Katy Perry scored one of the biggest hits of the year with "I Kissed a Girl." This song pissed off a few church leaders with its trendy-bi message, leading to signs like this:

Kiss and let kiss, I say, but this church clearly misses the point of the song. Perry is kissing a girl to impress her boyfriend, which is kind of lame. And using a lesbian kiss to stir up controversy is so
five years ago. But I guess it worked!
Perry's second single, "Hot N Cold," is a big improvement. I've listened to it five times already today. Romantic partners not knowing what they want can cause all kinds of problems in our lives. And so can apostrophes. My iPod has the song listed as "Hot 'N Cold," which is wrong since that implies that the "N" stands for "in." (I've discussed this problem
here,
here, and
here.) So, I went straight to the
source to see what the song is really called. But Perry's web site is hot and cold about apostrophes, too. It refers to the song as "Hot N Cold" at the top of the page and "hot n' cold" (hot
no cold?) at the bottom.

And are those backwards quotation marks? Still, "Hot N Cold" is hot.