Bunga bunga is a phrase of uncertain origin and various meanings that dates from 1910, and a name for an area of Australia dating from 1852. By 2010 the phrase had gained popularity in Italy and the international press to refer to former Italian Prime MinisterSilvio Berlusconi's sex parties, which caused a major political scandal in Italy.
Early use
An 1852 issue of Hogg's Instructor states that "bunga bunga" is the name given by locals to a location near Moreton Bay on the eastern coast of Australia. In 1910 Horace de Vere Cole, Virginia Woolf, her brother Adrian Stephen and a small group of friends, pretended to be the Prince of Abyssinia and his entourage. They obtained permission to visit one of the world's most powerful warships HMS Dreadnought in Weymouth, Dorset, in what became known as the Dreadnought hoax. It was reported that each time the Commander showed them a marvel of the ship, they murmured the phrase bunga, bunga! which then became a popular catchphrase of the time. Adrian Stephen, had this to say about the phrase: A 1950 Bugs Bunny short "Bushy Hare" used the phrase "Unga Bunga Bunga" in a nonsensical exchange between Bugs Bunny and a character who represented an Australian Aborigine and who was referred to as "Nature Boy". In Malay-speaking countries bunga means flower. As such bunga bunga is simply the plural form of flower.'' Possibly, Makassan contact with Australia can explain the existence of the word within the Australian Aborigines' culture. Bunga Bunga is also the name of a deity worshiped in Malaysia, Thailand, the southern Philippines and northern Sumatra; the deity is believed to take the form of a giant flower that resides at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy.
Resurgence in Italy
A century later, the term bunga bunga became popular again as part of a joke on the internet. This joke was then narrated by Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi at his dinner parties. This expression was then frequently quoted by the Italian and international press during the 2011 investigation surrounding Silvio Berlusconi's child exploitation acquiring a quite different meaning as "an orgy involving a powerful leader"; it was allegedly taught to Silvio Berlusconi by Muammar al-Gaddafi, who was also the unwitting originator of the phrase Zenga Zenga. In Italy, the term "has become an instant, supposedly hilarious, household expression". Recent explanations disagree on its meaning, or perhaps illustrate the range of its reference. It "is said to be a sort of underwater orgy where nude young women allegedly encircled the nude host and/or his friends in his swimming pool", "an African-style ritual" performed for male spectators by "20 naked young women", or erotic entertainment hosted by a rich host involving pole dancing and competitive striptease by skimpy-costumed "women in nurses' outfits and police uniforms" – but topless women, the prize being prostitution for the host. An alternative explanation for its origins was proposed by actress Sabina Began, who claimed that it was a nickname based on her surname and that she had organized the parties. The lexicographer Jonathon Green does not expect the term to make much headway, or to last, in English. The bunga bunga culture sparked a social movement called "Se Non Ora Quando" in 2011, which included street protests.
Popular culture
In 2006. Flavor Flav released the albumHollywood containing the track "Unga Bunga Bunga"; In 2011, the faux-French, American band Nous Non Plus released a song entitled "Bunga Bunga". The cover of the single featured a picture of Silvio Berlusconi. The song lyrics list famous cities around the world while the video is a black and white show-reel of semi-nude dancing women. In 2012, the term was used in the British motoring show Top Gearin Season 18, Episode 1. It was used to describe The Stig's Italian cousin, who emerged from a motor-home dressed in a suit, followed by three glamorous girls, to set a lap time in a Ferrari 458 Italia at the Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari. In 2013, the American band Cherry Poppin' Daddies used the term several times in the lyrics for their song "The Babooch", a satire of "one-percenter" lifestyles. The song's music video features clips of Berlusconi alongside other billionaire figures. In 2014, comedians Maynard and Tim Ferguson started a podcast named Bunga Bunga.