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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
World
Tom Embury-Dennis

Baby It's Cold Outside pulled by US radio station after listeners complain lyrics at odds with #MeToo

A scene from the 1949 film Neptune's Daughter, in which the stars perform a version of Baby It's Cold Outside ( Youtube/Neptune's Daughter )

A US radio station has removed Christmas classic Baby It’s Cold Outside from its playlist after listeners complained it was at odds with the #MeToo movement

Glenn Anderson, a host at Star 102 Cleveland, in Ohio, confirmed the station had pulled the song over what he said were the “manipulative and wrong” lyrics. 

"The world we live in is extra sensitive now, and people get easily offended, but in a world where #MeToo has finally given women the voice they deserve, the song has no place,” Mr Anderson wrote in a blog

Written in 1944 by composer Frank Loesser, the song takes the form of a back-and-forth conversation in which a man tries to convince a woman not to journey home in bad weather and to spend the night with him instead. 

The song includes lines such as: “I really can’t stay (Baby don’t hold out)”, “I ought to say no, no, no (Mind if I move in closer)”, and, infamously, “Say, what’s in this drink?” 

Some have accused the latter lyric of being an allusion to date rape, whereas others argue the line in the 1930s effectively meant, “I’m telling the truth”. 

Sondra Miller, president of Cleveland Rape Crisis Center, said the song “pushed the line of consent”.

"The character in the song is saying 'no’, and they're saying well, 'Does no really mean yes?'” she told local news channel WJW. “And I think in 2018 what we know is consent is 'yes' and if you get a 'no', it means 'no' and you should stop right there.” 

Star 102 subsequently launched a poll on its Facebook page to gauge what listeners thought of the decision. The overwhelming majority thought the radio station should reverse the ban. 

Criticism of the song has been on the rise in recent years, particularly in light of #MeToo, a global movement increasingly holding powerful men to account for sexual harassment.

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