And we share the noosphere with this...
Jan. 17th, 2011 08:51 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Stuck at the vet waiting for the results of a routine vaccination, and flipping through Reader's Digest. Among their charming Americana and humor sections ("Humor in Uniform," "Laughter is the Best Medicine," etc., etc.) is the "Family Funnies," about something cute or amusing or whatever someone said. It's like blogging, only on dead trees.
I gotta say, though, the people who sent their letters into Readers Digest wouldn't survive ten seconds in the blogosphere. The sheer embarassing dysfunction on display, the hideous unselfconscious encouragement to the next generation to be no better than Homer Simpson or Al Bundy, the willingness to discourage anything better than a consumerist existence from birth bed to death bed, is everywhere on display.
The one that sticks most in my head is the woman who thought it cute that her six-year-old had never seen an oven mitt before. When he asked the teacher why she used one, the teacher explained that something coming out of the oven might be hot and the mitt protects her hand. The kid replies, "Oh. My mom's usually just really careful about opening the pizza box."
The mother's child has (a) no idea of kitchen safety, (b) no need for kitchen safety, and (c) no experience at all preparing his own food or watching others do it. And the mom thinks that's adorable.
I don't know if the editors put that letter up because they were genuinely charmed by it, or they were horrified.
I gotta say, though, the people who sent their letters into Readers Digest wouldn't survive ten seconds in the blogosphere. The sheer embarassing dysfunction on display, the hideous unselfconscious encouragement to the next generation to be no better than Homer Simpson or Al Bundy, the willingness to discourage anything better than a consumerist existence from birth bed to death bed, is everywhere on display.
The one that sticks most in my head is the woman who thought it cute that her six-year-old had never seen an oven mitt before. When he asked the teacher why she used one, the teacher explained that something coming out of the oven might be hot and the mitt protects her hand. The kid replies, "Oh. My mom's usually just really careful about opening the pizza box."
The mother's child has (a) no idea of kitchen safety, (b) no need for kitchen safety, and (c) no experience at all preparing his own food or watching others do it. And the mom thinks that's adorable.
I don't know if the editors put that letter up because they were genuinely charmed by it, or they were horrified.
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Date: 2011-01-17 06:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-01-17 09:07 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2011-01-19 03:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-01-20 12:51 am (UTC)