When asked why "Hollywood" was chosen as a single in an interview with the BBC News website, Diamandis said:
"I'm saying: "This is who I was. Hollywood infected my brain and I really valued the wrong things in life, but I changed dramatically." "This obsession with celebrity culture is really unhealthy. I don't want to live my life like that, and I don't want to be a typical pop star".
Diamandis told The Sun: "That track is a sarcastic and cynical take on everything that's commercial about America. I love the country and people dearly and can't wait to tour there but I hate the way it brainwashes you. I am seduced by its pop culture but I don't want my brain to be infected."
Critical reception
Fraser McAlpine of the BBC Chart Blog called "Hollywood" a "properly amazing pop song" and stated that "the level of insight displayed about America, culturally and politically, is on a par with the Razorlightsong about America Marina, for all that she's spotted that Hollywood is something of an upsettingly fake place, with scope for quite exciting things to happen, seems to get as much enjoyment out of just singing the word as she does from puncturing its ego." Caroline Sullivan of The Guardian called it "perky".
The music video for "Hollywood" was directed by Kinga Burza and released onto YouTube on 30 November 2009. It was filmed in "a house which is basically like a palace" in West London. The video shows an American patriotic party with multiple American flags used as decorations and clothing. There are a number of characters and objects that symbolise the stereotype of American culture featured in the music video such as cheerleaders, jocks, American football players, a pageant queen, paparazzi, a cowgirl, baseball players, look-alikes of Elvis Presley, James Dean, Marilyn Monroe and President Barack Obama, hot dogs, popcorn and an Academy Award. Chilly Gonzales made a "stripped-down" remix of the song, for which Dan Knight filmed a video. Knight wanted his video to be the opposite of Burza's "super high glossy" work and to instead have the appearance of 1980s performances on programmes such as Top of the Pops. In his video, Gonzales and Diamandis perform on a fictional Estonian television programme called Pop!, complete with subtitles in the nation's language.
Track listings
CD single
"Hollywood" – 3:23
"Hollywood" – 3:43
Digital EP
"Hollywood" – 3:23
"Hollywood" – 3:43
"Hollywood" – 5:45
"Hollywood" – 7:26
"Hollywood" – 3:38
UK 7-inch single
UK limited-edition signed 7-inch single
Credits and personnel
Credits adapted from the liner notes of The Family Jewels.