Slip on a striped shirt, grab a baguette, and get ready for a whirlwind tour of every postcard stereotype you have ever heard about France. In Cliché !, Cédric Villain strings together a rapid-fire parade of clichés: berets, stinky cheese, frog legs, eternal vacations, perpetual strikes, perfume that masks showers skipped, and even the guillotine. The lyrics read like a tongue-in-cheek checklist of everything foreigners think they know about the French, sprinkling in famous names (some of whom are not even French) and playful digs at national quirks — all backed by a lively, accordion-flavored groove.
Beneath the humor lies a clever message: when you pile up stereotypes one after another, their absurdity becomes obvious. By exaggerating each myth, Villain invites listeners to laugh at how simplistic labels can be and to look beyond surface impressions toward the real, multifaceted France. The song is a musical wink that says, "Yes, we have berets and wine, but we are much more than the clichés you see in movies and tourist brochures."