Hero, eh? If it's not that polite Northerner above, then it's that jettisoned Southerner below.
Tag: parody
Blackless Black Friday
Here's a hilarious parody of Black Friday mashed up with "The Purge." Ben Stiller's production company Red Hour Films creates pieces for the You Tube channel Nacho Punch. It's funny but not completely reflective of society at large. Media content of this nature is heavily sanitized to avoid delivering the reality that all segments of society have both noble and ignoble people. Ever notice how commercials and comedy sketches tend to portray couples as a smart, in-charge woman with a hapless man? In any burglar alarm commercial, which ethnicity is always portrayed as the burglar(s)? Got to be a white guy or the Internet mob would hashtag the advertiser into smoldering ashes. Because of racial sensitivity, Stiller's people had
Mommmmmmmm! She’s looking at me!
Ignore the double negative in the title...this is hilarious
Crackin’ crackers
A brilliant parody of the idiotic things a clueless white schnook might say to minorities
At 4:20 p.m. it’s time for Weedies
One and Dunce
One of the most downloaded 84WHAS Radio podcasts are my conversations with University of Kentucky fanatic The Beasman. These sketches air two times weekly, usually at 5:45 p.m. but occasionally earlier in the 4 p.m. hour. RECENT BITS: Beasman just prior to the UofL vs Cincinnati football game Beasman after UK beats Providence and Alabama football loses Beasman after UofL loses to North Carolina Here's tomorrow's radio script for The Beasman, scheduled to air at 5:45 p.m. so that you can read along. Terrestrial: 840 AM; streaming via whas.com
Drawing on inspiration
As a little kid, I couldn't wait to open up the Courier-Journal and draw Hugh Haynie's political cartoon. I dreamed of growing up and making a living doing social commentary just like the late Hugh Haynie did. On September 30, 2013, I finally got a chance to peek into the long-vacated political cartoonist office on the Courier-Journal's 3rd floor. Mr. Haynie was succeeded by Nick Anderson, who went on to win a Pulitzer Prize for his cartooning. Anderson now works for the Houston Chronicle. Standing in this little office today, I imagined the swirling creative pressure that bore down on both Haynie and Anderson as deadlines approached. The Frazier History Museum is featuring a Hugh Haynie cartoon exhibit through