Reheated (107)
From the archives – and from the golden age of the Guardian – some examples of improbable agonising.
Women, we’re told, are being mentally injured by small baked goods.
A commenter asks, “What is it with people’s inability to ignore the things they don’t like?” Meaning things you don’t like and which have no bearing whatsoever on your everyday life or the turning of the world. Say, “our” alleged “obsession” with cupcakes and their supposedly debilitating effects on helpless, hapless womenfolk. Women being so mentally insubstantial that even a tiny cake can unhinge their minds, apparently.
But fretting ostentatiously about things of no importance has long been a standard template for Guardian articles, especially if you can shoehorn in some sophomoric theorising. It’s something most papers do to some extent, due to the obligation to Fill Space Somehow, but the Guardian is by far the greatest exponent and the most grandiose. Many of its contributors have mastered inadvertent surrealism.
As commenter sk60 quipped in reply,
On being oppressed by suburban barbecues, where, it turns out, the Patriarchy reigns and women are crushed underfoot.
I’ve been to a few barbecues over the years, one or two with female grill-keepers, though most with males wielding the Plastic Spatula of Oppression™. I can’t say I was ever aware of much argument as to roles. It generally seems to depend on who’s in the mood or who’s the better cook, at least of the items in question, or – perhaps more commonly – who’s prepared to spend the day on duty, sweating, while smelling of grease and smoke.
I’ve yet to hear of womenfolk being locked indoors, away from the charcoal and firelighters, by surly, hissing men. And at the barbecue I attended recently, the matriarch of the house had a much more important job than merely cooking sausages. My sister-in-law kept the day lubricated with endless, quite colossal, pitchers of Pimms. Priorities, you see.
It doesn’t seem to have occurred to Mr Power that quite a few people, male and female, actually enjoy the role-play opportunity of the barbecue – the theatre, the ritual, the fun. Even – heresy! – gendered fun. But hey, the point is that some of you heathens are still arranging your leisure time and social gatherings in a way of which our Guardianista disapproves. Your barbecues aren’t being gender balanced in the way he would like.
Also, the assertion by our learned journalist:
Guardian writer is psychologically crushed by spellcheck software, disposable paper cups.
“Angela could get coffee at Starbucks with ease,” says Ms Rojas, “while Icess was still spelling her name out.” Oh, this new realm of suffering: “Jessica was a staple at my local Chinese place even though Icess paid. And even Microsoft Word recognised Jenny as a proper pronoun, a proper person, over me; the red squiggle line was a constant reminder.”
Spellcheck too? Will this oppression never end? And doubtless Ms Rojas is intimately familiar with the spelling and pronunciation of every name of every employee at her local Chinese restaurant.
Prompted by Ted S in the comments. Which you’re reading, of course.
For those craving more, this is a pretty good place to start.
That.
I think it’s worth noting just how often the preoccupations of Guardian contributors, or their professed preoccupations, seem a little odd. One might say contrived.
But you’re not supposed to think about that. Too practical.
Well, indeed. For people who like to tell us, quite often, how immensely empathetic they are, they – Guardian writers – don’t on the whole seem very good at it.
I mean, if I picture Beloved Sister-In-Law #1 holding court at one of her rather impressive family barbecues, the word downtrodden does not spring to mind.
It’s the weird failure to grasp that the traditional role-play of the barbecue, the genial theatre, is part of the appeal, the ritual, and a source of knowing jokes. (“Man make fire! Man cook meat!” etc.)
And then there’s the implication that a big family feeding would be made more satisfying, more fun, if it were strictly gender-balanced in compliance with the assumptions of a rather sour Guardian contributor. As if the obvious thing missing were a gendered cooking rota.
As so often, you say these things out loud…
I love it when Guardianistas talk about “our obsession” with something that no-one I know is obsessed with.
What was once the language of tabloids has made its way into the more lofty media such as the New York Times. “What You Should Know About . . .” or “Five Points You Must Know About . . .” I especially like when a headline startes with “The Question No One is Asking . . .” Perhaps, dear journalist, no one is asking because no one cares.
I confess, when reading the NYT Sunday morning, my eye caught the headline “What to Expect at the Tony Awards” and I muttered to myself, “Gay men. Lots of gay men,” and I moved on.
[ Slides ashtray of oddly dusty boiled sweets closer to Stephanie. ]
I took the wrappers off to save you time.
Not infrequently, it’s as if the writers were baffled and disgusted by the most normal and innocuous human interactions. As if the need to find humdrum things problematic, thereby signalling in-group elevation, overrode all else, even if the attempt involves great contrivance and makes one look ridiculous.
And it seems fair to assume that Mr Power would be much less forthcoming on the subject of gender roles among other, browner people. I suspect that only Whitey’s leisure habits are to be the target of his eye-rolling disdain. One might, I think, regard his use of the word suburban as having certain intended connotations.
Ignoring the question of why someone would go to a concert of a band they didn’t like, totally the same.
Speaking of which, the Spam-No-Mor (Ausf. G)™ is being a fickle jenny again, if, at your leisure, you might ask one of the henchlesbians to give it a bitch slap.Spasiba.
From your original post:
She says this like it’s a *good* thing. This Matt sounds like an absolute cad. Bring cake back!
Liberated.
Mr Seaton’s enthusiasm for overriding the dietary preferences of other people is, we’re to believe, an act of nobility, of superhuman heroism.
He’s saving them from the “implicit values” of cupcakes.
Praise be.
Again, you say it out loud…
Via Mark Steyn, scenes from the front.
Would it be entirely unfair to gas them like badgers?
No, not at all. Even taking into account my preference for badgers.
It’s The Princess and the Pea as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade.
[ Rattles ashtray of unwrapped, oddly dusty boiled sweets in effort to entice. ]
So often, they just seem whiny, anhedonic and perverse. The kind of people you wouldn’t want at your barbecue or party. They’re telling us very little about the world, but quite a lot about themselves.
I’m trying to imagine our po-faced Mr Power trying to convince Beloved Sister-In-Law #1 that she’s somehow being cruelly downtrodden by the “ugly” sexism of her own barbecues, even though she doesn’t know this, possibly on account of her not being a Guardian reader.
I don’t fancy his chances, frankly. But I would sell tickets.
I’ll take two.
Pay per view?
But that’s the thing. You put these ludicrous outpourings against real people – people you actually know – and it can get quite surreal. In the case of Mr Power, our fretful Guardian columnist, and my own Beloved Sister-In Law, from what we can infer about him – and from what I know about her – she could reduce him to tears and impotent spluttering without once spilling her drink.
Patriarchy, indeed.
The Guardian is not really a newspaper as much as a petri dish for the emotionally unstable to publicly broadcast their neuroses.
What’s notable about it isn’t the public airing of persecution complexes as much as the head nodding that accompanies it. Their readership is offended by skincare products, think fish are racist, and feel oppressed by seeing other people going hiking.
Since the rest of the world refuses to listen to their concerns, and dismisses them as neurotics (not surprisingly), they found a “safe space” where they can all sit in a circle and agree that water causes white supremacy and pancake syrup empowers the patriarchy.
It’s a bit like listening to patients in 15th century asylums chatting amongst themselves, I imagine, as the one who thinks he’s Jesus talks with the one who thinks he’s Genghis Khan and the one who thinks he’s Napoleon, and all three agree that the rest of the world should listen to them.
He’s getting a bit carried away here in a display of male empathy with the imagined lived experience of slim young female colleagues, but it’s so over the top to make you wonder if there’s an in-joke or a bet behind it.
I wouldn’t be surprised if he banned cupcakes in his own office because he’s tired of the daily disruption and female drama. Or if he’s getting tired that what should be one-sentence emails saying no more of this during office hours please have to be written as female empowerment manifestos.
Take that, Kathleen Kennedy!
Next up . . .
Except . . . no one with authority in the 15th century took asylum inmates seriously.
Over the years, and on more than one occasion, I have felt an urge to say, “Despite the grandiose claims, this isn’t actually politics. It’s just your weirdly messed-up personality.”
[ WhatsApps Beloved Sister-In-Law #1 re date for next family barbecue. ]
Use of the Royal “We” is clearly outlined in the Grauniad’s style guide.
And, while I’m on the topic of journalistic style, Caps and Spelling and such, perhaps Ms. Icess Fernandez Lopez would have more success if she changed the spelling of her name to ISIS.
“ISIS, I’ve got a latte for ISIS…”
Ms Rojas – the one being denied “validation” by spellcheck software – and thus unable to “celebrate” her “uniqueness” – appears not to know that the software in question actually invites the user to add any unfamiliar terms, including proper names.
Ms Rojas, since you ask, is a creative writing graduate with “an alphabet soup full of degrees,” and now teaches others how to be “amazing writers.”
If the women folk in the UK don’t want to look like cupcakes or muffin tops, perhaps they should stop putting cupcakes or muffin tops in their great gapping maw?
Also, here’s a list of all Miss Universe / Miss World winners from all parts of the UK:
…
“It’s like, imagine going to a concert where everyone loves the same band…”
er…isn’t that the point of a concert?? That a band plays music for its fans who have purchased tickets to go hear said band play live? It’s kind of the definition of a concert.
It really does illustrate how far down the insidious Inclusion sinkhole we’ve fallen as a society when the default assumption of proponents of certain niche behaviors and identities is acceptance and celebration from the general populace, when the general populace has no expectation whatsoever of any of their norms, traditions, etc being accepted, let alone celebrated, by said niche groups. I for one do not want celebration or even acceptance of my normie ways from the general populace. Just live and let live – leave me out of your niches.
Meanwhile, in Los Angeles, the return of the “space to destroy” people.
Diversity in action.
So, we see that Antifa and dem pols now have a history of identical riots in support of:
BLM–burn cities down, attack cops
Free Palestine: shut down campus, attack Jews, attack cops
ICE deportations: burn shit, attack police, prevent deportation of criminals
Is there anything in common between these things? Yes–it is to burn shit and attack cops. It is anarchy. That is all it is. They just want to burn it all down. And the dems are supporting it.
The other thing in common is that dem politicians are supporting criminals (saint George), terrorists (Hamas), and criminals (deportations). Not just supporting them but willing to burn cities to support them. So, they must view such criminals and terrorists as their friends and constituents. wow
It depends. Some classical orchestras make a point of always including at least one ugly modern work to “broaden” their audience’s horizons. 😉
Whoever invented the Rorschach (sp?) test would be stunned to find out that cupcakes and hiking could harbor such sinister symbolism.
Never once has anyone guessed how to spell my last name, and only 1/10 pronounce it correctly. But feeling oppressed by this? ahhahahah no fucking losers
Couldn’t help a chuckle.
Monsters exist.
Musical Tardigrades.
Bringing the meme to life.
Heh. Tell me you’ve never had a girlfriend without telling…etc. etc. yadda-yadda….jk…95% right so ….
Yes…trying to get more information out of grok about the conductor’s lack of engagement but since no “official” sources address it, as far as grok is concerned he wasn’t on the video. Pursuing that is like pulling teeth.
“Professional” journalist doesn’t know right-click -> Add to Dictionary.
Ooh, I get a mention!
[ Rummages around mini-fridge behind the bar, takes ramekin of custard and replaces it with jar of pickled eggs ]
I am more worried about urban car-becues.
It seems clear that not enough news reporters’ cars get torched by rioters and “fun loving urban youth”.
A touch of envy?
Butter-iced snares of silken cords that sell precisely because they exploit every woman’s craving for beauty and sweetness, and offer a completely wonderful and momentary experience of treasured gratification, almost certainly followed by fond memories of delectable treats.
This right here ^^^? This is the primary difference between left and right.