Walk The Dinosaur

Album: What Up, Dog? (1987)
Charted: 10 7
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Songfacts®:

  • "Walk The Dinosaur" was written by Was (Not Was) members David Was and Don Was, and producer/songwriter Randy Jacobs. It was first released as a single in 1987, but ended up being included on their 1989 album What Up, Dog?

    This song has a colorful history and an interesting path to fame. Its amusing video and insanely catchy chorus helped it gain fame in the early days of MTV and their show Liquid Television. It also got some play in the Spike & Mike festivals. But its star would have faded by now if it hadn't been re-discovered in the 2000s and become an Internet meme.

    First George Clinton (of Parliament / Funkadelic fame) covered it with altered lyrics for the theme song to the pretty forgettable Super Mario Bros. film. A year later, it was part of the soundtrack for the 1994 film of The Flintstones - at last, somebody made the right movie for it to grow legs! Finally, Queen Latifah revived it for the 2009 animated film Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs, itself a sequel to the popular Ice Age franchise.

    It was this last usage, coupled with the inclusion of the song in the repertoire of the animatronic shows at the Chuck E. Cheese's pizza restaurant chain in 2011, that gave it new popularity with the younger generation. And suddenly, it was all over the web! Know Your Meme has a page showing the Google search stats spiking after the release of Ice Age, then trending up again after the Chuck E. Cheese bump.
  • Some of the quirks of this modern dinosaur story include a "Boom, boom, acka lacka boom boom" chant (sort of like the "Oooonga Chacka"s in "Hooked On A Feeling"), a video featuring four cavewomen doing a "Walk The Dinosaur" dance (sort of like "Walk Like An Egyptian"), and a reference to the hit TV show Miami Vice ("I felt a little tired, so I watched Miami Vice"), which ensured its place in '80s nostalgia. Note that in the third verse, he is no longer walking the dinosaur, he has now killed it, apparently in self defense.
  • Know Your Meme also remarks upon an interesting usage. It seems posting the lyrics to "Walk The Dinosaur" is a common alternative to "Bel-Air-ing." Now, what does "Bel-Air-ing" mean? It's a discussion-board meme where you post some long-winded shaggy dog story that seems to be leading to a payoff ending, but abruptly ends with some variation on the lyrics to the theme song to the TV series The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. When people started to catch wise to this trick and scan to the end of long paragraphs looking for "Bel-Air," the trick was then changed to posting "Walk The Dinosaur" lyrics instead.

    There's also a few animated gifs out there flying around, with either the chorus lyrics set to animation or other videos of people opening doors, falling down, dinosaurs charging out of closets, etc.
  • Was (Not Was) was the creation of the songwriter/producers Don Fagenson and David Weiss, who named themselves "Don Was" and "David Was" for the project. The name was inspired by Don's 18-month-old son, who would do that thing kids do where he would describe something as the opposite of what it was to get a reaction, and then correct it. So he might point to a cat, say "dog," wait for the disapproving look, then say, "not dog." Don saw something very Zen in this behavior, and became intrigued with Piaget's reversibility theory, which describes the developmental stage when a child understands that things can be undone. They morphed this into the name Was (Not Was) and took stage names after their new band name, kind of like the Ramones. This song became a hit, and the names stuck. Some other trivia about the band:

    They are not a one-hit-wonder. A few months before "Walk The Dinosaur" hit the charts, they had a #16 US hit with "Spy In The House Of Love."

    Don Was' career as a producer took off soon after this song was released. He produced the 1991 Bonnie Raitt album Luck of the Draw, and went on to produce Bob Seger, The Rolling Stones, Brain Wilson and Garth Brooks.

    There were two singers in the band: Sweet Pea Atkinson and Sir Harry Bowens. The Was guys operated behind the scenes - Don wrote the music and played bass, David came up with lyrics and played flute.

    The group appeared in the movie The Freshman.

    David and Don were often asked which one of the was Was and which was Not Was.
  • Thanks to the success of this song's video, Was (Not Was) landed a spot on the 1989 Club MTV tour along with Paula Abdul, Tone Loc, Information Society and... Milli Vanilli.

    This was the tour where Milli Vanilli's recorded track malfunctioned, exposing them for lip-synching. Lost in the furor was that the other acts augmented their sets with recorded tracks as well, except Was (Not Was), who performed live. "People aren't going to shows to be absorbed in musical values," David Weiss said, reflecting on the tour. "The kinds of audiences these bands attract don't care."
  • After a tour with Dire Straits, Don and David Was drifted apart. Don Was blames the pop success of "Walk The Dinosaur" for the beginning of the end. "We lost the little audience we had that was into who we really were," he told Mojo magazine. "Instead of building on that, we alienated them with this little novelty record and we didn't build any new loyal fans. People were loyal to that song, not to Was (Not Was)."

Comments: 9

  • Mark Conner from 45601Winston Watson (Bob Dylan drummer) and Stevie Salas ( Rod Stewart guitar player) are featured in the song and in the video.
  • Alexandra Merel Powers from Flat Lick KentuckyWhat a classic! Open the door, get on the floor everybody walk the dinosaur! Great song. Beautiful sexy women dressed in cavemen costumes. Never gets old! Need it in Jurassic Park movies more often.
  • Mason from MinnesotaOh, and there are some parts of the lyrics that almost seem to foreshadow the aftermath of 9/11. Obviously it’s just a coincidence, but a pretty spooky one. Consider how he mentions New York in the bridge, and then the final verse goes:

    “A shadow from the sky much too big to be a bird [airplane?]
    A screaming crashing noise louder than I've ever heard [plane crashes]
    It looked like two big silver trees that somehow learned to soar [“two big silver trees”: before they fell, the Twin Towers were so tall that they seemed to “soar” into the sky]
    Suddenly a summer breeze and a mighty lion's roar [scene changes to a warm desert, like Afghanistan or Iraq where U.S. troops were deployed to]

    And then the soldiers had to “kill the dinosaur” (i.e., fight terrorists in the Middle East, who could be compared to “dinosaurs” due to their “archaic” religious extremism). Of course, part of the reason these wars and attacks happened to begin with, was the Americans’ need to “walk the dinosaur” (i.e., drive cars powered by fossil fuels/oil).

    Again, this is obviously NOT what the band had in mind when they wrote the lyrics; they said it was about the threat of the Cold War going nuclear. But the lyrics almost seem to function better as a metaphor for 9/11 and the War on Terror. It’s uncanny.
  • Mason from MinnesotaThere seems to be an homage to the B-52s in this song. In the second part of the bridge that goes:

    “Elvis landed in a rocket ship
    Healed a couple of lepers and disappeared
    But where was his beard?”

    The man speaking the first two lines has a vocal delivery reminiscent of Fred Schneider, while the last line is sung by multiple women vocalists in a playfully off-key manner. Much like “Weird Al” Yankovic parodied the B-52s’ style in his own song “Mr. Popeil” (from 1984), Was (Not Was) were probably doing the same thing here. The B-52s were primarily known for their novelty dance songs, so the shout-out makes sense.
  • Ferb from Usa"But its star would have faded by now, if it hadn't been re-discovered in the 2000s and become an Internet meme." Nope! This song pops into my head on a regular basis, as it has since it was released, and I've never even heard of all this 2000s-era stuff mentioned in the article. I think sometimes people born after, say, 1988, think that unless something from the past has reappeared as Internet fodder, then it never actually happened in the first place. I once read a piece written on Vice by some dolt who thought Steve Winwood was a long-forgotten 80s singer whose only real claim to fame is that some dork in the 2000s created an "original" track which is really just Steve Winwood's "Valerie" looped for several minutes. Of course, 30 seconds of research would have shown this poor child the vast scope of Winwood's résumé, but why do research when you're a cool junior journalist for a POS like Vice?
  • Karey Grant from South CarolinaWho was the black girl in the video? Kinda makes me think of Karen Parsons from fresh prince,but not sure, also if any one knows the name of the black girl in Barry White's "practice what you preach" video, thanks
  • Mike O from IllinoisBrunette is Deborah Jenssen
    Blonde is Helene Phillips with her hair up second from right
  • Bo from AlabamaDoes look like her , but I would like to know the name of the girl in back with the sunglasses on.
  • Buskieboy from Brampton, OnI just came across the video of this song on YouTube. There are 4 "Cavegirls" in the video and I
    SWEAR one of them is Elisabeth Shue, from "Karate Kid", "Adventures in Babysitting" and "CSI"!
    She is the cute one with the short blond hair. Is this an unaccredited role? Perhaps she was doing
    someone a favor?
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