Sous Mon Bob is Philippe Katerine’s surreal stroll through the streets of his own imagination. Hiding “under my bucket hat,” the French pop icon slips into a secret alter-ego who watches the world from beneath the brim, half-invisible and totally uninhibited. The lyrics bounce from goofy self-portraits—a fifty-year-old belly, day-dreaming of collages and blow-jobs—to rapid-fire name-drops of Snoop Dogg, Dior scarves and burning Parisian cafés. Each odd reference is a colorful confetti piece that shows how modern life bombards us with random images and how Katerine embraces the chaos with childlike wonder.
Beneath the silliness lies a gentle reflection on identity and aging: even if no one really recognizes him, he can still “walk on the globe” and feel eternal. The repeated shout of “le monde est fou” reminds us that the world is crazy, so why not dance along under a floppy hat? The song celebrates freedom, eccentricity and the joy of staying curious, proving that you can be 50, slightly out of breath, yet still groove like the coolest kid in town—just keep your bob on and let the madness roll.