Lyrics Amused to Death - Roger Waters
Doctor
Doctor,
what
is
wrong
with
me
This
supermarket
life
is
getting
long
What
is
the
heart
life
of
a
colour
TV
What
is
the
shelf
life
of
a
teenage
queen
Ooh
western
woman
Ooh
western
girl
News
hound
sniffs
the
air
When
Jessica
Hahn
goes
down
He
latches
on
to
that
symbol
of
detachment
Attracted
by
the
peeling
away
of
feeling
The
celebrity
of
the
abused
shell,
the
belle
Ooh
western
woman
Ooh
western
girl
Ooh
western
woman
Ooh
western
girl
And
the
children
on
Melrose
Strut
their
stuff
Is
absolute
zero
cold
enough
And
out
in
the
valley,
warm
and
clean
The
little
ones
sit
by
their
TV
screens
No
thoughts
to
think
No
tears
to
cry
All
sucked
dry
Down
to
the
very
last
breath
Bartender
what
is
wrong
with
me?
Why
am
I
so
out
of
breath?
The
captain
said
excuse
me
ma'am
This
species
has
amused
itself
to
death
Amused
itself
to
death
It
has
amused
itself
to
death
Amused
itself
to
death
We
watched
the
tragedy
unfold
We
did
as
we
were
told
We
bought
and
sold
It
was
the
greatest
show
on
earth
But
then
it
was
over
We
ohhed
and
aahed
We
drove
our
racing
cars
We
ate
our
last
few
jars
of
caviar
And
somewhere
out
there
in
the
stars
A
keen-eyed
look-out
Spied
a
flickering
light
Our
last
hurrah
Our
last
hurrah
And
when
they
found
our
shadows
Grouped
'round
the
TV
sets
They
ran
down
every
lead
They
repeated
every
test
They
checked
out
all
the
data
on
their
lists
And
then,
the
alien
anthropologists
Admitted
they
were
still
perplexed
But
on
eliminating
every
other
reason
For
our
sad
demise
They
logged
the
only
explanation
left
This
species
has
amused
itself
to
death
No
tears
to
cry,
no
feelings
left
This
species
has
amused
itself
to
death
Amused
itself
to
death
Amused
itself
to
death
(repeating)
(Switch
channels)
"Years
later,
I
saw
Bill
Hubbard's
name
on
the
memorial
to
the
missing
at
Aras.
And
I...
when
I
saw
his
name
I
was
absolutely
transfixed;
it
was
as
though
he...
he
was
now
a
human
being
instead
of
some
sort
of
nightmarish
memory
of
how
I
had
to
leave
him,
all
those
years
ago.
And
I
felt
relieved,
and
ever
since
then
I've
felt
happier
about
it,
because
always
before,
whenever
I
thought
of
him,
I
said
to
myself,
'Was
there
something
else
that
I
could
have
done?'
And
that
always
sort
of
worried
me.
And
having
seen
him,
and
his
name
in
the
register
- as
you
know
in
the
memorials
there's
a
little
safe,
there's
a
register
in
there
with
every
name
- and
seeing
his
name
and
his
name
on
the
memorial;
it
sort
of
lightened
my...
heart,
if
you
like."
"When
was
it
that
you
saw
his
name
on
the
memorial?"
"Ah,
when
I
was
eighty-seven,
that
would
be
the
year,
ninete...
eighty-four,
nineteen
eighty-four."
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