Bloodhound Gang - The Bad Touch (official Video) [TOP-RATED · Fix]

Dropping a Scully and Mulder reference was the peak of 1999 relevance.

Jimmy Pop, the band’s frontman and primary songwriter, is essentially the Shakespeare of the gutter. The song is a dense collection of puns, pop culture references, and metaphors that range from the educational to the absurd: Bloodhound Gang - The Bad Touch (Official Video)

The music video is where the legend was truly born. The band members, dressed as "Monkey-Rats" (officially known as the "Discovery Channel" costumes), roam the streets of Paris with blowguns, kidnapping mimes and dancing in front of the Eiffel Tower. It was surreal, slightly low-budget, and perfectly captured the "we don't care" attitude of the alternative scene at the turn of the millennium. The Lyrics: A Masterclass in Innuendo Dropping a Scully and Mulder reference was the

If you grew up in the late 90s, you didn’t just hear "The Bad Touch"—you lived it. Whether it was the repetitive, infectious synth line or the sight of five guys in oversized monkey costumes frolicking through Paris, the Bloodhound Gang’s breakout hit was inescapable. The band members, dressed as "Monkey-Rats" (officially known

The central hook ("You and me baby ain't nothin' but mammals...") turned a nature documentary staple into a pickup line for the ages.