In his opening monologue as the host of “Saturday Night Live” last weekend, Donald Glover quipped: “I’m an actor, a writer and a singer. Some people have described me as a triple threat. But I kind of like to call myself just a threat.” As if to drive home the point that he’s scarily talented, Glover, who created and stars in the surreal FX comedy “Atlanta” was also the episode’s musical guest, performing two new songs as his hip-hop alter ego, Childish Gambino.
- Artist: Childish Gambino( Donald McKinley Glover)
- Album: CG4* (2018)
- Translations: Chinese, French, German, Greek, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Turkish
- Requests: Arabic, Hungarian
This Is America
Yeah, yeah, yeah, go, go away
Yeah, yeah, yeah, go, go away
Yeah, yeah, yeah, go, go away
Yeah, yeah, yeah, go, go away
Party just for you
Money just for you
Party just for me
Girl, you got me dancin' (yeah, girl, you got me dancin')
We just wanna party (yeah)
We just want the money (yeah)
I know you wanna party (yeah)
Childish Gambino This Is America Meaning
Girl, you got me dancin' (yeah, girl, you got me dancin')
Don't catch you slippin' up
Look what I'm whippin' up
Don't catch you slippin' up
Look what I'm whippin' up
Don't catch you slippin' up (ayy)
Police be trippin' now (woo)
Guns in my area (word, my area)
I gotta carry 'em
Yeah, yeah, this is guerilla (woo)
Yeah, yeah, or I'ma get the pad
I'm so dope like yeah (woo)
You go tell somebody
Get your money, Black man (get your money)
Get your money, Black man (get your, Black man)
Black man
Don't catch you slippin' up (woo, woo, don't catch you slippin', now)
Look what I'm whippin' up (Slime!)
Don't catch you slippin' up (woah, ayy)
Look what I'm whippin' up (ayy)
I'm so fitted (I'm so fitted, woo)
I'm so pretty (yeah, yeah)
Watch me move (blaow)
That's a tool (yeah)
Ooh, know that (yeah, know that, hold on)
Ooh, work it (21)
Hunnid bands, hunnid bands, hunnid bands (hunnid bands)
I got the plug in Oaxaca (woah)
America, I just checked my following list and
You mothafuckas owe me
Get your money, Black man (black man)
Get your money, Black man (get your, Black man)
Black man
Ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh, tell somebody
Grandma told me, 'Get your money'
Get your money, Black man (Black man)
Get your money, Black man (Black man)
You just a barcode, ayy
Drivin' expensive foreigns, ayy
I kenneled him in the backyard
For a big dog
Writer(s): LUDWIG GORANSSON, JEFFERY WILLIAMS, DONALD GLOVER
Lyrics powered by www.musixmatch.com
Lyrics powered by www.musixmatch.com
English → Chinese
English → German
English → Greek
English → Russian
English → Turkish
1. | Redbone |
2. | This Is America |
3. | Feels Like Summer |
1. | Grammy Winners – Category 'Song of the Year' |
English → Arabic - Ghada1812
1. | Hold on! |
The music video for one of those tracks, “This Is America,” appeared the same night, and it suggests that he is actually a quadruple threat: He can dance, too. But Glover’s graceful moves aren’t exactly the point. There’s plenty of messaging about race, violence and the entertainment industry in the song and video — which helps explain why fans and critics have devoted so much time to dissecting its references and debating its meaning. Here are some of their sharpest insights. (Excerpts below are unedited.)
[Read our interview with the director of “This Is America,” Hiro Murai]
‘Unpacking All the References in Childish Gambino’s Phenomenal New Video’ [Dazed]
“This Is America” is dense with allusions to American history and pop culture. Natty Kasambala assembles a list of footnotes to the video, from its Jim Crow imagery to Glover’s references to other musicians.
‘Childish Gambino’s Video Grabs You by the Throat’ [CNN]
“What Gambino put together is a true picture of America, where so many of us get to dance and sing and laugh and create,” writes Isaac Bailey. “All the while others are largely ignored and trapped in the background, struggling and sometimes dying in a sea of ugliness that many of us would rather not acknowledge, knowing it would ruin the pretty pictures we’d rather focus on.”
‘The Carnage and Chaos of Childish Gambino’s “This Is America” Video’ [The New Yorker]
Doreen St. Félix notes that “The video has already been rapturously described as a powerful rally cry against gun violence, a powerful portrait of black-American existentialism, a powerful indictment of a culture that circulates videos of black children dying as easily as it does videos of black children dancing in parking lots.”
She continues: “It is those things, but it also a fundamentally ambiguous document. The truth is that this video, and what it suggests about its artist, is very difficult. A lot of black people hate it. Glover forces us to relive public traumas and barely gives us a second to breathe before he forces us to dance.”
Justin Simien Breaks Down ‘This Is America’ on Twitter
In an appreciative Twitter thread Sunday night, Justin Simien, the creator of Netflix’s “Dear White People,” analyzed the imagery of “This Is America” and concluded that the video asked black viewers, “How can those of us granted a moment in the proverbial spotlight just use it to entertain ourselves to death?” He continued: “It’s a challenge and a series of questions. Like art should be.”
‘What It Means When Childish Gambino Says “This Is America”’ [Vulture]
Frank Guan analyzes the lyrics of “This Is America,” which draw heavily on trap music, a gritty rap subgenre with its origins in Atlanta. “The incongruousness of Glover, raised middle-class and a NYU graduate, bragging about his Mexican drug supplier and threatening to have you gunned down, is intentional,” he writes. “It’s a tribute to the cultural dominance of trap music and a reflection on the ludicrous social logic that made the environment from which trap emerges, the logic where money makes the man, and every black man is a criminal.”
‘Donald Glover’s “This Is America” Is a Stylish, Ambitious Provocation — But What Is It Actually Selling?’ [Vanity Fair]
K. Austin Collins takes issue with Glover’s critique of black America’s complicity in the violence that plagues it. “I’m wary of any claim that ‘We’ are distracted from black violence,” he writes, “because who’s ‘we,’ really? Every other day of the week, America’s complaint is that the blacks doth protest too much.”
‘Making Donald Glover the “Anti-Kanye” Is Gross and Wrong and Will Backfire, So Please Don’t’ [The Root]
Damon Young points out the danger of setting up Glover as the antidote to another black male artist, Kanye West, whose recent political pronouncements have frustrated many fans. “Between ‘Atlanta’ and his music, Glover’s work could have an antiseptic quality, cleansing us of Kanye’s descent into anti-blackness and celebratory idiocy,” Young observes. “But at the very least, this comparison fails because it reduces Glover’s work to that of a palate cleanser. And also implied is that only one of these types of men can exist concurrently.”
‘The Filmmaker of the Year Hasn’t Even Made a Feature Film Yet’ [The Ringer]
Adam Nayman turns his attention to the director of “This Is America,” Hiro Murai, who got his start making music videos and has also directed many standout episodes of “Atlanta” and HBO’s recent critical favorite “Barry.” As Nayman sees it, “The power of Murai’s aesthetic is bound up in the balance between the camera’s visual overstatement and its subjects’ deadpan dismissal.”
'This Is America' as written by and Ludwig Goransson Donald Glover..
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah, yeah, go, go away
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah, yeah, go, go away
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah, yeah, go, go away
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah, yeah, go, go away
We just wanna party
Party just for you
We just want the money
Money just for you
I know you wanna party
Party just for me
Girl, you got me dancin' (yeah, girl, you got me dancin')
Dance and shake the frame
We just wanna party (yeah)
Party just for you (yeah)
We just want the money (yeah)
Money just for you (you)
I know you wanna party (yeah)
Party just for me (yeah)
Girl, you got me dancin' (yeah, girl, you got me dancin')
Dance and shake the frame (you)
This is America
Don't catch you slippin' up
Don't catch you slippin' up
Look what I'm whippin' up
This is America (woo)
Don't catch you slippin' up
Don't catch you slippin' up
Look what I'm whippin' up
This is America (skrrt, skrrt, woo)
Don't catch you slippin' up (ayy)
Look at how I'm livin' now
Police be trippin' now (woo)
Yeah, this is America (woo, ayy)
Guns in my area (word, my area)
I got the strap (ayy, ayy)
I gotta carry 'em
Yeah, yeah, I'ma go into this (ugh)
Yeah, yeah, this is guerilla (woo)
Yeah, yeah, I'ma go get the bag
Yeah, yeah, or I'ma get the pad
Yeah, yeah, I'm so cold like yeah (yeah)
I'm so dope like yeah (woo)
We gon' blow like yeah (straight up, uh)
Ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh, tell somebody
You go tell somebody
Grandma told me
Get your money, black man (get your money)
Get your money, black man (get your money)
Get your money, black man (get your, black man)
Get your money, black man (get your, black man)
Black man
This is America (woo, ayy)
Don't catch you slippin' up (woo, woo, don't catch you slippin', now)
Don't catch you slippin' up (ayy, woah)
Look what I'm whippin' up (Slime!)
This is America (yeah, yeah)
Don't catch you slippin' up (woah, ayy)
Don't catch you slippin' up (ayy, woo)
Look what I'm whippin' up (ayy)
Look how I'm geekin' out (hey)
I'm so fitted (I'm so fitted, woo)
I'm on Gucci (I'm on Gucci)
I'm so pretty (yeah, yeah)
I'm gon' get it (ayy, I'm gon' get it)
Watch me move (blaow)
This a celly (ha)
That's a tool (yeah)
On my Kodak (woo, Black)
Ooh, know that (yeah, know that, hold on)
Get it (get it, get it)
Ooh, work it (21)
Hunnid bands, hunnid bands, hunnid bands (hunnid bands)
Contraband, contraband, contraband (contraband)
I got the plug on Oaxaca (woah)
They gonna find you like blocka (blaow)
Ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh, tell somebody
America, I just checked my following list and
You go tell somebody
You mothafuckas owe me
Grandma told me
Get your money, black man (black man)
Get your money, black man (black man)
Get your money, black man (black man)
Get your money, black man (black man)
Black man (one, two, three, get down)
Ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh, tell somebody
You go tell somebody
Grandma told me, 'Get your money,' black man
Get your money, black man (black man)
Get your money, black man (black man)
Get your money, black man (black man)
Black man
You just a black man in this world
You just a barcode, ayy
You just a black man in this world
Drivin' expensive foreigns, ayy
You just a big dawg, yeah
I kenneled him in the backyard
No proper life to a dog
For a big dog
Yeah, yeah, yeah, go, go away
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah, yeah, go, go away
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah, yeah, go, go away
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah, yeah, go, go away
We just wanna party
Party just for you
We just want the money
Money just for you
I know you wanna party
Party just for me
Girl, you got me dancin' (yeah, girl, you got me dancin')
Dance and shake the frame
We just wanna party (yeah)
Party just for you (yeah)
We just want the money (yeah)
Money just for you (you)
I know you wanna party (yeah)
Party just for me (yeah)
Girl, you got me dancin' (yeah, girl, you got me dancin')
Dance and shake the frame (you)
This is America
Don't catch you slippin' up
Don't catch you slippin' up
Look what I'm whippin' up
This is America (woo)
Don't catch you slippin' up
Don't catch you slippin' up
Look what I'm whippin' up
This is America (skrrt, skrrt, woo)
Don't catch you slippin' up (ayy)
Look at how I'm livin' now
Police be trippin' now (woo)
Yeah, this is America (woo, ayy)
Guns in my area (word, my area)
I got the strap (ayy, ayy)
I gotta carry 'em
Yeah, yeah, I'ma go into this (ugh)
Yeah, yeah, this is guerilla (woo)
Yeah, yeah, I'ma go get the bag
Yeah, yeah, or I'ma get the pad
Yeah, yeah, I'm so cold like yeah (yeah)
I'm so dope like yeah (woo)
We gon' blow like yeah (straight up, uh)
Ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh, tell somebody
You go tell somebody
Grandma told me
Get your money, black man (get your money)
Get your money, black man (get your money)
Get your money, black man (get your, black man)
Get your money, black man (get your, black man)
Black man
This is America (woo, ayy)
Don't catch you slippin' up (woo, woo, don't catch you slippin', now)
Don't catch you slippin' up (ayy, woah)
Look what I'm whippin' up (Slime!)
This is America (yeah, yeah)
Don't catch you slippin' up (woah, ayy)
Don't catch you slippin' up (ayy, woo)
Look what I'm whippin' up (ayy)
Look how I'm geekin' out (hey)
I'm so fitted (I'm so fitted, woo)
I'm on Gucci (I'm on Gucci)
I'm so pretty (yeah, yeah)
I'm gon' get it (ayy, I'm gon' get it)
Watch me move (blaow)
This a celly (ha)
That's a tool (yeah)
On my Kodak (woo, Black)
Ooh, know that (yeah, know that, hold on)
Get it (get it, get it)
Ooh, work it (21)
Hunnid bands, hunnid bands, hunnid bands (hunnid bands)
Contraband, contraband, contraband (contraband)
I got the plug on Oaxaca (woah)
They gonna find you like blocka (blaow)
Ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh, tell somebody
America, I just checked my following list and
You go tell somebody
You mothafuckas owe me
Grandma told me
Get your money, black man (black man)
Get your money, black man (black man)
Get your money, black man (black man)
Get your money, black man (black man)
Black man (one, two, three, get down)
Ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh, tell somebody
You go tell somebody
Grandma told me, 'Get your money,' black man
Get your money, black man (black man)
Get your money, black man (black man)
Get your money, black man (black man)
Black man
You just a black man in this world
You just a barcode, ayy
You just a black man in this world
Drivin' expensive foreigns, ayy
You just a big dawg, yeah
I kenneled him in the backyard
No proper life to a dog
For a big dog
Lyrics submitted by crazycrackah, edited by WGW
'This Is America' as written by Ludwig Goransson Donald Glover
Lyrics © Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd., Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.
Lyrics powered by LyricFind
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Following his calls to “stay woke!” on his biggest hit to date, Redbone, the musician, actor, writer, director and comedian Childish Gambino – AKA Donald Glover, has doubled his efforts on his new track This Is America. Its video amassed 10m views in only 24 hours and has been celebrated by Erykah Badu, Janelle Monáe, Trent Reznor and others as one of 2018’s best: a brilliantly choreographed bit of theatre in a vast warehouse, as Glover dances around an escalating riot, ending up with a complex dissection of gun violence and American racism. Theories about what it all means have started stacking up.
He’s playing Jim Crow
In the opening scenes, Glover uses grotesque smiles and exaggerated poses, with some on Twitter suggesting this is an invocation of the racial caricature Jim Crow. Another suggested Glover was accusing black performers – even himself – of “coonery”, or saying they are still made to feel like minstrels when they go out to perform their “black” music. One of the lyrics is “Grandma told me: get your money, black man”. Commenters on the lyric annotation site Genius have asked whether Glover feels that he has to take on stereotypically black performance roles (rapper, soul singer, comedian) to be able to earn money. His gunning down of the gospel choir singing the lyric suggests that he’s tired of the pressure to accumulate wealth, to be performatively black, and stay spiritually uplifted in an age of gun violence.
He’s duping us with dance
Donald Glover: how Childish Gambino faces down rap stereotypes
Read more
A little like that video where you’re told to follow a basketball being passed around, and you miss the moonwalking bear in the background, Glover and co’s moves – doing YouTube dance crazes such as the hopping, kicking “shoot” – mask the riots happening behind them. The video’s choreographer, Sherrie Silver, retweeted a comment, perhaps in agreement, from someone who argued: “Childish Gambino’s dance moves distracted all of us from the craziness that was happening in the background of the video & that’s exactly the point he’s trying to make.”
He’s taking on the police
The line “this a celly / that’s a tool” has a powerful double meaning. Fans have pointed out that on the one hand it refers to the case of Stephon Clark, shot dead just weeks ago by Sacramento police, who assumed he was armed, but only had an iPhone on him. Glover distils the distorting way black men are seen by police with “tool”, meaning gun. In the video, the camera pans up to black men filming the chaos on their phones. As other commenters on Genius have pointed out, Glover could also be saying that phones can be actual tools for documentation.
IF YOU HAVE yet to see Childish Gambino’s powerful video for his new single, This is America, you need to now.
Source: ChildishGambinoVEVO/YouTube
The incendiary single has exploded into pop culture since being released last week, amassing over 117 million views and holding the No.1 spot on Spotify’s Global Chart.
Donald Glover has been juggling as an actor, writer and singer for over a decade. His big break came in 2016 with Atlanta, the Golden Globe and Emmy Award winning series he created, starred in and occasionally directed.
Yeah, he’s a pretty impressive guy. And, all this whilst becoming a father twice in two years.
Source: Ian West
Glover, whose musical stage-name is Childish Gambino, hosted Saturday Night Live last week and debuted his single This Is America. His performance was a hit.
But the song’s video – cleverly released that night - quickly overtook all chatter about SNL, becoming one of the most talked about pop culture moments of the year of so far.
Great Art makes you think. It's been 4 days since I watched the video and I'm still thinking about 'This is America' by @donaldglover. What is it like to be a black man in America today?
— Smarter Every Day (@smartereveryday) May 15, 2018 Source: Smarter Every Day/Twitter
Glover was asked pointblank in an interview last week: “What’s the message behind your most recent video?, to which he replied ‘That’s not for me to say’.
So that’s where we step in.
In the era of #BlackLivesMatter, there is an ongoing major discussion about how Black Americans are treated and represented in modern day America. Along with Kendrick Lamar and Beyoncé, Gambino is joining a long list of artists who are using their art to create a social commentary.
1. Gambino’s dancing
The video begins in an empty warehouse, where a black man sits down and begins to strum a guitar, as an Afrobeat folk-inspired melody plays.
The camera moves slowly so that our gaze rests on Childish Gambino’s bare torso.
Source: RCA Wolf + Rothstein
He dances in a manner that causes his body to flow between looking alluringly sexy and disturbingly manic.
For anyone who has been on a J1 to California (or perhaps any big American city), you might understand how Glover’s crazed facial expression reminded me of the many ‘crazy homeless’ you see on the street, and how a disproportionate amount are black.
It was only through reading other articles that I saw that his dancing was meant to be reminiscent of a character that is well known to Americans: Jim Crow. History students might recall ‘Jim Crow’ laws, which made segregation legal.
Jim Crow references a ‘minstrel’ or ‘blackface’ character.
A white man, Thomas Dartmouth, came up with the character by using ‘black face’ and impersonating a real life man called Jim Crow, who was a physically disabled African-American slave. He used the African-American vernacular and dance to create a mentally-inept caricature of a Black man.
Dartmouth was using Black culture as a means of ridicule and financial gain.
Source: RCA/Wolf + Rothstein
The character Donald Glover plays is Jim Crow, representing the first time that Black culture was commercialised for the white masses. He’s trying to show the long history of White entertainers stealing from Black culture. The classic example of Elvis Presley becoming known as the ‘father’ of Rock n Roll, despite it being created by African-Americans. Bollywood full movies pc hd.
Today, Iggy Azalea is accused of being ‘rap’s best drag queen‘.
Many Irish ballads reflect the pain of treatment under British colonization. How would we feel if the British had used our genre of music for their own commercial gain, without acknowledging how our music inspired them, and whilst simultaneously stereotyping and belittling Irish culture?
Source: RCA Wolf + Rothstein
Childish Gambino’s dancing is abruptly stopped when he uses a gun to shoot dead the guitar player.
2. How the gun is treated versus the body
There is a jarring contrast between the treatment of the dead body, and the gun which fired the execution shot. An eager young boy darts forward, head bowed slightly, holding a red velvety cloth which he encloses around the gun that Gambino hands him.
Meanwhile, the body is dragged away by its arms, leaving a trail of blood smeared on the concrete ground.
The gun is treated with more sacredness than a body.
Source: @thelocalemo/twitter.com
The music’s tempo, which had changed with the gun going off, is disturbingly upbeat as Childish Gambino opens his rap with ‘This is America’. Glover is commenting that for Black Americans, America is unexpectedly violent towards them.
To be flippant, it’s reminiscent of Luke sucker-punching Ryan in The O.C and muttering the iconic ‘Welcome to the O.C’. Outsiders are not welcome.
Source: Warner Bros
3. Childish Gambino’s outfit
Glover wears Confederate-style army trousers throughout the video. The Confederates were the side who fought to keep slavery legal in the southern American states.
Can we talk about how @donaldglover is wearing confederate army pants #thisisamerica#donaldglover#ChildishGambinopic.twitter.com/XMFO3epDco
— Metro boolin (@boolin_metro) May 7, 2018 Source: Metro boolin/Twitter
The Confederates lost, but Confederate flags continue to be flown in southern states, used as bumper stickers or displayed on clothing.
The trousers symbolise that there are millions of Americans who every day display the flag that represents America’s colonial history of owning Black humans as personal slaves. Gta v rockstar activation code.
4. What the Choir means
This scene is transparent if you’ve been following news coverage of racially charged violence in America in recent times.
Source: RCA/Wolf + Rothstein
An all-black choir sings joyfully, and Glover dances to their beat, until he is handed a rifle and turns around to murder the group. The gruesome killing of the choir represents the 2015 Charleston Church shooting, where 10 black Americans in South Carolina were murdered by a 21 year old White man.
The White shooter walked away unscathed, just as Glover does.
5. Stephon Clark Murder
It’s believed that the March 2018 killing of Stephon Clark by police, who mistook his cell phone for a gun, is referenced in the lyrics:
The lyrics have a double meaning: first by using the slang ‘celly’ to mean cellphone and ‘tool’ to mean ‘gun’, which references the police believing that Stephon Clark was carrying a gun. In reality, he was carrying his iPhone.
Source: RCA/Wolf + Rothstein
The camera pans to young people holding cellphones in what looks like a prison, so ‘celly’ could also mean a ‘prison cell’ which is used as ‘tool’ by the American government to imprison Black people in the prison-industrial complex.
For more on this, see the phenomenal documentary 13th by Ava DuVernay on Netflix.
6. Get Out reference
For anyone who’s seen Jordan Peele’s Oscar-nominated film, Get Out, the link between the two is apparent. Childish Gambino runs for his life as he is chased by white people.
The wide, frightened, bulging eyes of Childish Gambino and of Get Out’s main character are eerily similar. Both have realised that they are part of a system, that they cannot get out of.
This is America, welcome, bish!
Source: Universal pictures
7. Dancing as distraction
After each bloody execution, Glover immediately breaks into dance. As a viewer, watching Glover switch from killing to dancing joyfully, with schoolchildren joining, makes for uncomfortable viewing.
We are distracted from the murders by looking at the entertaining and infectious dancing.
Source: RCA Wolf + Rothstein
Over thirty years ago, educator Neil Postman wrote a book called ‘Amusing Ourselves to Death’, where he discussed how people were medicating themselves into bliss which results in them voluntarily sacrificing their rights. He highlighted how ‘talking hairdos’ on television news shows could not be taken seriously. If we only went by print media, and not television, would the ‘walking hairdo’ that is Donald Trump have been elected?
The link here is that we are distracted by what we see in popular culture, be it on television, computers, and increasingly our phones.
Before our brains have time to understand what we’ve witnessed, we are on to the next image on our phones.
Source: RCA Wolf + Rothstein
The dancing distracts from the rioting that is ongoing in the background signifying how America continues to ignore the social problems and frustrations that Black Americans face.
Glover, along with other black entertainers like Beyoncé, acknowledge that as entertainers they distract from the reality of life in America.
Their art can be used to draw attention to the reality of their fellow black Americans who are suffering because of living in a racist state with a legacy of colonialism. Other entertainers, like Kanye, have embraced their success without question, and don’t see a need to use their position to help those that are left behind in the racist and capitalist system we live in.
8. SZA
So now that you’re up to speed or ‘woke’, I thought I’d distract you and draw your attention to the amazing goddess that is SZA, who features in the video in the bottom right of this scene.
Source: RCA/Wolf + Rothstein
She released a snippet of the video for her latest single on her Instagram yesterday, and it’s set to star…Donald Glover.
This Is America Lyrics Meaning Childish Gambino
A post shared by SZA (@sza) on