| Let me tell y’all what it’s like
|
| Watching Idol on a Friday night
|
| In a house built safe and sound
|
| On Indian burial grounds
|
| Sham on
|
| We drive our cars everyday
|
| To and from work both ways
|
| So we make just enough to pay
|
| To drive our cars to work each day
|
| Hey, hey
|
| We’re rockin' the suburbs
|
| Around the block just one more time
|
| We’re rockin' the suburbs
|
| 'Cause I can’t tell which house is mine
|
| We’re rockin' the suburbs
|
| We part the shades and face the facts
|
| They’ve got better-lookin' fescue
|
| Right across the cul-de-sac
|
| Hot real-estate rising stars
|
| Get-rich-quick seminars
|
| Soap opera magazines
|
| Forty-thousand-watt nativity scenes
|
| Don’t freak about the smoke alarm
|
| Mom left the TV dinner on
|
| We’re rockin' the suburbs
|
| From Family Feuds to Chevy Chase
|
| We’re rockin' the suburbs
|
| Numb the muscles in our face
|
| We’re rockin' the suburbs
|
| We feed the dog and mow the lawn
|
| Watching Mommy bounce the checks
|
| While Daddy juggles credit cards
|
| «Hi! |
| Sorry to bother you. |
| The name’s Bill; |
| I live just across the street.
|
| Yeah, that’s right just over there — no, no. |
| Not that house, The one next to
|
| it with the extra flower bed?
|
| Oh, and here’s all your papers from the last few days. |
| They were just piling up
|
| on the driveway where the whole neighbourhood could see them. |
| Not that that’s a
|
| problem, of course, but that and the grass being a little overgrown might give
|
| someone the impression you were out of town, and you wouldn’t want that!
|
| I’ve got to be going shortly to a little class I’ve been attending I just…
|
| Er, no no no no, not pottery or anything like that… it’s, uh,
|
| an anger management class actually. |
| And speaking of that very class they’ve
|
| been advising I find some common ground with people before you confront them to
|
| avoid becoming violent, y’know? |
| Well, actually, we do have a few things in
|
| common. |
| Here — could you take these papers? |
| They’re getting my suit wet.
|
| And, as I was saying, we do live on the same cul-de-sac; |
| that’s common ground.
|
| And I believe we actually have the same house plan, except the reverse.
|
| Your garage is on the left and mine’s on the — No! |
| It wasn’t me that dialed
|
| 911 at 6:31 p.m. |
| Wednesday about your son’s noisy rock band. |
| Anyway,
|
| it’s about your dog, and of course about our garbage, and some of the
|
| neighbours' garbage cans… No, I’m sorry, it IS your dog who’s been strewing
|
| garbage around the block, and I have digital evidence — complete with red-eye
|
| reduction — which I will email to you to prove that it is, in fact, your dog.
|
| Now, I have to warn you that I have a black-belt in karate too,
|
| and I certainly don’t mind using it if necessary. |
| No, not on you ma’am.
|
| on your stinking dog!»
|
| We’re rockin' the suburbs
|
| Everything we need is here
|
| We’re rockin' the suburbs
|
| But it wasn’t here last year
|
| We’re rockin' the suburbs
|
| You’ll never know when we are gone
|
| Because the timer lights the front
|
| And turns the cricket noises on
|
| Each night
|
| Yeah, yeah
|
| We’re rockin' the suburbs
|
| Yeah, yeah
|
| We’re rockin' the suburbs |