Al Qaeda Killed Kenny!
Is it me or is this a completely daft
interpretation of South Park? I have a friend in the marine corps who loves
South Park and Team America. He thinks it makes fun of the fictional people of
Durkadurkastan. Sadly, however, he seems incapable of seeing how the movie makes
fun of the protagonists by pushing their stereotypical perceptions of their
enemies to an extreme. There is an irony then, because when he laughs at those
extreme stereotypes, he doesn't see that the movie is using these stereotypes to
make a commentary on America's 'heroes' (who accept these stereotypes
unquestioningly and are thereby revealed to be incapable of sophisticated
thought and seeing nuance).I first
starting reading the article below hoping it might say something to help me
understand my marine friend better. However, all it seems to do is reproduce a
slightly more intelligent version of the same cognitive dissonance. The argument
below basically suggests that we should ship shit loads of South Park videos
over to the Middle East so that people will see how ridiculous Saddam Hussein
really was! Are you kidding
me???Wouldn't that be a candidate for
the most counter-productive propaganda strategy in the history of propaganda?
Rest assured, this move would do NOTHING to undermine the Iranian regime.
Instead, it would do just the opposite. Can you imagine 1000s of kids across the
Middle East laughing their heads of at 'those stupid Americans and their
ridiculous stereotypes of us'?Upon
watching South Park and Team America, I think there is only one thing an Iranian
would want to do. That is, join Al Queda right away in order to better defend
all right thinking human beings against those gun-toting
buckaroos...~Nhttp://www.nationalreview.com/script/printpage.p?ref=/comment/woolsey200511290838.aspNovember
29, 2005, 8:38 a.m.Al Qaeda Killed
Kenny!Carting Cartman off to
war.By R. James, Suzanne, Robert,
Daniel, and Benjamin Woolsey
November 29, 2005, 8:38
a.m.Al Qaeda Killed
Kenny!Carting Cartman off to
war.By R. James, Suzanne, Robert,
Daniel, and Benjamin WoolseyIn their
insightful and offbeat Freakonomics Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner tell the
remarkable story of Stetson Kennedy’s important role in preventing a
substantial national revival of the Ku Klux Klan following World War II. Kennedy
first infiltrated the Klan on his own and learned its secret structure,
terminology, and passwords and then, in a stroke of genius, provided these to .
. . The Adventures of Superman radio show. The script writers made great sport
of the Klan’s goofy terminology (“Exalted Cyclopses,”
“Kleagles,” “Klaverns,” etc.) as Superman battled
against them. Very soon all over the country children were playing Superman vs.
The Klan and mocking the Klan’s bizarre and murderous thuggery. Members
began to leave in
droves.Kennedy’s success
demonstrates that it is much more difficult to strike fear into a society when
its children are laughing at you. Some six decades later the comic geniuses
behind South Park, Trey Parker and Matt Stone, have on occasion turned their
attention to a different set of bizarre and murderous thugs. In an episode
shortly after 9/11, “Osama bin Laden Has Farty Pants” (originally
titled “Osama bin Laden Has a Tiny Penis”) the potty-mouthed South
Park kids go to Afghanistan. Bin Laden does not come off well. Then in their
first full-length film (South Park: Bigger, Longer, Uncut) Parker and Stone
explore the implications of a hilariously romantic involvement between Saddam
Hussein and the Devil.But to date the
piece de resistance of axis-of-evil mockery is their side-splitting latest film,
Team America: World Police. An all-marionette musical, the film satirizes
everybody within reach and is, well, gross (both characteristics are constants
in Parker’s and Stone’s work). For example, the three-man two-woman
American team of terror fighters is composed of good-hearted and brave but
naïve and corny bumblers equipped with the highest technology, which they
tend to misuse — accidentally destroying, say, Paris. They lapse into
psychobabble with one another while discussing their relationships (“I
have feelings for you, too”). All authority figures are fair game for
these two. And an edited version of the film is available for those of tender
sensibilities who might want to give a pass to the most scatological marionette
sex scene in the history of film.In
the film, Team America battles Kim Jong Il, a wonderfully nasty, pompous, tyrant
who wears his heart on his sleeve and is the mastermind behind the world’s
terrorists. (Many of the latter are from Durkadurkastan and say “Durka
Durka” a lot.) Kim’s principal sidekicks — Lenin would have
called them useful idiots — are a bevy of remarkably life-like marionettes
of Hollywood liberals, headed by Alec Baldwin. Parker and Stone give Kim a
unique accent that combines Elmer Fudd’s (“wicked wabbit”)
with some confusion between “l’s” and “r’s”
so his angry song about the Hollywood stars’ failure to live up to his
expectations comes out, “Ooo are worfwess, Arec Bardwin.”
Kim’s melodic lament, “I’m So Ronery,” is similarly, uh,
memorable, and concludes:I work wery
hard and I’m physicary fitBut
nobody here seems to wearize itWhen I
wule the world maybe they’rr notice
meBut untir then I’rr just
beRonery, so
roneryPool witter
me.After seeing Team America it
is virtually impossible, for any of the five of us anyway, to see a picture of
Kim Jong Il or even hear his name without the goofy South Park puppet leaping to
mind.Parker’s and Stone’s
special gift is to see the pompous, the absurd, and the self-important through
the eyes of the young and to caricature these with Chaplinesque comic
sensibility. The Middle East — where there is plenty of pomposity,
absurdity, and self-importance — is a place where satire and ridicule can
be particularly powerful weapons, especially with young people. We should not
fight the spirit of rebelliousness of the region’s youth but go with it.
It is now the case, and sometimes we even deserve it, that we are that
spirit’s target, but we should do our best to help it focus heavily on the
real and entrenched enemies of young people’s freedom: the Middle
East’s pompous
totalitarians.Instead our current
public diplomacy seems to stress broadcasting to the young people of the Middle
East bowdlerized songs from Britney Spears and Eminem, a few talk shows and
offering pictures of American life such as the State Department Magazine
Hi’s now-famous article for young Arab readers on American metrosexuals
(“Real men moisturize.”) Rather than just playing records on the air
and branding ourselves as folks who really care about guys getting pedicures,
maybe we should try to liven up the Middle East’s airwaves with some of
Parker’s and Stone’s inspired
irreverence.In World War II our most
talented writers, directors, and actors helped the war effort. This time around
we might similarly challenge young, creative Americans who understand the
streets of the Middle East, the humor of the young there, and what forms of
ridicule could really work against the Baathists, the Shiite theocrats in
Tehran, al Qaeda, and the Wahhabis. It should be possible to figure out how such
a team could be guided by Parker’s and Stone’s genius. But this
would have to be an undertaking of the young, by the young, for the
young.Recently one of us was
testifying on Iran before a Senate Committee and was asked, in effect, what
steps short of force might help undercut the authority of Iran’s hideous
government. The response — see if you can encourage the creators of South
Park to go after Ahmadinejad and Khamenei they way they went after Kim Jong Il
in Team America: World Police — produced an interesting reaction. The
younger Senate staffers, reporters, and members of the audience giggled and
grinned wickedly. Everyone over 40 looked absolutely clueless. Definitely the
right demographics.— The Woolsey
family, led by its younger members, are South Park
fans.http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/woolsey200511290838.asp
Posted: Wed - November 30, 2005 at 09:45 PM
|
Quick Links
Downing Street Memo
Technorati Search
Props
Categories
Democracy Now!
dotmac.info
Archives
XML/RSS Feed
counter
Calendar
| | Sun | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat
|
Statistics
Total entries in this blog:
Total entries in this category:
Published On: Nov 30, 2005 09:45 PM
|