Hypocritical Singing

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Hypocritical Singing is when a character sings a song saying he isn't going to/will never do something, but he does it/has done it anyway, or is doing it as we speak...I mean sing..

Related to and may overlap with Lyrical Dissonance.

Examples of Hypocritical Singing include:

Film

  • A variation from Disney; Mary Poppins sings the kids to sleep with "Stay Awake".
  • Fred Astaire's "I Won't Dance" number in Roberta.
  • In High School Musical 2, one of the characters sings about how he doesn't dance. Which is odd, considering that he was doing perfect choreography in the last movie.

Literature

  • The Hobbit: When pressed to do Bilbo's dishes, the dwarves begin to sing about smashing his plates and destroying his property, while actually taking care to do no damage at all.

Live-Action TV

  • Justin Timberlake sang a song on Saturday Night Live saying that he wasn't there to showcase his singing talents.
  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer's Musical Episode "Once More With Feeling" has two examples:
    • "I'll Never Tell", in which Anya and Xander list all the secrets they're keeping from each other.
    • "Rest In Peace", in which Spike sings of wanting Buffy to leave him alone, but he wants the exact opposite of that.

Music

"Missing You (I Ain't Missing You At All)" by John Waite.

Recorded Comedy

Theater

  • In Thenardier's song "Master of the House" from Les Misérables, he sings about what an honest and decent innkeeper he is, all while constantly cheating and conning everyone in the inn.
  • "Were you not to Ko-Ko plighted" from The Mikado. Many productions have Nanki-Poo and Yum-Yum punctuate "This, oh, this, is what I'll/he'll never do" with kisses.
  • "La donna è mobile", the Duke of Mantua's canzone from Rigoletto; the Duke is singing of the fickle nature of women, despite himself being a love-'em-and-leave-'em philanderer.

Western Animation

  • "Poor Unfortunate Souls" from The Little Mermaid is a slight variation in that Ursula, while trying to get Ariel to make a deal with her, sings of how she [Ursula] uses her powers to help people. The song's hypocritical in that Ursula makes herself seem to come off in the very best light. While she does help people, she compares herself to a saint, but she also always has something to gain from her deals, and she goes out of her way to make sure that those under contract will fail to uphold their end of the bargain.
  • Meg's "I Won't Say I'm In Love" from Disney's Hercules.
  • Or in The Simpsons during the all-singing clip show when Homer says, 'Singing is the lowest form of communication." Marge says, 'But you sing all the time," and Homer replies, "No I don't, I hate to rhyme."