I have no issue with the sentiment but the weird switch between conjugations of the verb made me very uncomfortable. 'She don't care about *us*', surely?
It's funny, after the playoff semi final where i was sitting in the front right corner of the top tier I commented that the atmosphere was really flat from our end and a lot of people disagreed. Yesterday we were more in the middle at the top and i thought rhere was decent noise even when we were losing. I wonder if sound just doesn't travel well in that stadium?
Is that really your only issue with the conjugation? Are we not going to speak about the elephant in the room?
You can hear them singing it at the end of this vlog. Why at 2-1 up would anyone turn their attention to a member of the board?
Didn't realise that was the first line. Those singing it will have been tanked up, so it wasn't clear to me. It was being sung loudly going back down the stairs at full time.
The word you are all looking for is "Hudibrastic". It is said of a poem/song which has surrendered sense and grammar to rhythm and rhyme. I have only ever got that into a conversation on one previous occasion, said of a line in Spandau Ballet's True ("why do I find it hard to write the next line" -because he probably just did!).
It’s a bit like those Millwall slaaaaaags singing “No one likes us, we don’t care”. They must care, or else they’d not mention it every two minutes.