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Why wasn't Queen as successful in America as in other countries? Then, after Radio Ga Ga, they couldn't even get into the top 40 in America even when these songs were top 10 hits everywhere else in the world.

08.06.2025 08:13

Why wasn't Queen as successful in America as in other countries? Then, after Radio Ga Ga, they couldn't even get into the top 40 in America even when these songs were top 10 hits everywhere else in the world.

MTV’s first ban of a video ever had been Queen’s Body Language - but banning a video for being too sexy was rock. Being cross-dressed with a feminist message implying women might want to break free from suburban drudgery? Far “too homosexual” and the video and the rest of the album didn’t get much airtime.

The canonical answer (according to surviving Queen members Bryan May and Roger Taylor) is homophobia and, arguably, misogyny. Queen’s single after Radio Ga Ga was I Want To Break Free - and Queen cross-dressed for the music video. It wasn’t (other than Freddie) even “glamorous drag” of larger than life drag queens; they dressed as a family including a woman with hair in curlers (or rather Coronation Street style working class soap opera characters) doing things like vacuuming and washing up.

Edit: As people seem to be questioning the question, Radio Ga-Ga only reached number 17 in the US Charts in 1984, and I Want To Break Free and all singles after it didn’t break the top 40. As for the albums, from 1975 to 1980 Queen had five top six albums in the US, and after that no top 20 albums (with the album after I Want To Break Free not even cracking the top 40 and even Freddie’s swan song Innuendo only made number 30)

I’m wondering about attachment and transference with the therapist and the idea of escape and fantasy? How much do you think your strong feelings, constant thoughts, desires to be with your therapist are a way to escape from your present life? I wonder if the transference serves another purpose than to show us our wounds and/or past experiences, but is a present coping strategy for managing what we don’t want to face (even if unconsciously) in the present—-current relationships, life circumstances, etc. Can anyone relate to this concept of escape in relation to their therapy relationship? How does this play out for you?