Vocaloid/Tear Jerker: Difference between revisions

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** As with ''Hello, How Are You'', don't be surprised if it [[Truth in Television|strikes a few chords.]]
* ''The Hedgehog's Love'' is about [[I Want My Beloved to Be Happy|leaving someone to keep from hurting them]], and convincing oneself that this really is for the best and will make them happy.
* In ''Ogre and Maid'', a blind woman gets lost in a forest and is saved by a terrifying ogre. Not realising that he's an ogre, she becomes his very first friend and makes him believe that humans aren't really that bad. But when he tries to visit her, [[Fantastic Racism|the villagers run him off]] and [[Humans Are Bastardsthe Real Monsters|threaten to kill him if he ever comes back]]. He gives up and goes back to being alone forever, and she [[I Will Wait for You|patiently waits for him to return]] until the day she dies.
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lnwTWh-09vk LOLA's English 'cover' of Double Lariat] is an ode to [[The Unfavourite]]'s desperate attempts to get someone to love her, set to [[Lyrical Dissonance|perky guitar riffs.]] It's not the most polished Vocaloid song you'll ever hear, but that just makes it even sadder.
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zbfBjZyVsJM Why Don't You Call Me Yet?] is about the singer wanting the person she is in love with to call her, while being too afraid that he has forgotten who she is to call him herself. In the end of one of the PVs, {{spoiler|Rin kneels on the floor, looking as if she has given up hope as the song ends. After a moment of silence, her phone goes off, to her disbelief. She answers it with a cheerful greeting, only for a final shot of her crying tears of joy to show up, leaving the viewer to assume that the man she loves has indeed called her.}}