Bowling for Soup

Bowling for Soup (also known as BFS) is an American pop-punk band started in 1994 in Wichita Falls, Texas. They are perhaps known for their cover of "1985" by SR-71.

They've done the opening theme song for Phineas and Ferb, the main theme for Sonic Unleashed, a cover of Modern English's "I Melt With You" for the Disney's Sky High, and a cover of A Flock of Seagulls' "I Ran (So Far Away)" for the opening of Saint Seiya's English dub.

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 * Bowling for Soup (1995)
 * Rock on, Honorable Ones!! (1997)
 * Let's Do It for Johnny!! (2000)
 * Drunk Enough to Dance (2002)
 * A Hangover You Don't Deserve (2004)
 * The Great Burrito Extortion Case (2006)
 * Sorry for Partyin (2009)
 * Fishin' for Woos (2011)

""Ain't that a bee with an itch. Ain't that a mother-trucker. You can go to H-E double hockey sticks and F yourself! 'Cause I'm flippin' gosh darn sick of all the S-words you put me though.""
 * Censor Bar: Blocking a jock's penis in the video for "High School Never Ends." It's labeled "Too small for TV."
 * Cluster F-Bomb: Their song "My Hometown."
 * Cover Version: “...Baby One More Time”; “Five O’Clock World”; “Gilligan’s Island Theme”; “I Melt With You”; “I Ran (So Far Away)”; “Jimmy Neutron Theme”; “Li’l Red Riding Hood”; “London Bridge”; “Sick Of Myself”; “Spanish Harlem”; “Speed Racer”; “Summer of ‘69”
 * "1985" is a song by their friends in SR-71. The Bowling for Soup version though is in a different key and has slight alterations to the lyrics to make the song less bitter and more of a celebration of The Eighties.
 * “Belgium”: A special case in that they themselves wrote and recorded the original, but continue to cover it in new styles as hidden tracks on their albums. Currently the alternate versions include acoustic, boy-band, and polka.
 * "Stacy's Mom:" Because everyone thought they did it anyway.
 * Double Entendre: "My Wena" seems like a long dick joke until The Reveal in the video, which shows that it's actually about a weiner dog named Wena.
 * The Eighties: "1985".
 * Exactly What It Says on the Tin: "The Bitch Song"
 * Fun with Foreign Languages: Three words that will change your life: "No Hablo Ingles."
 * Heavy Meta: "Really Cool Dance Song", which is rife with Take That against meaningless, generic dance music.
 * Heterosexual Life Partners: "BFFF" is essentially a love song from one partner to another, even saying "I'm tryin' to say I love you in a heterosexual way."
 * High School: "High School Never Ends".
 * Last-Second Word Swap: The entire chorus of "Friendly Goodbye".

""Such a big man, such a little chick/I think it all goes back to your tiny/Pick- up truck in the driveway" "Your friends think you're an asshole/And I do too/Over compensatin' for your small shoes""
 * Also "99 Biker Friends"

"You tell her that you're sorry/Blame it on the beer/Your dad was mean to you/Your friends think you're/An asshole"
 * Listing Cities: "I Can't Stand LA".
 * Network Decay: Referenced in "1985": "There was U2,and Blondie/And music still on MTV".
 * Potty Failure: One of the flashbacks in the music video of "High School Never Ends" shows a cheerleader acting friendly towards an awkward-looking boy while secretly slipping Ex-Lax into his drink. At the reunion, he gets revenge on her by eating various disgusting things to make himself puke all over her.
 * Subject 101: "Punk Rock 101", their ode to the Hot Topic generation.
 * Rashomon Style: "I'll Always Remember You (That Way)" is about a past romantic tryst as narrated by the former lovers (emphasizing rather different details of the same event).
 * Real Song Theme Tune: "Knights of the Zodiac", the DiC dub of Saint Seiya, used the Bowling for Soup cover of A Flock of Seagulls song "I Ran (So Far Away)", and "Today is Gonna Be a Great Day".
 * Silly Love Songs: "Smoothie King" despite some of its Anti-Love Song lyrics ("Love songs suck and fairy tales aren't true/And 'Happy ending: Hollywood' is not for me and you."). It's about finding that person who drives you crazy in all the right ways.
 * Signature Song: "1985" or "High School Never Ends".
 * The Something Song: "The Bitch Song".
 * Subverted Rhyme Every Occasion: see Last-Second Word Swap. There's also another one leading up to the second example in "99 Biker Friends".


 * Tsundere: The singer in "Not a Love Song" totally doesn't want his girl back.
 * T-Word Euphemism: Featured in "A Friendly Goodbye," where the chorus is a string of these because the narrator's soon-to-be-ex hates cursing.
 * Who's Laughing Now?: The premise of the video to "High School Never Ends", where the band gets karmic revenge on several Jerk Jocks that picked on them as kids in a high school renuion.