Gabba Gabba Hey

"Gabba Gabba Hey" is a catchphrase associated with the punk rock band the Ramones. The phrase is included in the song "Pinhead" (1977), which contains the lyrics: "Gabba gabba, we accept you, we accept you, one of us." The song ends with: "Gabba gabba hey, gabba gabba hey!..."

History

The phrase comes from a scene in the 1932 motion picture Freaks, in which the title characters chant the line "Gooble, gobble, we accept her, we accept her, one of us, one of us!" (The Ramones saw Freaks at an art house cinema on a rare day off when an outdoor event they were to perform at was canceled due to bad weather.) One of Freaks main characters is a microcephalic, or "pinhead," named Schlitzie.

In Allan Arkush's film, Rock 'n' Roll High School, during a Ramones concert at The Roxy, a character in a Schlitzie mask appears on stage carrying a large sign with the phrase "Gabba Gabba Hey." Afterwards, the band wanted to relive the experience,[1] and a roadie, usually Mitch "Bubbles" Keller, would appear on stage in a Pinhead mask, hand the sign to Joey Ramone, and perform a dance on stage, colloquially referred to as the "jerk dance." In later years, Keller updated the "Pinhead" with a brightly colored, mismatched, polka-dotted dress sewn together for him by an employee of the Ritz.[2]

Sometimes celebrity guests (such as Eddie Vedder) would don the mask and/or costume on stage. The Pinhead would usually leave after the song was finished, but sometimes would appear for promotional purposes, such as live performances on television or music videos. To this day, the Pinhead, along with the Ramones Presidential Seal is a symbol of the band and appears on many items of Ramones merchandising.

In 1991, a Ramones tribute album called Gabba Gabba Hey was released.

In other media

Music

  • On The Casualties album Die Hards (2001), in the song "Made in NYC," they repeat the phrase throughout the chorus as a tribute to The Ramones.
  • On Courtney Love's album America's Sweetheart (2004) in the song "But Julian, I'm a little bit older than you" she sings the phrase "Hey gabba gabba baby, Hey gabba gabba baby."
  • On Dream Theater's album Octavarium (2005), in the song of the same name, "Gabba Gabba Hey" is referred to in a stanza that is a play on words with some of the band's influences.
  • The phrase "I do-diddly-diddly-diddly — gobble-gobble-gobble-gabba-gabba-hey" can be heard in the intro to the song "The Nebbish Route" (2005) by Shpongle, as a reference to The Simpsons episode "El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Jomer (The Mysterious Voyage of Homer)" (season 8, episode 9, 1997).
  • The phrase appears in the lyrics of "The United Vibe", a song from Scooter's album The Ultimate Aural Orgasm (2007).
  • In the song "War on Errorism Commercial" (2010) by NOFX, El Hefe welcomes the fans with the phrase "Gabba Gabba Hey, punk rock fans!".
  • La Vida Bohème a Venezuelan band, repeats "Gabba, Gabba Hey!" constantly in their song "Radio Capital" (2010).
  • Thee Headcoatees do a song called "Davey Crockett (Gabba Hey)", by Billy Childish and sing "Gabba Gabba Hey" over and over; this song has since been covered by Chantal Claret on the 2015 album "Battles of a Heavy Heart." Thee Headcoatees also cover "Pinhead" on the same record.
  • Hinds, a female band from Spain, covered The Headcoatees "Davey Crockett" in 2015
  • At the end of the song "Camaleon Rock", by Flemita.
  • The Spanish band Nancys Rubias, in their song Marcianos Yeyes which tells the story of an abducted man, claims that the raptor aliens "sing gabba gabba hey"

Television

  • In a 1994 Christmas episode of Space Ghost Coast to Coast, "A Space Ghost Christmas", Zorak replaces the chorus of "Deck the Halls" (traditionally "fa la la la la") with "gabba gabba hey".
  • In The Simpsons episode "El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Jomer (The Mysterious Voyage of Homer)" (season 8, episode 9, 1997), Homer Simpson eats some "Guatemalan insanity peppers" that cause him to hallucinate. When running to Ned Flanders for help, Homer begins to hallucinate, and Flanders' typical comedic jabbering ("howdily-diddly-doodly" etc) warps and distorts in pitch and speed until it ends with "gabba gabba hey".
    • A later episode, "C.E. D'oh" (season 14, episode 15, 2003), features the following dialogue: "So my husband goes to a bar every night. Whoop dee doo. Who gives a bibble? Gabba-gabba hey."
  • In Eureka episode "E=MC...?" (season 2, episode 8, 2007), Sheriff Jack Carter and a veterinary scientist are talking to a chicken farmer about cloned chicken, and the vet states that a protein is a GABA blocker (pronounced "GABBA"). The Sheriff says something like, "It’s a what blocker?" Vet: "Gabba!" Sheriff: "Gabba ... hey!"
  • The title of children's show Yo Gabba Gabba!, which debuted in 2007, pays homage to "Gabba Gabba Hey".[3]

Video games

  • In the 1995 computer game Descent, typing the phrase "gabbagabbahey" on the keyboard during gameplay unlocks the cheat mode, after which other cheat codes (infinite weapons, infinite health, et cetera) could be entered. In the game's sequel, Descent II, typing "gabbagabbahey" lowers a player's health and shield to 1%.[4] In both games, typing the cheat code results in the computer announcer's voice admonishing the player with: "Cheater!" The B key by default drops a proximity mine that would shortly arm and explode if the player is still nearby, so use of the code without remapping the controls is perilous.[5]
  • In-game characters are customizable in the music video game Rock Band 2. One of the hair styles available is named "Gabba Gabba Hair," and is reminiscent of the Ramones' distinctive hair style.
  • In the computer game Sabrina The Teenage Witch: Spellbound, Aunt Zelda and a baby are hypnotized by a TV programme and repeat the phrase "Gabba Gabba Hey! Uh oh!" in one of the game's chapters
  • The 1998 game Star Wars: Rogue Squadron, typing "Gabba Gabba Hey" allows the player to fly a hidden ship, the Millennium Falcon during missions.
  • On GTA V, at East Los FM radio station, we can hear , from La Vida Bohme, a song called Radio Capital, which contains "Gabba Gabba Hey" on its main chorus.

Other

  • In the Marvel comic book The Sensational She-Hulk, the letters page is called "Gamma Gamma Hey," after the gamma radiation-irradiated blood that caused She-Hulk's initial transformation.
  • Humphry Slocombe, a San Francisco ice cream parlor, named one of their most popular flavors "Gabba Gabba Hey."[6]
  • Ottawa, Canada has a concert space and a record store in the City Centre known as Gabba Hey (formerly known as Capital Rehearsal Studios) It has become a one-stop shop for many in Ottawa’s music community. Owner and operator Luke Martin attached the moniker Gabba Hey, when he started hosting concerts, “for no particular reason except Capital Rehearsal Studios sounds a little cold for a place to have a party,” he says. “More than anything, it’s just to make it sound cool".[7]
  • If one uses Siri on the iPhone to identify a song performed by the Ramones after identifying the track Siri adds "Gabba gabba hey."
  • Breweries Toppling Goliath and Bottle Logic collaborated on a double IPA named "Gamma Gamma Ray" as a reference to their prior release of Xhops-Gamma and "Gabba Gabba Hey"
  • Upon obtaining a difficult baseball card of Gabby Hartnett baseball researcher Jeff Katz wrote an article for the Society for American Baseball Research titled “Gabby Gabby—Hey!”[8]
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References

  1. Melnicks, Monte A. On the Road with the Ramones (Bobcat Books, 2007)
  2. Melnick, MonteA; Meyer, Frank (2010-03-04). On The Road With The Ramones. Bobcat Books. ISBN 9780857122230.
  3. Keveney, Bill (October 21, 2008). "'Yo Gabba Gabba!' is monstrous fun for kids, adults". USA Today. Retrieved September 8, 2010.
  4. Descent 2 Interactive Demo Version Cheats
  5. Descent Cheats
  6. Palmer, Tamara. "The Mystery Spot: Who Serves This Colorful Plate?", SF Weekly "Foodie" blog (Apr. 18, 2011). Accessed Sept. 28, 2011.
  7. https://ottawacitizen.com/entertainment/local-arts/gabba-hey-ottawas-music-hub-at-city-centre
  8. Katz, Author Jeff (2020-04-16). "Gabby Gabby – Hey!". SABR's Baseball Cards Research Committee. Retrieved 2020-04-17.
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