Who is ana ng




















What makes the Giants not the Smiths is that Linnell sings it like its a regular pop record. When one compares this song with what a band like REM were producing at the time "Stand" or "End of the World as we know it" one wonders if there is any justice in the world. This is the song that should have been a number one in the real charts, not just the college chart. Ana Ng the most common Chinese name the Johns found in the Phone book when writing the song is a woman on the exact opposite side of the world of the singer.

Ana Ng and I are getting old and we still haven't walked in the glow of each other's majestic presence sums up the song nicely. It is a beautiful song of despair over not having found one's soulmate, believing she must be on the other side of the world and therefore practically unattainable. Using a gun on a globe is suggestive suicide just point it at your own dome instead.

The song also brings back memories of children's cartoons, in which characters dug straight down through the earth and wound up upside-down in China. The Johns claim that the song is not written from their own perspective but rather from someone's who actually does live opposite of Vietnam. I agree that this is a gorgeous song of hopeless romance -- the idea that The One is diametrically opposite you on the planet is one of the most depressing, and beautiful, I've ever heard in music -- but I don't think it's an exaggeration to say that this song is also about the futility of human endeavor in general.

For all your planning, Linnell seems to suggest, for all your grooming and searching and wanting and hoping, your true love, by sheer accident of birth, might still be on the other side of the world. You can't do anything about it. Certain lines seem to support this idea -- the storm tangling up the wires, for example, is a pretty perfect metaphor for how uncontrollable events defeat the attempts people make to connect with each other.

The scene in the video of hands adjusting what looks like a surveyor's instrument -- the person turns the device carefully, goes to make some fine adjustment, and the lens falls off, the hands recoil. Another image representing the transitory nature of what man does, how all his works crumble. And of course there's that last lyric -- "And the truth is, we don't know anything.

Only They Might Be Giants. Well Vietnam is pretty far away too. Ana Ng Might Be Vietnamese. So maybe Ana Ng is one of those extended metaphor thingies for all Vietnam, never walking in the glow of the majestic presence of a capitalist economy and democratic government. Uh, so, in conclusion, if you look at parts of the lyrics out of context, and glaze over the rest, Ana Ng becomes a profound commentary on the failure of the U.

Hey, you know what Mill said about the importance of wrong ideas in the marketplace. I believe the gunshot cartoon was from a Pogo comic. As I've been involved in a long-distance relationship for quite some time, I've found that the song's lyrics very accurately describe exactly how it feels to be in one: rewarding, and yet at times very depressing. I could elaborate, but many of the above who've already contributed have done so better than I could ever hope to.

If you aim a gun perpendicular to a globe with the barrel at Brooklyn, you're shooting straight across, because the globe is assumed to be acting as your y-axis. The gun is then, your x-axis. The exit wound of the bullet is in a foreign nation, in the same hemisphere. Try it sometime. Get a gun and shoot the mess out of a globe. So wrong. Globe is the X-axis, line by gunshot is Y-axis. However, there's the intriguing line "Water spirals the wrong way out the sink," which would imply the Southern Hemisphere.

It's silly to argue the details, because in true TMBG form, they don't quite fit together, but that's part of what makes it a fun song. I had a thought: the narrative of Ana Ng could all take place in the course of a day. The singer is in his apartment looking at his globe and thinking about the other side of the world.

The closest he can get to the other side of the world is the '64 World's Fair, where he sees all kinds of crazy stuff. Then the third verse takes place in the bus depot on the way home, where he thinks about how pointless the day was sticking like a broken record, playing over and over like any other day and realises that he "doesn't know anything". Taa daa! I'm pretty sure that the "Eighty dolls yelling 'Small girl after all'" is a reference to the "It's a Small World After All" boat ride, and someone possiably Ana?

I'd say this song has been pretty well summed up by everyone previously. There is one thing missing, though, and it's one of my favourite parts of the song. When he's at the World's Fair, the bench is still warm: his True Love was there, at that very bench, and he just missed her! Isn't that the way it goes? I have a personal experience just like that. Wild, huh? While Ana Ng is definitely a love song, I think it's actually about a sort of love triangle. Notice that everytime before the chorus plays, the narrarator makes a reference to something else that makes noise, be it a record that may be broken or backwards, or be it a mysterious voice speaking through the PA at the bus stop.

This leads me to believe that this song in fact has two narrarators; the chorus singer and the verse singer. The chorus singer could potentially be a famous singer of some sort, which would explain his voice on the records.

The singer of the chorus is in love with Ana, where the verse singer is a nobody in this situation. For some mysterious reason, however, all of the chorus singer's attempts to communicate with Ana are accidentilly intercepted by the verse singer.

The first record is backwards because apparently, everything in Ana Ng's world is backwards, so it would play forward in a record player over there. This verse singer, being constantly bombarded with things refering to this mysterious Ana Ng has made him obsessed with the girl. The chorus singer has accidentilly made the verse singer fall in love with his girl. Which one of them gets the girl in the end is not revealed, and is left up to the imagination though it seems that the chorus singer would, since the verse singer is nothing but an obsessed freak that Ana has never met.

I think that in some ways, the music video supports this theory. During the chorus, both Johns are dancing around like puppets, in complete sync with each other. This is because they are both slaves of their love for Ana Ng. There's also a small segment where the two walk from opposite sides of the screen, meet at the middle, shake hands, and keeep walking, their heads pointed to the ground. The two lovers of Ana may in fact know each other, and not realize that the other is trying to steal his girl.

Anyway, that's my take on the song. I used to ride my rocking horse to that song, maybe the Johns did too. Interesting tidbit. A friend who plays Kingdoms of Loathing alerted me to this, which is apparently the final fight before you reach ascension, whatever that means. To defeat it, you need to use the NG.

No idea what an NG is, but here's the text my friend sent me:. It's about someone who wants the unattainable, but can't have it. He makes it out to sound like he's the victim here, but really he's just a complainer. Okay, we've pretty much settled on what's the song's story is about, so I'll just say how I feel when I listen to it.

Even though a bunch of other people have already said this, I must say: I absolutely love this song because, to me, it settles the age-old debate of soul mates. Is there one true love and soul mate somewhere out there that both of you will know it is your destiny to be with as soon as you two meet? Or is there simply so many people on the Earth, that it's impossible, since chances are you'd never meet this soul mate, and the whole thing is pointless. But Ana Ng solves the problem. There is a soul mate for you out there, somewhere, anywhere, even on the other side of the world, that both of you would know you're destined to be with as soon as you meet.

It was only released for promotional purposes in the US, and saw official releases in in the United Kingdom as a maxi-single , Australia, and later, in , in Europe. We're doing our best to make sure our content is useful, accurate and safe.

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Word in Definition. Wikipedia 0. How to pronounce ana ng? Alex US English. David US English. Mark US English. Daniel British. Libby British. The water drains the same way no matter where you are! Girog on September 21, Link. There's no "like" button on this site Girog True - but it doesn't matter. The narrator is imagining the place where she lives and if he thinks the water swirls the other direction, well, that's part of his fantasy.

My Interpretation It's about a guy in love with someone he hasn't met. The idea that there is always someone for everyone. I love the way this song is written. Its not saying: you will find your soul mate.

There is a connection here too with the warm bench who has been there? I love that - that possibly you almost ran into the person you were meant for. This is so cleverly written. Lulutrue on October 20, Link. General Comment I really dig the self-references in this song. The bridge is about a bridge, the stick is about sticking.

Has anyone found more self-references? Vietnam is that place. Think about it. Bacon on April 19, Link. General Comment Whenever I happen to listen to this song, which is every 5 minutes, for I am addicted to it, I always think of the movie "Music from Another Room".

When I saw it a few weeks ago, I automatically thought of this song, not only because the main character's name in Anna, but because the line "When I was driving once I saw this painted on a bridge: "I don't want the world, I just want your half"" actually happened in the movie. Artists - T. Ana Ng is found on the album Lincoln.



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