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Thread: List of Bad Blog-Media Clichés is Familiar

  1. #1
    RZ Chamber of Commerce Unassisted's Avatar
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    List of Bad Blog-Media Clichés is Familiar

    The Gawker blog has an article with a new list of bad clichés from the blogging-media. I was struck by how many of them are used to convey snarkiness right here on our favorite baseball board.

    Looking back, I think I may have used a few of them myself. Others have just annoyed me from their overuse here. Now that I've seen them lumped together in this context, I think I'm going to make a New Year's resolution to purge them from my future posts.

    When you make words for a living, you will inevitably find yourself drawn into certain ruts of repetition. That's why you'll see the same tired clichés popping up in the same media outlets, or often in the writing produced by the same people. Blogs are no different, and are in fact worse -- the increased breadth and depth of volume encourages mass overuse of an even longer list of lazy jokes, references, and turns of phrase. And blog comments and discussions recycle the same slop with alarming regularity. We're as guilty as anyone of these crimes, and likely more guilty than some. We're willing to admit there's a problem though, just like at AA, so we're cataloguing the worst offenders far and wide. After the jump, an annotated list of words, phrases, and terms that have long overstayed their welcome in the media-blogosphere.

    Best. [ultimate thing or experience.] Ever/Evar.
    Likely originating in the reverse ("worst [x] ever"), this cliché still has a deathgrip on the media, in all its sincere and sarcastic permutations. It's usually taken to mean a state of permanent, perpetual bestness, which is of course unsustainable. Sooner or later, something will not be the best [x] ever, and this phrase is a perfect example.

    [undesirable counter-example], not so much.
    The punchline that ends a thousand million columns and blog posts. Weak as the lightest of lite beers, or the puny farts you get from such beer.

    FTW, O RLY, lol, FTL, OMG, FWIW, btw, PWND, ROTFL, etc.
    These are borderline acceptable if you're instant messaging, speed-typing while online gaming, or expressing approval of a pornographic image posted to your favorite kink forum. Beyond that, stop it. Even if your audience uses these expressions in daily life, such practice should not be encouraged. Self-consciously peppering normal discourse with geekspeak acronyms (especially when used in conjunction with non-geek subjects) no longer rescues your words by way of anti-coolness. See also: "teh" anything.

    [negative experience, situation, or description]; I just threw up a little bit in my mouth.
    In a rare sane move, most writers realize this one is dead, and thus avoid it. However, only when "threw up in my mouth" is completely exterminated from the world consciousness may we all rest in peace.

    [purposefully non-ghetto statement], yo.
    Often used in conjunction other ghetto nonfabulous phrases like "Oh snap!" and "The [object or situation] was mad [obscure adjective]," the ubiquitous "yo" is a red flag of caucasianness, or at least non-blackness, or certainly anti-hipness. See also "haterade," "shizzle," and so on. One waves the flag to signal and suborn the anti-cool nature of the associated prose, but these days, "yo" and its ghetto-term relations sound tired even when uttered by actual ghetto residents.

    [undesirable conclusion]. Oy.
    Even more so than fake ghettospeak, fake Jewspeak has been completely drained of impact, which perversely has made it even more prevalent in media and blogs (due to the well-known Jewish control of both). "Oy" in particular is a universally pointless and fantastically lazy way to express discontent without actually saying anything.

    [amazed paraphrase of opposing position]. Seriously? Seriously?
    Deadly serious in fact. The prose equivalent of telling a bad joke, wiggling your eyebrows, and saying "Eh? Eh? Eh? Am I right?" to your readers.

    What's next? [outlandish scenario]?
    Take something you don't like, then imagine a nutty alternate universe where that thing is exaggerated beyond all reason. One must follow from the other, correct? Your rhetorical work here is done.

    I'm looking at you, [example of complaint].
    Has been known to cause actual outbreaks of hives. As if the thing/person "looked" at would react with a surprised and bashful "Who, me?". Puts the writer in the unflattering role (for all concerned) of pedantic schoolteacher addressing unruly children.

    Um, [condescension]?
    As a verbal tic in conversation, "um" is perfectly acceptable and often auditorially invisible. Written in prose, it signals a level of smarmy superiority that would get you rightly punched in the face if you dared behave like that in person.

    [Argument], wait for it, [rhetorical flourish].
    Where did this come from? Stage direction cues in the theater? No matter, it's a ridiculous tease and artificial tension builder that's never worth the wait.

    [Undesirable experience] made my [sensory organ] bleed.
    One hopes there are people who've actually had their eyes, ears, or other parts bleed in such situations, so they can use this expression in all clinical honesty. Beyond that, inexcusable.

    [adjective]-y goodness
    "Goodness" once might have served as a comical placeholder for sarcastic expressions of positivity, but now it exists in this construction purely to demonstrate the high-lariousness of the writer. A near cousin replaces "goodness" with a noun specific to the context, such as "his sexy backness."

    [any word]-gasm
    Not orgasmic in any respect, and long past funny or clever.


    [x] is the new [y].
    The unkillable grandaddy of them all, a Protean monster capable of adapting to any topic, discussion, situation, or writer. Has gone through so many levels of irony, sarcasm, and hipster appropriation that it deserves to be captured and dissected so we can finally understand its vigor. There is likely no defense, but fight it as long as you can. Your sacrifice will be remembered.
    /r/reds


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  3. #2
    Baseball card addict MrCinatit's Avatar
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    Re: List of Bad Blog-Media Clichés is Familiar

    I, personally, have been guilty of using every one of those cliches in single posts. oy yo.

  4. #3
    Puffy's Daddy Red Leader's Avatar
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    Re: List of Bad Blog-Media Clichés is Familiar

    Um, WTF, that column is teh dumb. I'm talking, Worst. Evar, yo.

    Just because this d00d is obviously an oldster doesn't mean he's got to dump on something fresh. Oy.
    Last edited by Red Leader; 12-18-2006 at 11:11 AM.
    'When I'm not longer rapping, I want to open up an ice cream parlor and call myself Scoop Dogg.'
    -Snoop on his retirement

    Your Mom is happy.

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    Churlish Johnny Footstool's Avatar
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    Re: List of Bad Blog-Media Clichés is Familiar

    Add to the list: writing your own quasi-definitive, self-important list of what's funny/clever/cool and what's not. I get enough of that from the VH1 "Best Week Ever/I Love the (random decade)" crew.
    "I prefer books and movies where the conflict isn't of the extreme cannibal apocalypse variety I guess." Redsfaithful

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    Are we not men? Yachtzee's Avatar
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    Re: List of Bad Blog-Media Clichés is Familiar

    WTF? What's next, um, an article about how teh internets is full of geeks, dweebs, and dorks? Top ten lists are teh whack, yo. fo shizzle. :

    All this tells us is that internet users watch a lot of the same TV shows and movies and like to quote said shows in their conversations. If this list had been made 20 years ago, it would include "watchoutalkinboutwillis" and just about every line from Blazing Saddles and Monty Python. Tell us something we don't know (which could have been on the list as well).
    Wear gaudy colors, or avoid display. Lay a million eggs or give birth to one. The fittest shall survive, yet the unfit may live. Be like your ancestors or be different. We must repeat!

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    Mon chou Choo vaticanplum's Avatar
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    Re: List of Bad Blog-Media Clichés is Familiar

    Quote Originally Posted by Yachtzee View Post
    WTF? What's next, um, an article about how teh internets is full of geeks, dweebs, and dorks? Top ten lists are teh whack, yo. fo shizzle. :
    Fo shizzle rules xcore. Yo.

    I think I use some of these. But I do it ironically, like.
    There is no such thing as a pitching prospect.


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