Smokin-0.mp3
Smokin-0.mp4
Smokin-I.mp3
Smokin-I.mp4
Smokin-intro.mp3
[Intro]
(Wow-eee!)
Did you see?
[Verse 1]
She….
(Is hot)
In case you forgot
(She’s hot)
With all she’s got
[Bridge]
Is she too hot
(Too, too hot)
[Chorus]
I ain’t jokin’
When I say she’s smokin’
Her entire attire
(Is on fire!)
[Bridge]
(Wow-eee!)
Did you see?
[Verse 2]
She is hot
(She’s on fire)
In case you forgot
(Take her higher)
With all you’ve got
[Bridge]
Is she too hot
(Too, too hot)
[Chorus]
I ain’t jokin’
When I say she’s smokin’
Her entire attire
(Is on fire!)
[Outro]
Is she too hot
(Too, too hot)
ABOUT THE SONG
The song “Smokin’” uses double entendre and wordplay to deliver a sharp allegory for the climate crisis, portraying Mother Nature (“She”) as both alluring and burning, quite literally. Beneath its catchy, flirtatious tone lies a warning about planetary overheating, and humanity’s dangerously passive or admiring gaze as the planet ignites.
Verse 1:
She… (Is hot) / In case you forgot / (She’s hot) / With all she’s got
“Hot” serves a dual meaning—on the surface, it’s sensual; deeper down, it signals dangerous temperature rise. “In case you forgot” hints at willful ignorance of nature’s current state. “With all she’s got” reflects both her abundance and the fury now unleashed as a result of environmental abuse.
Bridge:
Is she too hot (Too, too hot)
A rhetorical question—inviting the listener to reconsider whether we’ve crossed the climatic point of no return. Repetition of “too” drives the idea of excess, suggesting that nature’s rising heat is no longer a metaphor, but a physical, global threat.
Chorus:
I ain’t jokin’ / When I say she’s smokin’ / Her entire attire / (Is on fire!)
The cheeky tone contrasts with a deadly message: “smokin’” is literal. Wildfires, rising global temperatures, and burning landscapes are her “attire.” The phrase “I ain’t jokin’” cuts through the flirtatious language, reminding listeners that this is real—she’s burning, and it’s no joke.
Verse 2:
She is hot / (She’s on fire) / In case you forgot / (Take her higher) / With all you’ve got
This verse is even more pointed. “She’s on fire” is no longer metaphor—it evokes climate extremes, wildfires, heatwaves. “Take her higher / with all you’ve got” is darkly ironic, showing how our relentless consumption is pushing temperatures—and the crisis—even further.
Outro:
Is she too hot (Too, too hot)
Repeating this question leaves the listener with a moral reckoning. It echoes the question: have we pushed nature past the limit?
Summary:
“Smokin’” disguises a climate crisis dirge beneath a stylized, playful surface. Mother Nature is depicted as a beautiful woman whose beauty has turned lethal due to human carelessness. The song cleverly critiques how society objectifies and romanticizes nature, even as it burns her alive. It exposes our tendency to admire the disaster instead of averting it.