I don’t know if it still is
– I don’t know if it ever was – which
is a good start for a post grounded in ignorance – but besides hockey, which
ranks “Numero Uno” in Canadians’ hearts and minds, Canada’s dominant focus – though
maybe it wasn’t, but let’s say it was for the purpose of this blog post, and
who knows I may accidentally be right – was
on its preeminent international export…
Wheat.
Which, as this post title indicates, is accurately
pronounced in Canada as if it begins with the letter “H.”
So what you hear is, “Hwheat.”
As in Hweetabix. Or Shredded
Hwheat.
As I have mentioned elsewhere, not necessarily to unanimous
approval, an often- important element in comedy is ignorance. Hopefully, collective ignorance, meaning both
the comedian’s and the audience’s ignorance, rather than just the comedian’s, a
type of comedy I am not particularly fond of.
The latter case involves laughing at comedians – immigrants,
rural “hayseeds”, drug-addled “head cases” – for being dumber than the
audience. You take pleasure in their
ignorance, and feel better about yourself
because you’re smarter. I personally take
no satisfaction in being smarter than a stupid
person. My pleasure derives from feeling as smart with a smart person – Jon Stewart, Lewis Black
– someone at least whose comedic sensibilities do not appear to emanate from a
near overdose or their having been kicked in the head by a horse.
So okay – two colliding realities: One – Hwheat (the last time I’ll be spelling
it that way) is an essential Canadian commodity, and Two – I know nothing about
wheat. Which grows primarily in the
province (Read: state) of
Saskatchewan, which is two provinces to the west of the province of Ontario
where I grew up, and which I have never visited in my life. (I almost
did. A CBC – Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation – radio producer once proposed that I hitchhike across Canada
in the winter and call in with daily progress reports, but I – wisely, I
believe – nipped that exciting adventure in the bud.)
My first foray into “wheat ignorance comedy” occurred when I
was writing and performing comedic inserts for that same CBC radio network. For a
period of time, I had a job where I recorded five sketches every two weeks
which were then syndicated across the country. I am honored to recall that, to attain that
position, I beat out, among other applicants, SNL’s and Ghostbusters’ Mr. Danny Aykroyd.
(I have, stored in my garage, the original boxes containing
reel-to-reel audiotapes of these forty-plus year-old broadcasts. I am afraid to touch them, fearing, as with
prehistoric dinosaur bones, that they would immediately disintegrate to
dust. If they are not dust already. Why then do I keep them? What are you saying? That’s my life
you’re telling me to toss out!)
The segment in question was entitled, “We Interrupt This
Program.” This two-minute comedy bit was
structured as a mock “Breaking News” bulletin.
I actually got in trouble for using that title, because, in CBC parlance, “We interrupt this
program,” is an official “Alert Directive” reserved for terrible events, you know,
like if war breaks out. When the
military hears “We interrupt this program”, fighter planes take off, and
battleships are dispatched out to sea.
You are not supposed to use that for comedic purposes.
But there I am, trumpeting a fabricated “Red Alert.” And what exactly is my dire announcement to
the nation at large?
“Giant seals have
invaded Saskatchewan!”
Followed by,
“It is not known what
the giant seals are doing in Saskatchewan.
However, it is feared they have come to jump on the wheat.”
Which, in Ignoramusland,
sounds like a monumental disaster for Saskatchewan wheat farmers.
Not to be outdone is my knownothingness, partnered with my
brother, who knows as much about wheat as I do, I amped up my brainlessness, co-writing
a sketch for my brother (and his partner Lorne Michaels’) television show,
wherein two stereotypical farmers rock on their front porches, pondering the
government’s recently-instituted policy, paying Canada’s farmers generously for
not growing wheat.
It is during this moment of relaxation that one of the
farmers bolts upright, terrified that he had mistakenly not grown oats instead.
The agitated farmer is distraught at the thought of
government inspectors nosing around and discovering that the crop the
government was paying them not to grow – wheat – was not in fact the crop they
were not growing, but that they were not growing another crop entirely – oats –
which they were not being subsidized to
not grow.
The reason why this is a worry but not a certainty is that
the distraught farmer is unable to recall what it was he didn’t plant.
To which, his more fatalistic fellow farmer replies,
“Well, we’ll know pretty soon. If she don’t come up in the fall, she’s
wheat. And if she don’t come up in the
spring, she’s oats.”
Let us now count the number of “stupidities” involved in
this comedy routine. First, we are
lampooning without evaluation a government policy paying farmers for not growing
something. Secondly, we are poking fun
at the farmer’s inability to distinguish between wheat and oats. (“It’s just seeds.”) And besides, they had not planted anything!
Thirdly, we are maligning the farmer’s memory for being unable
to recall what he didn’t plant. And
finally, we are categorically stating that “If she don’t come up in the fall,
she’s wheat, and if she don’t come up in the spring, she’s oats”, oblivious to the
reality of when either of those crops
would actually “come up.”
Plus, adding insult to “quadruple injury”, we have our
farmers referring to their non-harvest as “she”, ignoring whether farmers ever
apply personal pronouns to their crops, feminine or otherwise.
And yet, to me and
to my brother,
“The Wheat Sketch” was – and continues to be – extremely funny.
Is ignorance a prerequisite for comedy? The Big
Bang Theory suggests otherwise. The
four “regulars” say smart stuff all the time.
The “Ignorance Factor”, if there is one, seems to lie with the audience,
who accepts their gibberishal Geniuspeak
but has no idea what they’re talking about.
But wait. Upon
further examination, the four nerdy eggheads, light years ahead of the
“Intelligence Curve” in physics, sit distantly – and hilariously – on the other end of that “Intelligence Curve”
–especially the “Sheldon” character – when it comes to social skills.
Ignorance may not be a prerequisite.
But as a purveyor of comedy,
I would be loath leave home without it.
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Coincidentally - there was no premeditation in this matter - Happy Canada Day! My "Home and Native Land" has a lot it can to teach louder countries. Who knows? Maybe, someday, they'll listen.
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Coincidentally - there was no premeditation in this matter - Happy Canada Day! My "Home and Native Land" has a lot it can to teach louder countries. Who knows? Maybe, someday, they'll listen.
After viewing Canadian tv "sitcoms" for the last two years I can honestly say the tv "comedy" execs up here are so incredibly overpaid it just isn't funny. Happy Canada Day Earl, eh!
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