Tuesday, January 28, 2014

"The Explainer Question of the Year"

"Thousands of you (Slate readers) sifted through the topics that this column was unable to address in 2013—a list of matters of minuscule importance, such as why venison is not usually made into soup, and when people started drinking beverages through straws. But these were just the also-rans. What were the runners-up?"
In third place, with 8.1 percent of the votes, a question of meteorological anthropology: What did Native Americans think of tornadoes? This would have been a tricky one to answer, as some American Indians seemed to view them as a cleansing while others called them punishment.

In second place, with 8.7 percent, some cross-cultural lexicography: I love palindromes (“A man, a plan, a canal—Panama!”) but I’ve always had an English-centric view of them. What are some palindromes in other languages? What’s the easiest language for palindromes? Another question that doesn’t have an easy answer. As they say in Iceland, Amma sá Afa káfa af ákafa á Samma—“Grandma saw Grandpa enthusiastically groping Sammy.” Let’s leave it at that.
Advertisement

And in first place by a wide margin, with 12.3 percent of the votes, our Explainer Question of the Year for 2013: Countless times in TV shows or movies, characters urge a wounded figure to stay with them, not to lose consciousness. Is there any medical basis for this? Doesn’t the body need to lose consciousness to cope with the emergency? Might these dramatic and good-hearted souls actually hasten the wounded character’s death?
Stay With Me!

Do you have any of these sorts of questions? Do you want to share them? Maybe somebody will pop in with an interesting answer. More interesting than the answers on 'Media Day'

9 comments:

sakredkow said...

Brilliant. : D

john said...

I got a question:

Does making all your website posts in red bold letters on a black background tell your reader(s): 1) you have no artistic sense, 2) the incredible importance of what you write, 3) that you got tired of WRITING IN ALL CAPS, or 4) you are a racist?

Dust Bunny Queen said...

Who says venison isn't made into soup?!? There is nothing better than the next day roast of venison made into a hearty vegetable soup. Venison Minestrone is fabulous.

I have a question. How out of touch are these people?. Do they ever talk to anyone outside of their own itty bitty circle jerk of friends? Why not? Ok... a lot of questions, but basically the same one just rephrased differently.

virgil xenophon said...

@DBQ/

If you haven't realized by now that we all live culturally in an M.C. Escher world you're beyond hope. :)

Icepick said...

Does making all your website posts in red bold letters on a black background tell your reader(s)

I'm going with the idea that the writer has a thing for Nazi-chic, so I'm going with (4).

Did I win? Is there a prize? Is it better than that one that Highlander from Long Island got? 'Cause that one was kind of sucky.

ricpic said...

Maybe Sammy is a girl's name in Iceland. Unless the Icelanders are so "evolved" that they've put all that old fashioned opposite sex stuff behind them.

john said...

Icepick - don't go calling Crack a Nazi.

I choose "overly emphatic", or perhaps "unnecessarily wed to his own opinion".

Valentine Smith said...

Well the first one is easy. Punishment and cleansing are certainly not opposites but rather 2 separate stages in the same process.

Purge - Purgatory - Penitentiary - etc - etc

The ignorance would be astounding except we all know the state of postmodern education where the idea of punishment has become unacceptable because because well because it's not the soft and easy way and self-esteem and no one's got the stomach for reality and all.

Known Unknown said...

It's like Mythbusters without all the fun explosionry.