Showing posts with label cliches. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cliches. Show all posts

Monday, January 5, 2015

Iconic Bucket List, Actually


Lawrence Hall


 

Iconic Bucket List, Actually

 

Some amusing folks at Lake Superior State University have published their 40th annual list of overused and euphemistic words and phrases, including “polar vortex,” “skill set,” “swag,” “foodie,” and “enhanced interrogation” (http://www.lssu.edu/banished/).

 

The anonymous writers refer to the tiresome words and phrases as “banned” and “banished,” but one hopes those strong verbs are mere hyperbole.

 

This is all jaw-droppint iconic fun, actually, and actually all of us tire of overused iconic words and phrases, actually.  I mean, like, actually, you know, actually keep calm and talk to the jaw-dropping iconic hand because actually at the jaw-dropping end of the iconic day when the iconic fat lady actually sings ya gotta give 1001% to iconic, inclusive, and sensitive jaw-dropping iconic fate because actually iconic Mother Nature’s wrath is a jaw-dropping shoo-in for the bucket list.  Jaw-dropping, actually. And iconic.

 

And, hey, television news: why do you say “Next, but first?”  Almost every evening the on-air reporter says something to the effect of “Next we’ll have Greg with the weather, but first…”  In the event, what is truly next is a series of advertisements, followed by what used to be called a human interest story, and then, finally, the weather report.  Thus, Greg is not only not next, he is far from next, and so has time to go out for a coffee before he must be in place before the cameras.

 

Actually (so to speak), Lake Superior State University is not free of verbal clutter itself.  Note the filler language on their admissions page:

 

At LSSU, we're redefining the classroom and preparing students for a world where the only constant is change. Students at LSSU go beyond the traditional classroom experience with real-world, hands-on, engaged learning experiences. (http://www.lssu.edu/admissions/).

 

“The only constant is change,” “real-world,” “hands-on”, and “engaged learning experience” are the sort of puffery that appeared, like fungal growth, in high school mission statements (remember mission statements?) before the turn of the century.  These examples of verbal clutter should be featured on LSSU’s list of banned words.

 

On the admissions page appears a promotion for LSSU’s honors program:

 

The Honors Program at LSSU is for highly motivated students that wish to develop their abilities and skills in exciting and innovative ways that go beyond the classroom. The central goal of the Honors faculty is to actively engage the Honors students in the process of their undergraduate education.

 

Given that this blurb features four capitalization errors, a pronoun error, numerous redundant modifiers, and a split infinitive, the admissions people might want to ask the word people to proofread their puffery.

 

They could put it on their iconic bucket list, actually.

 

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Creepy Books



Mack Hall, HSG
Mhall46184@aol.com
29 June 2013

Creepy Books

Often a book is promoted as “a real page turner.”  This is curious, because books do not turn pages; their readers must do that for books, even with one of those little plastic boxes that light up and flicker the pages across a little screen.

Many novels are said to be stories of redemption.  But then, what story is not?  From the Bible through The Divine Comedy, The Canterbury Tales, Robin Hood (and his merry persons of indeterminate gender and lifestyle choices), Huckleberry Finn, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, To Kill a Mockingbird, and beyond, almost all stories are about redemption.  Does this really need to be said?

Eat, Pray, Barf – As book titles and on picture frames and posters one often sees commands, always in three: Eat, Pray, Love; Live, Laugh, Love; and, oh, Eat, Love, Barf.  The truly reflective person considers the title and asks “Why the (Newark, New Jersey) should I?”  And why should anyone take instructions from a picture frame sold in a store called Dried Grasses ‘n’ Stuff Express Outlet?

In the Study Helps section of the book store the titles are all about how to pass acronymic tests – ACT, SAT, LSAT MCAT, MSAT, GED, and perhaps OMG.  One concludes that success in life is not predicated on knowing how to DO anything, but on passing an exam set by some state board.

Another book is said to be “gripping.”  What does the book grip?  Does one really want a book that might grip one at an unexpected moment?

And how about the ubiquitous “must read?”  Why must one read this book?  By what authority?  A polite request by the publisher is more appropriate for a free society than a command.

Some reviewers claim to have been “spellbound” by a book.  Must be Harry Potter and Yet Another Sequel with the Same Plot, eh? 

A book can be cutting edge, bold, daring, riveting, provocative, gritty, compelling, haunting, sweeping, unflinching (is a book ever flinching?), thought provoking, inspiring, rewarding, bedazzling, enlightening, engaging, haunting, engrossing, revealing, lyrical, nuanced, epic, accessible, Kafka-esque, beautifully wrought, poignant, timely, edge-of-your-seat,  passionate, dispassionate, exquisite, erudite, comprehensive, marvelous, glorious, profound, formidable, relevant, timely, and a fully realized tour de force roman a clef by a fresh new author when what the reader really wants to know is if the book features  gunfire, car chases, a body in the library, a hottie named Lola, and maybe a hooded Methodist minister with glittering red eyes and a dagger bearing ancient Sanskrit symbols on the bloodstained blade.

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