I
know what you're thinkingthese
are just silly headlines taken from my
local supermarket tabloid. But that's where
you'd be wrong. I got these as e-mails.
Yes, they all come from that venerable
source of fretful wisdomthe
Internet. Urgent alerts from concerned
friends, vigilant relativesand
complete strangers. Thank god for the World
Wide Web!
And then there are those wonderfully gruesome things that have (supposedly)
happened to other people. The man who blew himself up when he went to
extinguish his cigarette after his wife squirted a can of hairspray in
the toilet, the child killed by snakes in a Burger King ball pit, the
beloved aunt whose life was needlessly snuffed out when the cleaning
lady unplugged her respirator to run the floor waxer. How about the tourist,
slipped a mickey in a Las Vegas bar by a gorgeous blonde? The poor guy
woke up covered in ice in a hotel bathtub to find his kidneys had been
removed by an organ harvester and sold on the black market.
There's a light side to life, too, and the Internet, bless its beeping
little heart, brings us a few chuckles: Man stuck in cat door mistaken
for work of art. How about the naked wife in football helmet and the
meter reader? You've probably heard the one about Thurgood Marshall mowing
his lawn when a woman passing by asks how much he gets paid for a job
like that. "Oh, I don't get paid," says the Supreme Court Justice. "The
woman I do it for just lets me sleep with her."
There's the truly sinister: the Second Coming Project (the cloning of
Jesus), the alarming news that the latest version of AOL's software permits
them to read stuff on your hard drive. We know this one's genuine because
it was brought to our attention by a fired employee, and, look here,
AOL, any denial from you will only confirm it.
And let's not forget the sexual outer limits: the perfume-sniffing scam
(your girlfriend could be spritzed with the latest fragrance in a major
department storeactually knockout dropsand end
up in white slavery), male pregnancy websites, odd-things-inserted-into-orifices
stories, and the nasty sex experiments NASA is performing in outer spacethe
fiends!
The Internet has become the mother of all urban legends, outrageous stories
about fantastic things befalling normal folk like you or me that are
so irresistible we can't wait to pass them on to the next person we meet.
Wild and improbable things, sure but they could have happened.
Hair-raising tales and creative gossipthe scandalous habits
of one's neighbors and the bizarre goings on of people in foreign parts. Schadenfreude being
a big part of these talesthe perverse pleasure we get from
bemoaning someone else's misery.
Urban legends didn't, of course, start with the Internetas
folk tales, these are the oldest stories we have. The imp of the perverse
that drives the dotty urban legends is the poor relation of the folk
imagination that inspired The Odyssey, The Thousand and One
Nights and the blues.
E-mail lore is strangely akin to folktales. Hence the disorienting mix
of hard facts and florid fantasies that sit absolutely straight-faced
in one's morning inbox. The Web in this way is similar to the situation
in the late Middle Ages when readers gave equal credence to Marco Polo's
travel tales (mostly true) and those of Sir John Mandeville, which were
almost entirely invented.
Oh, by the way, did I forward you the one about the 747 pilot who locked
himself out of the cockpit and had to hack his way back in with a fire
ax? Wait a minute, this isn't an urban legend, it's a movie. If you think
about it, most Hollywood movies are urban legends. Movies, even
the most far-fetched, are based on the what-if premise. Just bring in
some special effects, a few healthy girls, and Arnold Schwarzeneggerand
folks'll believe anything.
On
the other hand, a lot of urban legends
seem to originate with movies. It's the
ongoing dreamtime of pop culture cannibalizing
itself. Urban legends are little
one-minute mental moviespreposterous
plots and drastically abbreviated storylines
that run in the cinema of the mind. Folklore
has its own poetic realism and emotional
logic, and these alarming net-spawned dioramas
carry us back to that atavistic cave of
invention, a story-teller spinning yarns
by the flickering light of the fire.
Coming Soon To an Inbox Near You: The Dark Side of the Internet!