Editing Portrait of an American Family (album)

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'''"Get Your Gunn"''' is the first single and the seventh track of the album. The song was inspired by the murder of OB/GYN doctor David Gunn who was killed in Florida by an anti-choice activist. The frontman later described his murder as "the ultimate hypocrisy I witnessed growing up: that these people killed someone in the name of being 'pro-life'".<ref name="RS Columbine: Whose Fault Is It?">{{cite journal |author= Marilyn Manson |title= Columbine: Whose Fault Is It? |accessdate=2010-11-17 |type=op-ed essay |edition= |issue=815 |series= |volume= |date=1999-05-28 |journal=Rolling Stone |publisher=Wenner Media LLC}}</ref>
 
'''"Get Your Gunn"''' is the first single and the seventh track of the album. The song was inspired by the murder of OB/GYN doctor David Gunn who was killed in Florida by an anti-choice activist. The frontman later described his murder as "the ultimate hypocrisy I witnessed growing up: that these people killed someone in the name of being 'pro-life'".<ref name="RS Columbine: Whose Fault Is It?">{{cite journal |author= Marilyn Manson |title= Columbine: Whose Fault Is It? |accessdate=2010-11-17 |type=op-ed essay |edition= |issue=815 |series= |volume= |date=1999-05-28 |journal=Rolling Stone |publisher=Wenner Media LLC}}</ref>
  
'''"Wrapped in Plastic"''' is the eighth track on the album. The earliest recording of this song dates back to the band's ''Refrigerator'' cassette tape, released in 1993. It recycles lyrics from an earlier Spooky Kids song, "[[I.V.-T.V.]]". The frontman has stated that "Wrapped in Plastic" is about his past at his grandfather's basement. The version on ''Refrigerator'' cassette gives the listener better detail of this fact.
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'''"Wrapped in Plastic"''' is the eighth track on the album. The earliest recording of this song dates back to the band's ''Refrigerator'' cassette tape, released in 1993. It recycles lyrics from an earlier Spooky Kids song, "I.V.-T.V.". The frontman has stated that "Wrapped in Plastic" is about his past at his grandfather's basement. The version on ''The Family Jams'' cassette gives the listener better detail of this fact.
  
 
'''"Sweet Tooth"''' is the tenth song on the album, and the only song that former bassist [[Gidget Gein]] wrote both guitar and bass parts for. However, of all the album tracks, "Sweet Tooth" was the only one not regularly played live.
 
'''"Sweet Tooth"''' is the tenth song on the album, and the only song that former bassist [[Gidget Gein]] wrote both guitar and bass parts for. However, of all the album tracks, "Sweet Tooth" was the only one not regularly played live.

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