Everybody's Free
Aquagen/Rozalla Lyrics


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Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free

Brother and sister
Together we'll make it through
Some day a spirit will lift you and take you there
I know you've been hurting but I've been waiting to be there for you
And I'll be there just helping you out
Whenever I can, ooh

Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free to feel good, to feel good

We are a family that should stand together as one
Helping each other instead of just wasting time
Now is the moment to reach out to someone, it's all up to you
When everyone's sharing their hope
Then love will win through, ooh

Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free to feel good

Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free to feel good




Everybody's free to feel good, yeah
Everybody's free to feel good

Overall Meaning

The lyrics to Aquagen/Rozalla's "Everybody's Free" are an anthem for unity and positive emotions. The song's message is that everyone has the right to feel good and happy, and that we should support each other in achieving those feelings. The lyrics address the listener directly, telling them that they are free to feel good and that they can always count on others to be there for them.


The song begins by addressing "brother and sister," suggesting a feeling of kinship and shared experience. The line "together we'll make it through" emphasizes the importance of teamwork and support in difficult times. The line "some day a spirit will lift you and take you there" suggests a spiritual or supernatural force that can help us overcome hardship and find happiness. However, it's important to note that the song doesn't define this spirit in any particular way – it's left up to the listener's interpretation.


The chorus, with its repetition of "everybody's free to feel good," is a catchy, uplifting expression of the song's core message. The lyrics urge us to come together as a family to support each other, rather than wasting time fighting or being negative. The final line, "when everyone's sharing their hope, then love will win through," is a message of hope and optimism that suggests that even in difficult times, love and positivity will ultimately triumph.


Line by Line Meaning

Everybody's free to feel good
Everyone has the right to experience happiness and joy in their lives


Brother and sister
We are all connected and should treat each other with kindness and respect


Together we'll make it through
With the support of one another, we can overcome any obstacles and challenges that come our way


Some day a spirit will lift you and take you there
One day, we may experience a moment of transcendence that brings us to a higher level of consciousness


I know you've been hurting but I've been waiting to be there for you
I empathize with your pain and am here to support you whenever you need me


And I'll be there just helping you out
I will go out of my way to assist you in any way that I can


Whenever I can, ooh
Whenever possible, I will be there for you with my support and assistance


We are a family that should stand together as one
As members of the human race, we should support and care for one another as though we are family


Helping each other instead of just wasting time
Our time is better spent assisting others rather than being selfish and unproductive


Now is the moment to reach out to someone, it's all up to you
We have the power and responsibility to initiate acts of kindness and support towards others


When everyone's sharing their hope
In a world where hope is spread and shared, anything is possible


Then love will win through, ooh
When we act with love towards one another, it will ultimately lead us to triumph over adversity


Everybody's free to feel good, to feel good
Everyone has the right to experience the positive feelings that come with being happy and fulfilled in life




Lyrics © Peermusic Publishing
Written by: Nigel Andrew Swanston, Tim Cox

Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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Most interesting comments from YouTube:

@WyrdFayth

+slurb1 Except no. Doc adores his family. By merit of BEING family, though Brock does seem to have earned honorary status.

He doesn't usually QUITE care about them more than himself, at least not to a point of valuing their needs above his own unless it's literally life-or-death, and not to a point that it overcomes his extreme introversion more than once in a blue moon. He doesn't want to actually be around them most of the time. But he still loves them and wants them to be safe.


In Dia de los Dangerous, one of the times we see Doc at his most emotional is when he thinks Brock has died.



In Ice Station Impossible, shortly after a near-death experience of his own, Doc steps not only in front of Hank (who is at risk of exploding any moment) but even in front of Brock, between them and Richard's gun. To reiterate, he puts himself doubly in harm's way to protect Hank even though he could defrost another one. Just because the boys CAN die doesn't mean he wants them to if at all possible.


In Return to Spider-Skull Island, mere moments after JJ has tried to kill him, when Brock is about to crush him, Doc stops him, because "He's family."

In Twenty Years to Midnight, when Rusty sees what he thinks is a living Jonas, his response isn't bitter or outraged, it's confused but wistful. When he asks where he's been, it's not an accusation, but practically begging. He's hurt, he's emotional, and this is toward the man on whom he blames almost every problem in his entire life, who was repeatedly-- sometimes intentionally and sometimes accidentally-- abusive and neglectful toward him.


It's played in sort of an asshole way, but in Pinstripes and Poltergeists, the "Did I ever tell you about your mother? Or that you're both clones? :D" I mean. The WAY he says it is awful, but think of WHY he'd say it. Could it perhaps be, I don't know, seeing an opportunity to get some of the things that have been heavily weighing on him for so long off his chest without it actually affecting anything long term and eagerly taking it? Because that would be my guess.


In Assisted Suicide, we actually SEE, literally inside his mind, how much the boys's deaths are constantly haunting him and hindering his other functions.

Heck, a lot lower key, to show it's not purely in life-and-death and other extreme scenarios.. In Momma's Boys, Rusty asks Hatred to check Dean's room because Dean won't let him in there-- but when Hatred does so, Dean's not IN his room. Rusty isn't staying out because Dean is physically blocking the way, but because Dean TOLD him to stay out. He may not show the boys MUCH respect, but he does still have some.


In All This and Gargantua-2, Rusty's whole demeanor INSTANTLY changes the moment he learns JJ is dying. He holds him until his arms both go completely numb but still doesn't put him down yet.


I could actually go on quite a bit.




Rusty doesn't connect well with people. He doesn't communicate well on most fronts. He doesn't like being around people unless it's under just the right types of circumstances. He gets annoyed extremely easily over incredibly minor offenses. He's also a drug addict and very, very likely to be mentally ill (even outside of the PTSD), and I say that in a way intended to increase sympathizing toward and understanding his atypical behaviors and responses to things, not in a "lol mentally ill" way.


But Rusty DOES value his family above MOST things in life, when push comes to shove.


Which means that, yes, he actually was trying to escape reality and his guilt in this scene. He was definitely not celebrating their deaths.



@pegclairezach

Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free
Brother and sister
Together we'll make it through
Some day a spirit will lift you and take you there
I know you've been hurting but I've been there waiting just to be there for you
And I'll be there just helping you out
Whenever I can, ooh
Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free to feel good, to feel good
We are a family that should stand together as one
Helping each other instead of just wasting time
Now is the moment to reach out to someone, it's all up to you
When everyone's sharing their hope
Then love will win through, ooh
Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free to feel good
Everybody's free to feel good, yeah
Everybody's free to feel good



All comments from YouTube:

@Kenro200x

This was probably the greatest intro to a second season of any season I've ever seen. It was kinda sad to be honest. Still it was all kinds of awesome.

@michaeljeffery7466

Lol

@tobiasandrews3778

I’ve watched it a million times. It’s perfect. It’s real life. Lol.

@brianolsen7361

I had never heard this song until that show. I listen to it at least once a week now.

@joedaleo8872

Actually showed that Thadeus Venture cared.. a little

@gokuonice1940

honestly this hits so deep for me, it will simply exist within me for the rest of my life.

5 More Replies...

@ShooterJoe

Most of the budget of this episode went into licensing this song but it was just so perfect, that opening was the peak of Venture Bros.

@hraesvilgr

lol look at this guy, he thinks Venture Bros peaked 13 years before it ended

@Zachdude123

This song hits different when you and your friends are all together in a room with butterfly costumes :D

@skwissgaar_skwigelf_kdz3251

RIP 24

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