The Onion's "Our Dumb World" is an online map of the world on which users can scroll around and read satirical factoids located at various points on the map. When a country is "featured" for the week (or month, or whatever) the blurbs proliferate within its borders. The problem with "Our Dumb World" is similar to the problems with The Simpsons' "Africa" episode or Hostel's handling of its Slovakian setting: it tries to pass off the writers' utter ignorance of the subject matter as a satirical critique of America's ignorance of the rest of the world. This week's featured country is Romania, and the various jokes include a spooky castle, a spooky path, a picture of Nicolae Ceauşescu dressed as Count Chocula on a box of cereal, a used coffin dealership (bored with the vampire schtick yet?), a gymnast in a Bride of Frankenstein fright wig, and some 11 other jokes about mad scientists, werewolves, vampire bats and reanimated corpses. What is conspicuously absent is evidence of any research whatsoever concerning Romania past or present, despite an abundance of such information on websites an 8-year-old could use. The Ceauşescus, for example, were killed in their dotage by assault rifles on Christmas Day. Or a one-step Google search for "Romanian jokes" yields this communist-era gem:
Q: What's big, black, noisy, makes a lot of smoke and cuts carrots in five?
A: The Romanian machine for cutting carrots in four.
Good satire is supposed to critique ignorance and injustice, not celebrate them. The worst of it is, The Onion's writers (like too many other North Americans) aren't even "dumb"-- they're just too lazy and complacent to care.
RATING: 5% (at least they found it on the map.)
(Image from www.swingingpuss.com.)
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8 comments:
There is also the opposite problem with satire: that it's so accurate it ain't even funny.
I've been meaning to see that. I liked Christopher Guest in This Is Spinal Tap.
Best in Show was fantastic. The problem is he's too good.
I emailed The Onion at their editorial address. I wonder if they'll read it.
Arbitrary percentage rating?
-ed
Sorry, boss. I had 5% on it, but then I cross posted, edited it, and liked the second edit better, but I don't do % over at TPM so it got lost when I recopied the HTML.
Speaking of 8 year olds, the cutting machine is a tricky concept to teach most kids. 4 pieces is 3 blades, so they have a hard time wrapping their heads around why it isn't 4 and 4.
man that was a long ass review
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