Tag Archives: Kim Jong-un

Hair Scare

For a brief time yesterday the parade of horribles that makes up the world’s news was interrupted by the delightfully wacky story that all North Korean men have been ordered to get the same haircut as the Hermit Kingdom’s leader, Kim Jong-un.

The BBC, which broke the story in the western media, walked it back a few hours later by amending the headline to limit the Hair Dictum to male students, rather than all men.

It remained a nice frolic for feature writers though, because anything involving the suppression of young people is irresistible eyeball candy for the oldsters who follow news headlines all afternoon.

But sourpuss editors who do not want a good time to last too long subjected the story to some journalistic analysis and concluded this entire totalitarian trim tale was probably a hoax, because real North Korean men who have been seen out walking around in broad daylight recently are not sporting Kim Jong-un’s side-buzzed, floppy-topped do.

What a pity. I had already commissioned an ode to Kim Jong-un’s Hair Order from Trail Baboon Poet Laureate Schuyler Tyler Wyler, who is only capable of crafting juvenile sing-song verses.

And once STW begins a project, he cannot stop until he’s done.

I sat down in my barber’s chair
for one more monthly shearing,
For years Bob cut my thinning hair,
a gradually growing clearing.

“I’ll take the usual,” said I,
“the way I always do.”
“The usual?” he said. “But why?”
“The usual’s not you.”

“For I can cut it how you like.
My stylings are the smartest.”
I said “If you can make it spike,
I’ll know you are an artist.”

“A spike,” said he. “I’m on the job.
Your spike will be sublime.”
“If that won’t work,” I told him, “Bob,
the usual’s just fine.”

He spoke at length to every strand,
he clipped and combed and pasted,
Caressed each follicle by hand.
No single hair was wasted.

But as completion quickly neared
Bob’s face slumped in a frown.
The spike that he had engineered
stood briefly, then fell down.

“That’s fine,” I said, “A noble fight.
The challenge was too tough.
It won’t take long to make it right.
The usual’s enough.”

It only took a little while
A peaceful, quiet respite
But when I saw my newest style
I looked just like a despot.

Hair was collected in a clump
Like a racer’s in the luge is.
As if a wild bear took a dump
on Moe of the Three Stooges.

I looked at Bob. His face was cool.
I said, “This is deranged.
I asked you for ‘the usual.'”
“That’s it,” he said. “It’s changed.”

“That spike was never meant to be.
‘Twas preordained to flop.
All hairstyles now, are, by decree,
dictated from the top.”

What’s ‘the usual’ for you?

Ask Dr. Babooner

We are ALL Dr. Babooner
We are ALL Dr. Babooner

Dear Dr. Babooner,

Not long ago my father died and left me an entire country to play with. I had a distant relationship with the old man (he was a tyrant) and frankly I would be happier today had he dumped his nation-thing on someone else before kicking the bucket. But it was too important for him to ever let go – I guess being adored by millions of bootlickers is the kind of thing a guy just gets used to.

From my perspective, being the new “Dear Leader” is not much fun. My time is all spoken for and fawning minions tend to grate on my nerves. Plus, while people are oh-so-nice and always complimentary to my face, people in other nations make fun of me, call me a maniac, a warmonger and a thin-skinned little boy. But I’m NOT a little boy! I’m NOT!

I wish I could punish them for saying that!

So lately I’ve been acting all irrational and threatening.

What I want is respect, but I know I’m never going to get that in words. I figure the best I can hope for is a little indulgence – some sign from my critics that I might be a dangerous man. At least as dangerous as my father with some “shock and awe” potential – like a crazy sundae with an extra helping of nuts. If I could get an appropriate response – something like going to Defcon 2 status – I’d back down and everyone could go back to the things they’re really interested in.

For me, I’d like to own a basketball team. Yeah, that’s what I’d really like to do.

Anyway, right now I’m not getting the reaction I want and people are acting like I’m bluffing. But I don’t think I am.

I’ve never played poker, but should I fold my hand or bet the farm?

Sincerely,
Daddy’s Boy

I told Daddy’s Boy that when you are trying to prove you are dangerous it is important to know whether you are bluffing or not. If you only THINK you’re not bluffing, you probably are. But if you’re bluffing and you don’t know it, you’re deluded. And self-delusion is dangerous. And if your delusion makes you dangerous, then that means you’re not bluffing.

Sigh.

Things start to get complicated very quickly when you care too much about what others think of you.
But that’s just one opinion. What do YOU think, Dr. Babooner?