<P> Evan Sawdey of PopMatters described the video as "bizarre - yet - fitting", and Melody Maker said it represented a stunning "psycho - cartoon". Adrian Glover of Circus called the animation incredible and the video "really cool". MTV vice president of music Lewis Largent told Spin "You can watch' Paranoid Android' a hundred times and not figure it all out ." </P> <P> Stanley Donwood worked with Yorke to design the artwork for most of the "Paranoid Android" releases, although both the images and design were ultimately credited to "dumb computers". The cover illustration accompanying the single depicts a hand - drawn dome contains the phrase "God loves his children, yeah!", the last line of the song, written above on the uppermost plane . Images from the OK Computer artwork reappear, including a pig and two human figures shaking hands . Writer Tim Footman suggested that these images are borrowed from Pink Floyd, respectively corresponding to the Pink Floyd pigs and Wish You Were Here cover . The cover of the CD2 single is tinted differently from the CD1 single . The UK vinyl release did not include the dome artwork found on the CD singles, but feature images taken from the OK Computer release across the top banner area . </P> <P> The two versions of the single have different messages on the reverse . Both the CD1 and Japanese releases state: </P> <P> To kill a demon made of wet sawdust . This sort of demon is almost impossible to kill the only way to do it is to cover its face with wet bread and karate chop its head off otherwise you are in trouble and so is the neighbourhood . Wet sawdust demons like to terrorise . N.B. pressing its face into wet bread that is on the ground works best though you can get a result just by throwing the bread at its face . </P>

What does the robot voice say in paranoid android