A song for all the astronauts and pirates.
Okay, so there's something bothering me this morning. That thing is "Arthur's Theme" by Christopher Cross. In case you don't know, that's the song about being caught between the moon and New York City.
The chorus is as follows:
When you get caught between the Moon and New York City
I know it's crazy, but it's true
If you get caught between the Moon and New York City
The best that you can do ......
The best that you can do is fall in love
Let's look at this logically. "When you get caught" implies that it is inevitable that you will be caught between the moon and New York City at some point. In reality, how likely is this?
Given that the earth rotates once on its axis every day, the moon and New York City lining up so anything can be between them can only occur twice a day. When the moon is directly above New York City, one would need to be in a geo-synchronous orbit above NYC in order to "get caught". The other way to be between the moon and NYC is to be on the other side of the earth with the moon overhead. I calculate this to be somewhere near the McDonald Islands in the southern Indian Ocean. Also an unlikely scenario.
Is this a song merely for astronauts and pirates? And what does the alignment of the moon with a major North American city have to do with falling in love? And if the singer is just poetically trying to say that he's standing in New York City and the moon is overhead and he is thus between the two objects, this would be an occurrance that happens pretty much every day. Does he fall in love with whoever is nearby when the moon is overhead?
Frankly, I find this song easily as questionable as the Pina Colada Song. And don't get me started on What You Waiting For by Gwen Stefani.
Alana