Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Ben Pobjie, Kelli Underwood, the difficulties of post modernist irony and the genuine satire of Keith Dunstan


(Above: : Kelli Underwood)

Who on earth is Ben Pobjie and why on earth should anyone care?

Well I care because I'd like to send a female boxer around to give him a good jab, followed by a nifty low blow below the belt.

All in the name of jolly, good humored repartee of course.

For a moment there, you'd almost think Ben is the latest in a long line of males to think that they were the ones to invent the immortal angle on women doing anything, courtesy of that line first attributed to Dr. Johnson:

I told him I had been that morning at a meeting of the people called Quakers, where I had heard a woman preach. Johnson: "Sir, a woman's preaching is like a dog's walking on his hind legs. It is not done well; but you are surprised to find it done at all."
Boswell: Life

Well I guess it was the eighteenth century and they could get away with that kind of thing in those days, and it has a certain elegance.


What is it? Dress up as Sam Newman week?

Oh wait, it's ironic discourse. Of a satirical kind. So heavy handed you'd swear Ben was the proud owner of a chainsaw.

Is this the best Crikey, home of First Dog, can do in the way of humor?

I mean I know Pobjie is just being post modernist ironic in an existential discourse. His blog tells me as much:

So climate change denialists aren't the only stunningly stupid people out there. There are also those who read humour columns. I mean, not all of them, but some.

Check out my latest, here. It's not the worst example of the "I don't get it, and I shall now prove it beyond doubt" genre, but there are a couple of prize pigs in there.

"mocking of women taking non-traditional roles". Sigh. Yes, yes, of course.

Sigh, yawn, of course. The hapless reader who upset him had the cheek to suggest his routine had been around since before Pankhurst, to which Ben replied Channel Ten didn't have the rights pre-Pankhurst. LOL.

Because it seems Ben is sending up those who get agitated about a woman caller being used to call AFL matches, namely one Kelli Underwood, pride of Adelaide. Apparently this is of some concern to people who live in Melbourne, but then if you live in Melbourne, anything can become a major concern. Like not living in Sydney.

Clever Ben. Not for a moment does he give way his savage satirical intent. Instead his piece oozes lines like this:

Now, some PC greenie-types will be saying, hey, what’s the big deal? What difference does it make whether the commentator is a man or a woman? Let me ask, have you ever heard a woman’s voice? It’s all high-pitched and tinkly, like wind chimes. Would you want wind chimes commentating on football? Can wind chimes convey the excitement of a speccy? Can wind chimes abuse an umpire? Can wind chimes bellow like a moose when a young man is knocked unconscious by a perfect hip-and-shoulder?

But is this Ben being real or Ben channeling Sam Newman? Sigh. It's so hard to tell. Because apparently a lot of people hate Kelli's voice. Or so I'm told.

Which raises a suspicion. How is it Ben does a really good job of channeling Sam, and is it irony if you only manage to evoke the standard mind set of the Melbourne male and/or male AFL follower?

Because you know I think Ben really warmed to the job of demolishing the nefarious weekend-infiltrating harpy and her high pitched voice and her invasion of male space. You know like the person you meet in a dark space in a club and they're dressed in black and reciting poetry, and the next thing you know they're talking about how they've only been in the city for a week and miss the pig shooting.

You have to go back a few years now to remember that fine flurry of feminism introduced by that upstanding feminist Kerry Packer, when he allowed Kate Fitzpatrick to join the Nine network cricket commentating team in 1983 in a bid to attract female audiences by giving the game a female perspective.

The poor sweetie was bowled over and didn't get selected for the next season.

Tip to Ben. The intertubes is big and so I'm told by the Seven network, full to overflowing. There are vast numbers of readers who've never heard of the AFL, and perhaps even vaster numbers who've never heard of Kelli Underwood, trailblazing breath of fresh air 'crashing through or crashing' the boy's club of AFL commentating.

If you wanted your readers to have some sort of perspective on your satirical musings, you should have answered a couple of basic questions.

Do you like the AFL, or do you loathe it? Do you like Kelli Underwood as a commentator, or do you think she's a misfire? Are you writing in the desperate hope she'll make the cut next year, or as a subversive way to help her on her way?

Would you rather watch Lesbian Vampire Killers than watch the AFL with Kelli Underwood commenting because (a) it's more amusing than the AFL or (b) it's more amusing than Kelli Underwood calling the AFL.

I know I'll never learn the answers, which is a great relief, because strangely the whole damn thing reminds of Melbourne and the Coodabeen Champions club and men in black leaving the streets of Fitzroy on a Saturday to go to the football!

Whatever happened to Keith Dunstan and his Anti-Football League?

Why here it is, though it seems to have sagged a little and given up the ghost a lot, under the fiendish pressure of dealing with a town besotted by nonsense. Ah well, vale Keith.

Which takes us back to Ben.

Po faced is all very well, but it took me immense time and energy to discover that the brave Kelli's already called her fourth and final game, and she won't be used in the finals, and that Channel 10 is "tightlipped on whether she will return as a caller next year."

So then the question is whether Ben's piece is parody and satire, or perhaps just insightful prophecy in which all his judgements will come to pass and his insights fulfilled?

Thereby making Kelli the Kate Fitzpatrick of her generation?

Thank the lord I'll probably never know the answer as that would involve watching assorted games of football. But I do feel like sending Ben Pobjie an invoice for ten minutes of my time.

Pretending to be a satirist when he might well be just another prophet.

Questions left unanswered:

Is listening to Kelli Underwood more desperate than watching Lesbian Vampire Killers?
Is LVK a show worse than Sex Lives of the Potato Men? Is that humanly possible? (yes and no)
Can a game of AFL football reach the standards of the potato men? (yes, and no)
Is it possible to do a satire about a culture which promotes Sam Newman as a star?(no)

(Below: Keith Dunstan burning a football at the MCG in 1972. Now that's satire).


7 comments:

  1. Terribly flattering. Shame you weren't amused, but can't please everyone. I think I'll link to your blog, because I've enjoyed browsing through it. Let me know if you'd actually like answers to your questions, I'd be happy to give them.

    ReplyDelete
  2. @ Dr. Cam: what you say might well be true, but it is personal, and we like to keep the punching above the belt at loon pond. We leave the extreme fighting to Tim Blair and Andrew Bolt.

    @ Ben Pobjie: not really. As you know, rhetorical devices are common enough in post ironic post modernist discourse, but feel free to provide answers (or not) in a column - perhaps one cogitating on the idea of writing in the voice of Sam Newman, while suggesting the result is somehow a criticism of Sam Newman, while happily it secretly and furtively allows the writer the power and pleasure of channeling the spirit of Sam Newman.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I can't really imagine anyone deriving pleasure out of channelling Sam Newman. It sounds more like some kind of Japanese horror plot.

    ReplyDelete
  4. It wasn't true, sadly... I was just taking the piss.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Then sadly you show the same tonal uncertainties as Ben Pobjie. Now if you'd waved your pinkie in a pejorative way we'd have known where you were coming from and going to, but frankly Ben Pobjie's deeper metaphysical and spiritual ties to Sam Newman - what we might call his Japanese manga dreaming - must remain his own business.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I agree. It can be difficult when people say one thing and mean another. That's why we need more satirists like Keith Dunstan - he didn't like football and then he started an anti-football league. It was ground-breaking stuff.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Perhaps Mr. Pobjie could set up an 'anti-people who are anti-female football commentators' league, with a sub-branch dedicated to those who are 'anti-Sam Newman starring in Japanese horror movies'. It could be ground breaking, but what if female football commentators wanted to join?

    Perhaps membership should be limited to satirists who reserve the right to send up female football commentators in order to send up people sending up female football commentators. Buggered if I can think of a decent name. How about the New Man Club for Sensitive Satirists?

    ReplyDelete

Comments older than two days are moderated and there will be a delay in publishing them.