Prodigy - Smack My Bitch Up -uncensored - Banne... !free! Official
: The protagonist engages in heavy drinking, drug use (specifically cocaine and heroin), vandalism, and hit-and-run driving.
The central hook—"Change my pitch up / Smack my bitch up"—was widely condemned by advocacy groups like the National Organization for Women (NOW), who argued it promoted domestic violence. Prodigy - Smack My Bitch Up -uncensored - banne...
However, the phrase was not an original lyric written by the band. Producer Liam Howlett had sampled it directly from the 1988 track "Give the Drummer Some" by the classic hip-hop group Ultramagnetic MCs. Within hip-hop subculture, the phrase was slang for doing something with intense energy, high power, or maximizing a track's volume and drive. : The protagonist engages in heavy drinking, drug
Spoiler Alert: The ultimate irony—and the genius—of the video lies in its final seconds. Producer Liam Howlett had sampled it directly from
Of course, no discussion of the video is complete without its masterful, gut-punch ending. After a night of unstoppable, hyper-masculine destruction, the protagonist stumbles into a bathroom and looks into the mirror. The camera finally reveals the reflection—. In a single, brilliant shot, Åkerlund subverts everything the viewer has been conditioned to expect. The rampaging, violent "bitch smacker" is not a stereotypical male brute, but a woman.
The video is shot entirely in POV (point-of-view). For four minutes, the viewer is the protagonist—stumbling out of a limousine, snorting lines of cocaine off a table, groping a stripper, getting into a violent brawl, trashing a hotel room, and engaging in a graphic sexual act.
Liam Howlett has said he regrets not using a different sample, not because of the controversy, but because it overshadowed the music. “People forgot to listen to the track. It was an electronic punk record. End of story.”