Eyebrows

Eyebrows-Best-Of.mp3
Eyebrows-Best-Of.mp4
Eyebrows.mp3
Eyebrows.mp4
Eyebrows-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Would you look at that
(Raise an eyebrow)

[Bridge]
Somehow….

[Refrain]
Imagine that
(Certainly is odd)
Love’s a spat
(Calls himself God)

[Bridge]
Would you look at that
(Raise an eyebrow)

[Break]
Somehow….
(Lost all know-how)
There we go
(Blended in…)
Into a reality (TV show)

[Refrain]
Imagine that
(Certainly is odd)
Eat his hat
(Calls himself God)

[Bridge]
Would you look at that
(Raise an eyebrow)

[Outro]
Somehow….
(Lost all know-how)
There we go
(Blended in…)
Into a reality (TV show)
Oh no! (Oh, no, no, no)
Woe (woe, woe, woe)

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “Eyebrows” is a satirical and surreal reflection on the absurdity, ego, and spectacle of the Trump presidency — conveyed through irony, minimalism, and repetition. Here’s an interpretation of each section and how it relates to Trump’s time in office:

[Refrain]

Imagine that
(Certainly is odd)
Love’s a spat
(Calls himself God)

This sets a tone of disbelief and irony:

  • Imagine that” echoes the public’s ongoing shock or fatigue with Trump’s unexpected behavior.

  • Certainly is odd” acknowledges how abnormal and chaotic his presidency often felt.

  • Love’s a spat” might refer to how Trump framed many relationships — whether international, political, or personal — in combative terms, even with allies.

  • Calls himself God” critiques his narcissism or messianic self-image, echoed in statements where he claimed to be “the chosen one” or boasted in hyperbolic terms.

[Bridge]

Would you look at that
(Raise an eyebrow)

This is a nod to the public reaction — often stunned or skeptical.

  • The raised eyebrow symbolizes constant disbelief, as Americans watched presidential norms erode or turn into spectacle.

  • It’s also a callout to the viewer, as if watching from the sidelines in stunned silence.

[Break]

Somehow…
(Lost all know-how)
There we go
(Blended in…)
Into a reality (TV show)

Here’s the heart of the critique:

  • Lost all know-how” captures the governance failures and erosion of institutional expertise.

  • Blended in” points to how the line between politics and entertainment blurred.

  • Into a reality (TV show)” explicitly references Trump’s history in reality television, implying his presidency itself became an unscripted, chaotic, ratings-obsessed performance — style over substance, spectacle over governance.

Refrain Repeats

The second refrain doubles down, changing “Love’s a spat” to “Eat his hat,” possibly:

  • Referring to humiliation or absurd self-confidence (“he’d eat his hat before admitting fault”),

  • Or satirizing the extremity of some of his claims and the media’s credulity.

[Outro]

Somehow…
(Lost all know-how)
There we go
(Blended in…)
Into a reality (TV show)
Oh no! (Oh, no, no, no)
Woe (woe, woe, woe)

The repetition of “Oh no!” and “Woe” shifts from satire to lamentation.

  • It’s no longer just a joke — there’s genuine anxiety and grief.

  • It suggests that what began as disbelief or satire became real and damaging, with consequences for democracy, truth, and trust.

Summary

“Eyebrows” distills the Trump presidency into a surreal, biting commentary on:

  • Narcissism and divine delusion

  • Chaos and anti-intellectualism

  • The collapse of truth into entertainment

  • The public’s stunned passivity (“raise an eyebrow”) while it all happened

It’s a compact protest song — somewhere between Beckett and Broadway — built from disbelief and dread.

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Raise

Also found on the album “Reggae Entrée

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