Recently, I was attending the annual stockholders meeting of one
of the
many corporations I've invested in and things were getting rather rowdy.
One half of the group of opulent investors were arguing that we
needed a new capital gains tax to "stick it to the poor where it really
hurts" while the other half was saying we should "beat the poor till
they lay bleeding in their own urine." Now I was quietly trying to get
some attention for a compromise I'd developed, which was "smashing the
poor into piles of unidentifiable goo" but it was all going nowhere. Trying to be
heard in a room of excited free-market capitalists is a lot like trying to be
heard in a roomful of enraged buffalo - essentially impossible (though
the buffalo are usually serving a much better brand of Chablis.) So I decided to try out an attention
getting technique I once saw on Eight Is Enough. I figured if I calmly
voiced opinions so shocking and reprehensible in content, they would
have no choice but to pay attention to me. "Hey, Charlie," I stated to
the fellow next to me. "Did you know the holocaust was a lie?" Charlie
paid no heed, and continued throwing cheese chiplets at the CEO of a large
corporation who was across the table. "Bob," I called out to a fellow
across the room. "I had a great time molesting your ten year old son
yesterday!" Bob ignored me and continued smashing his cellular phone
against the head on the aged Duchess of Smackenshire. "Okay," I thought to myself, "I'll give this one more try."
"Gentleman, " I began. "I like Barney the Dinosaur."
With this the room went silent. Finally, Thomas Robeson, a
nuclear armaments magnate cried out, "Forget punishing the poor, let's get
Forbis." Instantly I was attacked by a barrage of solid silver forks,
fine china plates, and pewter money clips filled with weighty hundred
dollar bills. The force of said blows sent me reeling across the room
where I bounced off the wall where I was further assaulted by a
thousand dollar attaché case and several weighty copies of "The
Complete Ayn Rand Reader - With A Joint Introduction By Milton Friedman and
Neal Peart."
Finally I descended to the floor bloodied and beginning to lose
consciousness, only vaguely aware of the sound of my affluent cohorts
proceeding back to their table to continue discussing the plans for the
film version of Charles Murry's The Bell Curve, starring Leonardo
Decapprio.
I've always felt lying in a pool of one’s blood and organs is an
excellent time to ruminate of life, and began to now. It was curious, I
thought, how my cronies had responded so savagely to the mere mention of
the Purple One's name. Why could that be? Barney was certainly no Pol
Pot or Stalin, no O.J. or James Earl Ray. Why do people hate him so?
The truth is, I don't really "like" Barney, I just don't
particularly hate him. But even that's a hard position to take in a society
that really seems to have it in for the fellow. Ever since he popped up
P.B.S. five or so years ago, people have been venting and ranting, accusing
the overstuffed oaf of everything from childishly insipid conduct to being
the spawn of Satan. And nowhere is Barney more despised than on the
Internet. Plug the Barnster's name into a search engine and look what
you find: "BARNEY IS PURE EVIL," "DAVE'S ANTI-BARNEY PAGE," "BARNEY HATE
LINKS," "TOP 38 WAYS TO KILL BARNEY," and "PROOF THAT BARNEY IS
SATANIC." Not a whole lot of love there. But why? Why all this obsessive
hatred over some alcoholic transient in a dinosaur costume? It
really points out the hypocrisy of this society. For years we snivel
about the violence on television, how it's raising a generation of
mental defectives and homicidal Beavis and Buttheads (I'll bet you the
Jonesboro kids never watched Barney), then when a genuinely kind and
well-liked childhood icon appears, we whine that he's too nice, too
benevolent, and demand his destruction. What a bunch of brats we are.
You would think Barney would be a hit with generation X, the generation
that collects Happy Days lunch boxes and reveres the time traveling adventures of
Sherman and Mr. Peabody like they were the Book of Genesis. But, I guess
Barney is too schlocky, a little too serious when he spouts his
educational and affirming drivel. I guess when it comes down to it,
Barney is the Anti-Gen X icon, there's not an ounce of cynicism in him.
While the rest of television is foaming at the mouth with hip, urban
pessimism, Barney is playfully hopping through his pastel
landscape, cheerfully singing "I love you, You love me, etcetera,
etcetera" There's just no room left in this collage of Detective Sipowiczs
and Bart Simpsons for an eternally cheerful and admittedly, mildly
retarded, character like Barn. He's the modern day Lennie from Steinbeck’s
Of Mice and Men, and like George, society has
decided it is time to silence him forever.
Perhaps, it is because Barney represents our youth that we so despise
him. Our children are our future, and though we bless and protect them,
we must also view them with an eye of jealousy. They have their whole
lives ahead of them, a montage of first kisses, first jobs, of hopes and
dreams that may be fulfilled. But we cannot be so cold as to despise
them, so we hate their heroes, perhaps in a jaded attempt to make them
aware of the harshness of reality. We dislike Barney because he is our
lost innocence, our lost childhood calling. (This would also explain why
I don't detest him, as my transition from child to adult has been
tenuous at best.)
It is said that God the father gave his only begotten son to be punished
for the sins of mankind. And when I think of Jesus, his lacerated,
bloodied body, dragging the cross of his doom up the hill while Romans
taunted him, I think of Barney. He too, is suffering for mankind, uniting
us together in universal hatred of he, fraying him against the cross of
public television. He too, has his court of apostles: his television friends, like that one
older Hispanic chick, or that redheaded white kid whom we all know will grow
up gay, and Baby Bop, who will eventually betray him. And the day may
come my friends, when we will realize that the so called "second coming"
has already occurred, and that the simple jester, the folly of our children
is actually the form of a much wiser adult. And those who refused to be
led by him will simply burn in the eternal fires of hell. If this is you
friend, you have one escape, Simply repeat after me:
I know that the Lord sent his only begotten son, Barney the Purple Dinosaur, to die for my
sins, and I accept the love Barney has offered me everyday before Sesame
Street and that pedophiliac Mr. Rogers. Furthermore, I will buy every
stuffed Barney toy that comes down the market, and will support every
PBS program including Firing Line. To the lord Jesus (Barney). Amen.
Don’t say I didn’t warn you, sinners.
Wil Forbis is a
well known international playboy who lives a fast paced life attending
chic parties, performing feats of derring-do and making love to the
world's most beautiful women. Together with his partner, Scrotum-Boy,
he is making the world safe for democracy. Email - acidlogic@hotmail.comVisit Wil's web log, My So-Called Penis, and receive complete enlightenment.