"What does the fox say?" is about an inherently furry topic - what foxes say to others, including other animals. It's even clearer when the lyric are spelt out on the big screen in the BBC special. "Kangaroo Court" as a song is not furry in the same topical sense, so I wouldn't say it's particularly furry just for mentioning an animal-containing idiom - but the music video is (as is the extended non-lyrical version). The same for "Digger"'s music video. Aesthetic is sufficient, but I think it should be associated with the performance rather than adhering to the performer or composer merely because they are in the community.
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"What does the fox say?" is about an inherently furry topic - what foxes say to others, including other animals. It's even clearer when the lyric are spelt out on the big screen in the BBC special. "Kangaroo Court" as a song is not furry in the same topical sense, so I wouldn't say it's particularly furry just for mentioning an animal-containing idiom - but the music video is (as is the extended non-lyrical version). The same for "Digger"'s music video. Aesthetic is sufficient, but I think it should be associated with the performance rather than adhering to the performer or composer merely because they are in the community.