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I'm with Stupid (Pet Shop Boys song)

"I'm with Stupid"
I'm With Stupid 7.jpg
Single by Pet Shop Boys
from the album Fundamental
B-side "Girls Don't Cry", "The Resurrectionist"
Released 8 May 2006
Format 7", CD, Maxi-CD, DVD
Recorded 2003–2005
Genre Synthpop
Length 3:27 (album version)
3:58 (video edit)
Label Parlophone
Writer(s) Neil Tennant, Chris Lowe
Producer(s) Pet Shop Boys, Trevor Horn
Pet Shop Boys singles chronology
"Flamboyant"
(2004)
"I'm with Stupid"
(2006)
"Minimal"
(2006)

"I'm with Stupid" is a song by British synthpop band Pet Shop Boys and is featured on their 2006 album, Fundamental. It was released 8 May 2006 as the lead single from the album in the United Kingdom and the rest of the European Union (see 2006 in British music). It became the duo's 21st Top 10 single in the UK, peaking at number 8.

Though ostensibly about a romantic relationship with a man perceived by the public as a "moron", the song has been acknowledged as being, on another level, about Tony Blair's beleaguered relationship with George W. Bush. The protagonist of the song is eventually brought to wonder if the other's stupidity might not be a front:

(See also special relationship as a term in international relations.)

It received its official first play 31 March on BBC Radio 2 and charted at number eight in the UK Singles Chart, becoming the duo's twenty-first UK top ten single. One of the single's B-sides, "The Resurrectionist", is about body-snatching in the English Regency era, carried out by people literally called "resurrectionists".

"I'm with Stupid" was performed on the 23 April 2006 episode of Top of the Pops, in the latest in a long series of Pet Shop Boys performances on the UK music programme. The performance was planned to include six dancers, wearing masks depicting Blair's and Bush's faces. The BBC's editorial department objected, however, citing the need to be politically "impartial"; in the end, only one Blair mask and one Bush mask was used, with the remaining four masks replaced by ones depicting Bill Clinton, David Cameron, Menzies Campbell, and Vladimir Putin. The song was later performed in Germany in the form the BBC had objected to.


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