Wow.  I can't believe that's a real song.  I'll have to check it out.  
I have long loved this song, and since I became PO-aware, I have started to think that if I had one question left in the world that I could ask (or that proverbial "what famous person would you have dinner with" question), I would ask David Byrne why he wrote that song.

He lives in NYC. Maybe I'll run into him one day. If I do, I'll ask him if he knew about peak oil in 1988.

He must off known, I love this song.

My favourite PO track is "Big Business" its an extra on the "stop making sense" DVD

"Think you've had enough
huh?

stop talking
help us get ready

Big business
after the shakeup

Stop talking help us get ready"

me and a friend always refer to post peak as "the shakeup" now

"Life during wartime" is also quite apt. but probably more for the billy cottrells of this world

My favorite Revolution Sellout Ads were the ones for Phillips?? FlatPanel TV's, a couple years ago, which always wrapped up with the Beatles' 'Getting Better'.  I don't care if it was McCartney or Jackson who got the check, it was just sad.

I designed some of my own versions of those ads, one where African Kids in dustbowl villages are huddled excitedly around a shiny new Coke Machine, while the Bottling Company Upstream has dammed their river (cue music), and another where people are all driving Bradleys and Tanks down the highways to the mall, which is full of the same..

Hello,
the song I enjoyed the most from Talking Heads was this -

---------------------
The Big Country
---------------------

I see the shapes,
I remember from maps.
I see the shoreline.
I see the whitecaps.
A baseball diamond, nice weather down there.
I see the school and the houses where the kids are.
Places to park by the fac'tries and buildings.
Restaunts and bar for later in the evening.
Then we come to the farmlands, and the undeveloped areas.
And I have learned how these things work together.
I see the parkway that passes through them all.
And I have learned how to look at these things and I say,

(CHORUS)

I wouldn't live there if you paid me.
I couldn't live like that, no siree!
I couldn't do the things the way those people do.
I couldn't live there if you paid me to.

I guess it's healthy, I guess the air is clean.
I guess those people have fun with their neighbors and friends.
Look at that kitchen and all of that food.
Look at them eat it' guess it tastes real good.

They grow it in the farmlands
And they take it to the stores
They put it in the car trunk
And they bring it back home
And I say ...

(CHORUS)

I say, I wouldn't live there if you paid me.
I couldn't live like that, no siree!
I couldn't do the things the way those people do.
I wouldn't live there if you paid me to.

I'm tired of looking out the windows of the airplane
I'm tired of travelling, I want to be somewhere.
It's not even worth talking
About those people down there.

Goo Goo Ga Ga Ga
Goo Goo Ga Ga Ga

-----------------------

Peak Oil and Kunstler's suburbia hatred in one song.

I actually posted excerpts from this article at Kunstler's site a few days ago.

What was most interesting about it was how it actually shows a number of people not buying into certain current American myths - and this group ranges pretty wide, with music over decades. Strange how it becomes interesting news to get an occasional reminder that principle is still part of being a person.

And Byrne has his own radio station at -

http://www.davidbyrne.com/radio/

We don't really need the mass media, which is why I wonder so many people care about the MSM - notice that this article, spreading through the Net, is not really MSM in the traditional sense - though it is very good journalism. Read about Byrne's experiences, and you might notice that the MSM is part of the problem in a number of ways, some quite concrete. There are certain inherent virtues in not using corporate sources except as completely untrusted information sources requiring thought and cross-referencing.