clean as a whistle. you know how to whistle, don’t you?

In honour of International Women’s Day. Please let this be a joke. 

Lysol

It alleges to be an old ad for a feminine hygene product: Lysol. That’s right, Lysol, the stuff I used to kill the mushrooms and mildew in my livingroom. Worked like a dream, although when I was looking after horses for a living we were always cautioned not to use the stuff on their feed buckets, because it was too toxic. I do hope this image is a joke, and the spelling mistakes in the text of the full version don’t help its case for plausibility, but the current news coming out of South Africa, where they use borax, dirt, or salt, leads one to believe people are stupid enough to have done this. Yeah, on second thought, people are stupid enough to have done this. Here’s the text in full, all italics original:

Often a wife fails to realize that doubts due to one intimate neglect shut her out from happy married love

A man marries a woman because he loves her. So instead of blaming him if married love begins to cool, she should question herself. Is she truly trying to keep her husband and herself eager, happy married lovers? One most effective way to safeguard her dainty feminine allure is by practicing complete feminine hygene as provided by vaginal douches with a scientifically correct preparation like “Lysol.” So easy a way to banish the misgivings that often keep married lovers apart.

Germs destroyed swiftly

“Lysol” has amazing, proved power to kill germ-life on contact…truly cleanses the vaginal canal even in the presence of mucous matter. Thus “Lysol” acts in a way that makeshifts like soap, salt or soda never can.

Appealing daintiness is assured, because the very source of objectionable odors is eliminated.

Use whenever needed!

Yet gentle, non-caustic “Lysol” will not harm delicate tissue. Simple directions give correct douching solution. Many doctors advise their patients to douche regularly with “Lysol” brand disinfectant, just to insure feminine daintiness alone, and to use it as often as necessary. No greasy aftereffect.

For feminine hygiene, three times more women use “Lysol” than any other liquid preparation. No other is more reliable. You, too, can rely on “Lysol” to help protect your married happiness…keep you desirable!

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13 out of 30’s not bad

Behold the 30 books everyone should read before they die, at least according to the Guardian and the librarians they consulted, follwed by tick marks to indicate which ones I have read and, therefore, to what extent you may condescend to/suck up to me. It’s a bit heavy on the recent stuff; surely Paradise Lost should be in there somewhere, to say nothing of Brave New World, although at least with that one they could, given modern life, defend themselves with the indisputable claim that it’s redundant. It also seems to indicate that Charles Dickens was the greatest author the English language has ever known, a claim which is itself one of the great comedic set pieces. Much like the death of Little Nell, it just never ceases to bring a tear to the eye and a hearty laugh to the belly.

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee N
The Bible Y
The Lord of the Rings Trilogy by JRR Tolkien Y
1984 by George Orwell Y
A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens Y
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte N must I?
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen Y
All Quiet on the Western Front by E M Remarque N
His Dark Materials Trilogy by Phillip Pullman N but I will in two weeks when I go house-sitting
Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks N but I have some of his other stuff
The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck Y
The Lord of the Flies by William Golding Y
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time by Mark Haddon N That became a classic rather quickly, didn’t it?
Tess of the D’urbevilles by Thomas Hardy Y, Unfortunately. Nuff said!
Winnie the Pooh by AA Milne Y
Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte N Again, must I?
The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Graham Y Although I find it vastly inferior to T. H. White’s The Once and Future King
Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell N
Great Expectations by Charles Dickens Y
The Time Traveller’s Wife by Audrey Niffenegger N
The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold N But I own it; it’s around here somewhere, probably underneath a pile of Vanity Fairs.
The Prophet by Khalil Gibran N Although I have read many a snippet as part of someone’s email signature
David Copperfield by Charles Dickens N Don’t wanna. Can’t make me.
The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho Y
The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov N
Life of Pi by Yann Martel Y And met the man. Now may I be excused from reading David Copperfield?
Middlemarch by George Eliot N And it may interest you to know that neither Eliot, nor any of the Brontes, have made it into any of the three editions of the Norton Anthology of English Literature which I own.
The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver N
A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess N But I love his other stuff, will get to this one day.
A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Alexander Solzenhitsyn N Is it really better than The Gulag Archipelago? 

Censorship = Death

Pakistan don't block the blog

In this particular case, censorship literally does equal death.

From HelpPakistan.com. The Pakistani bloggers are requesting that other bloggers download and display one of their images (such as at right) to display solidarity with their cause and outrage that all Blogspot blogs have apparently been banned in Pakistan:

Over the past few days, The Freedom of Expression of Pakistani Bloggers has been under attack by some, if not all, Internet Service Providers (ISPs) who has chosen to block all blogs hosted on the blogspot.com domain. Political pressure groups have protested to the government to block those web sites displaying the controversial cartoon images of Prophet Muhammed (PBUH) that were hosted on the net. But instead of blocking specific sites, ISPs have simply blacklisted the entire domain, causing thousands of blogs to be inaccessible for viewing or authoring in Pakistan.

I will also take this opportunity to remind my readers that Pakistan’s earthquake-recovery efforts currently still require aid: in fact, they require more winter-grade tents than exist in the world. You can donate here or to the charity of your choice.

Apocalypse Wow!

Is this the worst movie ever made? Dear readers, you will have to tell me, for lo, I haveth not the space on my hard drive, and besides, I’m afraid what all my cool documents will say about me behind my back if I force them to make room for the abomination which is The Day the Clown Cried.

Spy Day the Clown Cried

This is proof positive that, no matter how awful a thing may be, how apocalyptically degenerate, how earth-shatteringly horrific, it will, in the fullness of time, get its own fansite.

Where’s mine, bitches?

The site includes not one but TWO scripts for downloading, a first draft and a final, along with comparative analysis (and never has the word “anal” been more apt) and a compendium of articles on this lost meisterstroke (and never has the word “stroke” aw, fergit it).

Lordy, I’m filthy-minded today. Good thing I work for a singles club!

In any case, here is a snippet from the very fine Spy article in which I first learned of the existence of this work of lost…crapitude. And here is the entire article, for those whose lives do not contain enough pain.

JERRY GOES TO DEATH CAMP by Bruce Handy
Illustrations by Drew Friedman
from “Spy Magazine” – May 1992

To artists and intellectuals, the twentieth century has posed no questions more vexing than these:

First, can art make sense of the Holocaust? 

And second, why do the French love Jerry Lewis?

The first question can’t really be answered, at least not in the space allotted here. As for the second, it’s my own opinion that the French have confused sloppy, uneven filmmaking with Godardian anti-formalism.  Regardless, raising these two issues on the same page is not just a pointless exercise in non-sequitur.  Because Jerry Lewis, like Elie Wiesel and Primo Levi before him — not to mention the producers of the NBC ministeries Holocaust — has transformed the incomprehendible into art.

He did this two decades ago, in 1972, a year of cultural ferment that also saw a black man, Sammy Davis Jr., snuggle Richard Nixon on national television.  It was Lewis’ 41st film (but his first to deal with the mass destruction of European Jewry), and it turned out to be the most notorious cinematic miscue in history — unfinished, unreleased, said by the few who’ve seen it to be  almost unwatchable.  Oh, there are also Von Stroheim’s Queen Kelly and Welles’ Don Quixote, among other busts.  But no other film, seen or unseen, can boast both Nazi death camps and the auteur responsible for The Nutty Professor.

There is only one The Day the Clown Cried.

It sounds like a punchline in an overheated Hollywood satire:  Jerry Lewis in Auschwitz. Depending on your taste, the prospect may be as offensive or as inttriguing as … well, truly, no metaphor measures up to the particulars.  A synopsis:

An unhappy German circus clown is sent to a concentration camp and forced to become a sort of genocidal Pied-Piper, entertaining Jewish children as he leads them to the gas chambers.

The story is meant to be played as drama.  By all accounts, no one sings “You’ll Never Walk Alone”, and Tony Orlando does not appear.
Clown Crying

Who’s in play?

It’s a good question. Here, courtesy of BoingBoing is La Molle Industria, a website that claims to lay it out for you in funfunhappyhappy Engerish terms…only not. I like it very much, although I have no need for the Orgasm Simulator.

Eg:

Tamatipico

Tamatipico Is Your virtual flexworker: He works, he rests and he has fun when you want him to! Raise his productivity but pay attention to his energy and his happyness because he could get injured or strike.