March 08, 2004

Heh-Heh-Heh. He Said Muffet.

Mark gives Rose/Birnbaum a run for their money and interviews Dan Rhodes. While there aren't any Elton John-like confessions, the interview's a good read. I hope other literary blogs will start taking it to the next level and start interviewing authors who come through their respective towns.

Marty Beckerman claims that he was misquoted by Rebecca Traister. This isn't the first time Traister's been accused of overeager journalism, though, to Beckerman's credit, he never demands a brawl with David Talbot. (via Bookslut)

Spalding Gray's body may have been found. An autopsy is underway to determine identification.

And a London librarian claims that nursery rhymes are naughty. Of course. We all know that the spider sitting on Little Miss Muffet's tuffet is really a horny dude with eight dicks. The curds and whey are clearly graveside bukkake. We all know that the grandma-eating Big Bad Wolf represents a guy with an older woman fetish and a closet subscription to MILF Monthly. And we all know that Sleeping Beauty was the princess that the rabble couldn't chat up and take back to the inn. Nursery rhymes are indecent! It is my fervent hope that the Bush Administration will prevent this filth from corrupting the minds of our children.

If you don't believe me, one hard look at "Georgie Porgie" should obviate all innocence:

Georgie Porgie, puddin' and pie

[Clearly, the elided G illustrates that the rhyme is not about "pudding," but about "putting it in." Centuries before the naughtiness of American Pie, "Georgie Porgie" establishes in its first line a distinct pastryphilia. The implication of "Poor G" after "Georgie" implies a guilt for the events about to happen. Furthermore, like Nostradamus predicting the threat of Saddam Hussein, the basis for Georgie is not George IV, but George Michael and his infamous bathroom incident.]

Kissed the girls and made them cry.

[If Georgie Porgie intended merely to kiss the girls, then his behavior would be relatively harmless. But the fact that the girls are crying suggests one of two possibilities: (1) either Georgie Porgie has halitosis (unlikely) or (2) Georgie Porgie is a closet rapist, causing untold grief. Note how easy it is to replace the line with "Screwed the girls and made them cry."]

When the boys came out to play.

[Not content with forced debauchery, Georgie Porgie expands his horizons and illustrates to his peers that he swings both ways.]

Georgie Porgie ran away.

[Again, by anticipating the furor over same-sex marriages, the nursery rhyme proves to be well ahead of its time. Instead of coming to terms with his polymorphously perverse nature or indeed atoning for his sins as a rampant rapist, Georgie Porgie decides to run away and return to his cave. The subconscious message being fed to children is that not only is it okay to "make girls cry," but that one's true deviant nature must be kept from the populace, ideally in an isolationist environment, much like the Catholics.]

Posted by DrMabuse at March 8, 2004 07:56 AM
Comments

I hope other literary blogs will start taking it to the next level and start interviewing authors who come through their respective towns.

Some of us have taken that trajectory in reverse!

Posted by: ron at March 8, 2004 10:52 AM