Here are 10 questions. The questions are answered directly in the lines from rock and roll songs. There are several eras and sub-genres. They range from simple to not-so-simple.
When all 10 questions have been answered, someone may posit another 10.
He’s been working on a cocktail. What’s it called?
And the correct answer to No. 2 should be the first answer that was given.
The girl in the flatbed Ford might be a fine sight herself, but the lyrics clearly indicate that the singer (Glenn Frey) is referring to himself (alternately, it could be Jackson Brown who cowrote it to which the lyrics refer) which is why the girl slows down to take a look at him.
When I read the answer to #2, I chuckled, but realized the ambiguity. My assumption is that the phrase was supposed to be the girl in the flatbed Ford, but if you parse it out literally, the object of the phrase is written in such a way that the singer should refer to the singer. “Well, I’m a standing on a corner in Winslow, Arizona/ and such a fine sight to see/ It’s a girl, my Lord in a flatbed Ford/slowin’ down to take a look at me.” My thought is that the intention is: “Well, I’m a standing on a corner in Winslow, Arizona and such a fine sight to see: It’s a girl, my Lord, in a flatbed Ford slowin’ down to take a look at me.” Not that the singer/narrator of the song is the “such a fine sight to see,” but the syntax is ambiguous. I find it unlikely, though, that the singer was talking about himself as “such a fine sight.”