Parklife

See also: parklife

English

Etymology

From the 1994 Blur single "Parklife", which features a narrator speaking verbosely about his daily routine at the park, interrupted by regular shouts of "Parklife!". Popularized as a general interjection in 2014 in a Twitter meme comparing the supposed similarities between "Parklife"'s narration and the speaking style of Russell Brand.

Interjection

Parklife

  1. (UK, humorous) A response to a statement perceived as pretentious, pompous or verbose.
    • 2014 November 13, Ella Alexander, “Russell Brand officially a negative influence on politics, according to this”, in The Independent[1]:
      The news won’t come as a surprise to everyone, considering the number of Twitter users who gamely shouted “Parklife!” at him recently, after Brand’s convoluted way of speaking was compared to the wordy verses of Blur’s song of the same name.
    • 2015 May 5, Jules Montague, “How to win any argument: pseudo-scientific neuro-gibberish”, in The Guardian[2]:
      If you can shout “Parklife!” at the end of your sentence with the word “hippocampus” “or “fusiform gyrus” somewhere in the middle, there is a chance you’ve mastered neurobabble.
    • 2019 December 5, Laura Waddell, “Scotland’s ‘Unmakars’ can take you to some unexpected places”, in The Scotsman[3]:
      As an avid reader, but one who gave up academia years ago, parsing meaning from the dense descriptors occasionally left me ready to shout Parklife. But it’s also a book which says to the reader: make of this what you will. There are no polemics here, no dumbings down.