This post contains
bad, foul, filthy and unacceptable language - the words that “will curve your
spine, grow hair on your hands and maybe, even bring us, God help us, peace
without honor.”
This is not a post
for children. Kids, take a hike.
This is also not a
post for those adults who are offended by this type of language. Do yourself a favor, and go read some of my
cute stuff before moral outrage can kick in.
Just about everything
else on this blog is clean…Stupid sometimes, but clean.
End of Warning.
I
have a problem.
Based
on the only George Award Winner for profanity in television’s response last year, I made a correct, firm and justified decision:
Dana DeLorenzo’s award for her portrayal as Kelly Maxwell in the Ash vs Evil Dead series could be the only George Award for Television, ever.
Dana DeLorenzo’s award for her portrayal as Kelly Maxwell in the Ash vs Evil Dead series could be the only George Award for Television, ever.
No
one would ever come close to both her execution and excitement, as shown in her acceptance tweet.
This
leaves me in quite a pickle as, based on no fucking research whatsoever, the
number of television series on networks that don’t give a shit about censoring language now rivals or possibly outnumbers the ones that do.
Therefore,
to fix this problem, along with the George Awards this year will be the first
presentations of the newly minted Dana Awards for Profanity in Television.
TA-DA!
TA-DA!
There
are two recipients this time: a hard and soft one so to speak.
In
American Gods, Pablo Schreiber played
Mad Sweeney- the six foot five inch, hard fightin’ and cussin’ leprechaun, who
had previously been Lugh, Lord of Celtic mythology and the legendary Irish King
Buile Shuibhne.
Yes,
Neil Gaiman threw all the mythological shit he could get his hands on against the
wall and ran with what stuck. Trust me; both the book and show are awesome.
There
are many mythological potty mouths on this show, but Sweeny takes the cake, even
surpassing Ian McNaughton’s Mr. Wednesday, by infusing good old Irish rage into
every fuck, cunt and combination thereof.
At one point he lets fire with a prayer containing “"Why does this shit always happen to me?” in old Irish.
For
puttin’ a powerful Gaelic belt on every hard “c” sound in your profane repertoire
during this series, one of the inaugural Dana awards goes to you Mr. Schreiber.
The
second of this year’s Dana Awards goes to Henry Cavill.
No
it’s not for when he played Superman that led to my profane rants in some cases,
and my happy swears of joy others.
Instead it’s from his leading role in The Witcher.
I'm
a little late to the party with this show, but I’m glad I got there. It’s a
hoot! It rolls very much like an
Eighties sex and gore filled sword and sorcery flick, but with modern
storytelling and character development.
I'm
really glad I don’t binge, and watched the episodes one a day. It let the nonlinear,
triple path tales sink in properly.
What
earns him a Dana Award is the choice to avoid the usual trope of made up swears
in a fantasy setting. There are no
shouts of “Crom!” “Holy Eister” or even “Demon Dogs” within the eight episodes.
Instead everyone uses the same shitload of bad words that some of us do in
everyday life.
Cavill
as Geralt of Rivia, however, deserves special mention.
He
is a man mutated against his will in childhood to become a monster hunter who
then spends his life with destiny dumping on him, the populace fearing him, and
never knowing who will betray him next.
While
others in the world he inhabits tend to swear out of anger or fear, Geralt
always seems to infuse each four lettered syllable with pathos, world weariness
and exhaustion.
His
exhaled, simple and understated, “fuck”s mark key moments in the narrative
where his personal shit is hitting the fan.
It’s
rare when such a basic and classic word becomes memed across the continent, and
it’s all due to Cavill’s delivery.
Enjoy
your Dana Award Sir.
Congratulations
to Pablo and Henry on their inaugural Dana Awards. For lessons in upping your already masterful
games, watch a couple episodes of Dana DeLorenzo dealing out weaponized "fucks" as Kelly Maxwell in Ash vs Evil Dead.
That’s
all for this year's seventh excursion into profanity folks.
Hopefully
we’ll all have much happier swears when…
The
George Awards Will Return.
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