Liz, who's a movie producer. We watch a lot of movies together.
And she's like, hey, have you seen Who Frame Roger Rabbit?
And I tried watching it as a kid.
It's really scary when you're a little kid
because they're very mean to the cartoons.
So I was like, you know what?
Yes, let's give it another try.
Let's put it on.
So she turns the movie on.
And then immediately, I'm like,
oh, there's something really weird about this movie.
And she's like, oh, that the humans and cartoons
are interacting, I'm like, no, that is fine. that is logically consistent to me. There is something else, like right
when the movie starts that really bothered me.
It starts with a very lovely kind of jazzy, low, blue note. And then the movie's titles
fade onto screen. It's literally the first visual of the film. And it's who framed Roger Rabbit, except instead of a question mark, it is phrased
with an exclamation point at the end.
So not who framed Roger Rabbit, but who framed Roger Rabbit?
So that's my friend Liz who I watched the movie with and she told me there's a very specific
reason for that.
And it's because the director of the movie, Robert Semeckis,
gave this interview where he said, there is a superstition in Hollywood that if you put
a question mark at the end of your title, the movie will bomb at the box office. And
when you think about it, there's lots of examples that back that up. So like, what's
eating Gilbert Grape is a statement of fact.
Statement, okay. What's love got to do with it with Tina Turner is also a statement.
And what's weird about it though is this is not a superstition that everyone follows. So
there's lots of examples where they don't use the question mark and there's lots of examples where
they do. Okay. Say for example, guess who's coming to dinner? I think it came out in 1967.
It's a huge, huge hit. It's got Fence or Tracy. It's got Sydney, Pau allier. It's guess who's coming to dinner, no question mark.
And I always took that as an example of a movie
that, okay, they followed the rule.
Contemporaneously, you have who's afraid of Virginia Woolf,
which is like Liz Taylor's huge, huge, huge,
come back, massive, massive, massive hit.
You have, they shoot horses, don't they,
starting Jane Fonda.
That's got a question mark.
That's a huge hit.
So, it's not precise.
So, you have movies like Guess Who's Coming to Dinner,
which do really well, but then you have all these other movies
at the same time, which we're also doing well.
Right.
So, Liz and I were like looking through all these titles
in history and trying to figure out like some pattern
or some rhyme or reason to why you put in a question mark.
And what we noticed is that there's lots of dramas that don't use question marks.
So what's even Gilbert Grape, you know, really serious movie, but comedies use them all
the time.
So, dude, where's my car?
That is a question.
A brother where art though.
That's a pretty goofy film.
That is also a question.
And Liz's theory about this is it's really,
the question mark really sets you up
for a certain kind of mood.
I would say sort of of zininess or whistfulness.
It's sort of like one or the other.
So you have what about Bob,
which is a question mark at the end,
because it's kind of like what about Bob?
And it makes you feel kind of like cheerful and goofy,
like you're waiting for the punchline,
you're waiting for the shoot or drop.
It's like being told the first half of a joke.
So ultimately, there's kind of no rhyme or reason to this.
Like there's lots of movies with question marks.
There's lots of movies with that question marks.
But what Liz explained to me, which is interesting,
is it really isn't keeping with how the movie industry
makes decisions that one thing does really well,
and then they kind of try to guess
if that thing is gonna do well.
What was the thing that did it?
Again.
So she says it's part of this bigger pattern
where people are trying to guess things in this industry
where success can sometimes feel totally random.
You can't fully predict how people are going to act.
And so people get very, very into these like,
nitty gritty sort of, you know, like,
oh, people don't like leads with blonde hair this year.
That remake flops were never gonna make remakes
for like 15 more years.
That musical did really well.
So now we're gonna do 30 more musicals.
I mean, like these kind of superstitions are just
trying to put light-nick in a bottle
and trying to like,
apply any kind of rhyme or reason
to what is ultimately like such a multi-variant
and shifting public mood that will put or not put money in your pocket, that you'll
latch onto stuff like question marks in the titles, which is like the equivalent of
wearing the same pair of shorts for every NCAA finals game you play in.
So ultimately, there's kind of no answer to the mystery,
except to say that all creativity and art is a mystery.
And what I think I take some kind of delight in is the potential that there's these like sweaty people like in suits like really vexed over whether or not
a question mark should go next to the title or not.
Absolutely. And like, what is this? What is this telling our audience? If we are telling them,
dude, where is my car? As a complete sentence. No. Oh, I kind of love it. So I guess I,
you know, there's so much of what we do on the show is to think about all the thought that goes into things.
And often the result is a beautiful object
or a functioning street or a curb cut or whatever.
And this is truly like deck chairs on the Titanic.
I mean, this is like,
this is truly, we don't know how this works.
We don't know what it's going on.
It's probably means nothing right
But we're gonna make all sorts of decisions. It's gonna be a meeting about it
It is a whole meeting to decide whether or not dude wears my car is a statement or a question
And if that is going to influence whether a teenager is gonna go see that movie. Oh, I love it
I love it. I love it. Okay.
Well, that's, you know, and mystery unsolved, but I'll now think of it whenever I see a poster
and, you know, like, and someone deciding that this is a declarative statement versus
an a query, which is awesome.
Cool.
Thanks, Chris.
Thanks for having me.
This episode of 99% of BizBot was produced by Ben Sisto and Chris Barube, edited by Emmett
Fitzgerald, mixed by Sri Fusif, music by Swan Rial, with barking from Carrot Rital Rial.
RIP Karen, you were a good boy.
There is a very cool documentary about Ben's investigation called Who Let The Dogs Out
and it goes into a bunch of detail we couldn't fit into this episode and it is delightful
to watch.
It's available now for rent or purchase on all the VOD platforms and as of right now,
September 2023, it's streaming on Peacock and Tubi.
Special thanks to Brent Hodgie Ali Kelly, and Jozzling Core
for providing audio from their movie for this episode.
Also thanks to Liz Watson for her story about who frame Roger
Rabbit and to Avery Troufflement, who saw the documentary
and insisted we do this story.
Kathy, too, is our executive producer,
Dillianne Hall, is our senior editor,
Cracolsted, is the digital director.
The rest of the team includes Jason Dillian, Martin Gonzales, Christopher Johnson,
Vivian Leigh, Bosch Mdahn, Jacob Moltenano Medina, Kelly Prime, Joe Rosenberg, and me Roman
Mars. The 99% invisible logo was created by Stefan Lawrence.
We are a part of the Stitcher and Sirius XM podcast family now headquartered six blocks north
in the Pandora building and beautiful.
Uptown, Oakland, California.
You can find links to other Stitcher shows I love as well as every past episode of 99
PI at 99pi.org.
Okay, Carrot. Light out. Good boy, Carrot. Say, Stitcher. Good. Say, Series XM. Good boy.
you