Fight the Trite
Robert Wringham supports your right to have breakfast for dinner and dinner for breakfast
(Content from Issue Two. Buy the whole magazine here).
Happy Birthday to you, Thunk!
Happy Birthday to you, Thunk!
Happy Birthday dear Laaaaauraaaaaa, Thunk! Thunk!
I am in pain. Itâs partially self-inflicted from bashing my head against the function room wall (balloons tacked into each corner, some hilariously arranged to resemble a cock and balls) and partly as a result of third-party clichĂ© abuse.
Happy Birthday to yooooou.
THUNK!
You will never hear me sing the happy birthday song. No price is high enough.
Yes, I have a problem. I have a mental illness that nobody seems to understand. If I explain that itâs a bit like Touretteâs Syndrome, we’re getting close.
Whatâs the problem exactly? I am adverse to the trite: to doing what’s âexpectedâ or ârequiredâ or to âgo along with thingsâ – especially when doing so is supposed to be âfunâ.
Donât misread that I position myself as an angry rebel-to-the-core. I can conform when I have to. Then again, Iâd probably betray us all to the storm troopers if we were hiding in the attic and some dickhole said, âShhhâ.
Like I say, itâs a syndrome.
Whenever Iâm required to âjoin inâ – to clap along or to dance to music or to play some sort of game where a requirement is to work with other people – I am filled with a near-insatiable urge to do something weird: to strike a funny pose, to kick off an inappropriate conversation, to remove one of my shoes and begin to eat it, to aggressively overturn a table or to shout âTitfuck!â at the top of my lungs.
I just can’t help it. I sometimes stand backwards at gigs. I sometimes shout the words âHa Ha Haâ at trite comedians. Iâve cleared chess boards when Iâve been expected to lose graciously. To use the language of the clichĂ© bore, I’m a stick in the mud.
âAnything popular is wrong,â said Oscar Wilde. I’ve been spouting this little micro-quote for a long time now. The irony, of course, is that quoting Oscar Wilde is in itself pretty trite. As I hear myself quoting him, a little bit of vomit pools in the back of my mouth.
Slightly more palatable is the mirrored maxim, âAnything different is good.â Thus spake Bill Murray in Groundhog Day, when heâs finally released from the time loop: an endless clichĂ© of his own making.
When you make small talk or confess to a âguilty pleasureâ or are moved to announce that you enjoy Family Guy (doesnât everyone?) or decide to buy one of those brilliant Mr. Men t-shirts that everyone else is wearing or to strike up a conversation about how good the latest Bond movie was, you are effectively saying, âI am operating on default settings. I am Times New Roman in size 12.â
Fuck that.
Donât think you can escape triteness by buying into an existing subculture either. If I see you wearing white make-up and a dog collar tomorrow, my friend, I will kick your ass.
OK?
Letâs declare war on the trite. When you see a singer on Jools Holland doing an impression of Chris Martin, please don’t reward him by going out and buying his CD, whether The Guardian likes it or not. Punish him! Don’t even let the TV people count your digital signal as a Nielson Rating: switch over to News24 or something instead. Hell, switch over to a channel that isn’t even broadcasting. Musak trumps music sometimes.
War!
When someone uses a popular anachronism (âyeah, you and whose army?â), pull their trousers off. When their trousers are clumped around their ankles and theyâre giving you a bemused âWTF?â expression, explain that you have ClichĂ© Touretteâs. If you’re too much of a pacifist for that, just shout the word âHolocaustFuckCancerJar!â and carry on with the conversation as if nothing unusual had happened.
Neologisms are chief in our arsenal.
War!
When someone speaks against non-sequitur or uses the phrase in the pejorative, give yourself a good, hard slap in the face. That’ll show ’em.