I'm a little ambivalent about tomorrow's celebration of International Talk Like a Pirate Day. There are a few reasons, some personal, most not. Here are my thoughts:
1) Right off the top, I confess that I am still a little hurt by the utter failure of Talk Like Slip Mahoney Day (June 2). I know I made many errors in the concept -- the Bowery Boys and Slip himself, the late Leo Gorcey, are hardly remembered anymore. Plus, even for those who remember the many Bowery Boys movies fondly, talking like Slip Mahoney is not simple. Slip's hard-knocks New York accent is easy enough to imitate, but his constant stream of malapropisms is difficult to replicate off the cuff. Malapropisms are hard! You have be to clever to sound that dumb. As I wrote before, any fool can go ARRR and Avast ye, but it's tricky to come up with lines like "You're not holding me here as an accomplishment to the crime because I never accomplished anything in my life, so what's the charge?" I blame myself for thinking we were up to the challenge.
2) The failure of Talk Like a Grizzled Prospector Day (January 24) to catch on should have taught me that the "Talk Like" holiday concept is not infinitely expandable. I don't even hear much about International Talk Like William Shatner Day (March 22) anymore.
3) And I don't think that Talk Like a Pirate Day is even what it used to be. The founders don't update the Webpage very often. Krispy Kreme used to give out free doughnuts on the big day, but there's no mention of it on the company site now. Dunkin' Donuts hasn't done anything for it, I believe, in five years. The day's biggest supporter, humor writer Dave Barry, has been missing for weeks, dealing with a serious family medical issue. (Maybe he'll make an appearance tomorrow.) Childhood Cancer Support in Australia does use the day as a fund-raising opportunity, so I hope for their sake it is not disappearing.
I don't know if any offices are doing employee fun events based on the day, but in the current sensitivity-to-the-point-of-explosion atmosphere, it would seem reckless to celebrate anything relating to a people known for intemperance, violence, thievery, and sexual incontinence. Hey, I'm glad I'm not working in an office anymore!
4) Finally, are pirates what they had been? The main tent pole for the pirate popularity is the Pirates of the Caribbean film series. The first movie came out in 2003, and they've been getting stupider ever since. While there was a lot of smarts in the first film, it got progressive sacrificed for looks and set-pieces as it went. I bailed after #3. They've all made money, but no one knows if there will be a #6 at this point. It may be stuck in Development Hell. If it actually is made, it may be dumber than the dumbest Bowery Boys movie -- so dumb that it will cause a explosion of stupid that will make the Kraken look like a Chiweenie puppy, taking all the fun of piracy with it.
Plus, the Pittsburgh Pirates are in fourth place in the NL Central as of this morning.
So all this is rather distressing. But, of course, I will be ready tomorrow all the same.
What the hey -- Dunkin' Donuts might change its mind and hand out doughnuts. Doughnuts ahoy!
3 comments:
As a Bowery Boys fan and having been born on Talk Like a Pirate Day, I can really synchronize wit' yer concerns dere, Fred. I grew up watching Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall on weekend mornings on Channel 5 (or was it 9 or 11) out of NYC and loved them! As for pirates, I think the Somali branch of the biz kind of took the wind out of their sails (sorry) with their speedboats, AK-47s, and chants of "Die Infidels!" in lieu of learning proper pirate-speak like "wizzen down th' fud-nutchies ye blasted sea-dogs!" or some such. Thanks for another fun post!
Ahoy, Mongo! You're right; I forgot about those pirates. They're not the fun pirates we love. Actually neither were the originals, but they're all safely dead.
Harrr har harrrr! Ye'll never get the formuler!
Post a Comment