October 8, 2022

"Only an optimist would look around right now and feel convinced that there existed such a thing as a 'reasonable person'..."

"... let alone one who could be used as a standard in legal cases. But if you stop believing in reasonable people — even a person who is occasionally, initially fooled by something parodic — you stop believing that democracy is possible. If you don’t believe that most people are ultimately reasonable, why on Earth would you want them to be in charge of everything? Democracy, like parody, presumes that people are capable of noticing when someone is trying to dupe them. I have to think this is among the reasons autocrats distrust parody; not just because it shows them in a bad light, but because its underlying assumption is that people can see what is in front of them."

Writes Alexandra Petri, in "Parody is an act of optimism" (WaPo), after The Onion filed an amicus brief in a Supreme Court case, Novak v. Parma, about a man who was prosecuted for putting up a website that was a parody of a police department website.

Here's the brief. Excerpt:

Americans can be put in jail for poking fun at the government? This was a surprise to America’s Finest News Source and an uncomfortable learning experience for its editorial team.

Indeed, “Ohio Police Officers Arrest, Prosecute Man Who Made Fun of Them on Facebook” might sound like a headline ripped from the front pages of The Onion—albeit one that’s considerably less amusing because its subjects are real....

The Sixth Circuit’s decision in this case would condition the First Amendment’s protection for parody upon a requirement that parodists explicitly say, up-front, that their work is nothing more than an elaborate fiction. But that would strip parody of the very thing that makes it function....

Tu stultus es. You are dumb. These three Latin words have been The Onion’s motto and guiding light since it was founded in 1988 as America’s Finest News Source, leading its writers toward the paper’s singular purpose of pointing out that its readers are deeply gul- lible people.

The Onion’s motto is central to this brief for two important reasons. First, it’s Latin. And The Onion knows that the federal judiciary is staffed entirely by total Latin dorks: They quote Catullus in the original Latin in chambers. They sweetly whisper “stare decisis” into their spouses’ ears. They mutter “cui bono” under their breath while picking up after their neighbors’ dogs.

So The Onion knew that, unless it pointed to a suitably Latin rallying cry, its brief would be operating far outside the Court’s vernacular. The second reason—perhaps mildly more im- portant—is that the phrase “you are dumb” captures the very heart of parody: tricking readers into believing that they’re seeing a serious rendering of some specific form—a pop song lyric, a newspaper article, a police beat—and then allowing them to laugh at their own gullibility when they realize that they’ve fallen victim to one of the oldest tricks in the history of rhetoric. See San Francisco Bay Guardian, Inc. v. Super. Ct., 21 Cal. Rptr. 2d 464, 466 (Ct. App. 1993) (“[T]he very nature of parody . . . is to catch the reader off guard at first glance, after which the ‘victim’ recognizes that the joke is on him to the extent that it caught him una- ware.”).

It really is an old trick. The word “parody” stretches back to the Hellenic world. It originates in the prefix para, meaning an alteration, and the suffix ode, referring to the poetry form known as an ode.

Interesting! I did not know that... or is that a joke and I am dumb? I checked the OED — which is an anagram for "ode" — and The Onion's etymology is correct.

One of its earliest practitioners was the first-century B.C. poet Horace, whose Satires would replicate the exact form known as an ode—mimicking its meter, its subject matter, even its self-serious tone—but tweaking it ever so slightly so that the form was able to mock its own idiocies.

This is not a mere linguistic anecdote. The point is instead that without the capacity to fool someone, parody is functionally useless, deprived of the tools inscribed in its very etymology that allow it, again and again, to perform this rhetorically powerful sleight-of-hand: It adopts a particular form in order to critique it from within. See Farah v. Esquire Magazine, 736 F.3d 528, 536 (D.C. Cir. 2013).

Parody leverages the expectations that are created in readers when they see something written in a particular form. This could be anything, but for the sake of brevity, let’s assume that it is a newspaper headline—maybe one written by The Onion—that begins in this familiar way: “Supreme Court Rules . . . ” Already, one can see how this works as a parodic setup, leading readers to think that they’re reading a newspaper story. With just three words, The Onion has mimicked the dry tone of an Associated Press news story, aping the clipped syntax and the subject matter. The Onion could go even further by putting that headline on its website—which features a masthead and Latin motto, and the design of which parodies the aesthetics of major news sites, further selling the idea that this is an actual news story.

Of course, what moves this into the realm of parody is when The Onion completes the headline with the punchline—the thing that mocks the newspaper format. The Onion could do something like: “Supreme Court Rules Supreme Court Rules.”

The Onion could push the parody even further by writing the joke out in article format with, say, a quote from the Justices in the majority, opining that, “while the U.S. Constitution guarantees equality of power among the executive, legislative, and judicial branches, it most definitely does not guarantee equality of coolness,” and rounding off by reporting the Supreme Court’s holding that the Court “rules and rules totally, all worthy and touched by nobody, in perpetuity, and in accordance with Article Three of the U.S. Constitution. The ability of the President and Congress to keep pace with us is not only separate, but most unequal.”

Ha ha ha. Put the 9 Justices in order from most to least likely to laugh at that paragraph.

That's a real Onion headline, by the way — here — as we see in a footnote. It's from 1997, and I believe I remember it from back then (a quarter century ago!).

As can be seen, the Associated Press form is followed straight through into the article. That rhetorical form sets up the reader’s expectations for how the idiom will play out — expectations that are jarringly juxtaposed with the content of the article. The power of the parody arises from that dissonance into which the reader has been drawn. Farah, 736 F.3d at 537.

Here’s another example: Assume that you are reading what appears to be a boring economics paper about the Irish overpopulation crisis of the eighteenth century, and yet, strangely enough, it seems to advocate for solving the dilemma by cooking and eating babies. That seems a bit cruel—until you realize that you in fact are reading A Modest Proposal....

Importantly, parody provides functionality and value to a writer or a social commentator that might not be possible by, say, simply stating a critique outright and avoiding all the confusion of readers mistak- ing it for the real deal. One of parody’s most powerful capacities is rhetorical: It gives people the ability to mimic the voice of a serious authority—whether that’s the dry news-speak of the Associated Press or the legalese of a court’s majority opinion—and thereby kneecap the authority from within. Parodists can take apart an authoritarian’s cult of personality, point out the rhetorical tricks that politicians use to mislead their constituents, and even undercut a government institution’s real-world attempts at propaganda. Farah, 736 F.3d at 536 (noting that the point of parody is to “censure the vices, follies, abuses, or shortcomings of an individual or society”) (cleaned up).

Time and again, that’s what has occurred with The Onion’s news stories. In 2012, for example, The Onion proclaimed that Kim Jong-un was the sexiest man alive. China’s state-run news agency republished The Onion’s story as true alongside a slideshow of the dictator himself in all his glory. The Fars Iranian News Agency uncritically picked up and ran with The Onion’s headline “Gallup Poll: Rural Whites Prefer Ahmadinejad To Obama.”

Domestically, the number of elected leaders who are still incapable of parsing The Onion’s coverage as satire is daunting, but one particular example stands out: Republican Congressman John Fleming, who believed that he needed to warn his constituents of a dangerous escalation of the pro-choice movement after reading The Onion’s headline “Planned Parenthood Opens $8 Billion Abortionplex.”

The point of all this is not that it is funny when deluded figures of authority mistake satire for the actual news—even though that can be extremely funny. Rather, it’s that the parody allows these figures to puncture their own sense of self-importance by falling for what any reasonable person would recognize as an absurd escalation of their own views. In the political context, the effect can be particularly pronounced. See Hustler Mag., Inc. v. Falwell, 485 U.S. 46, 53–55 (1988); see also Falwell v. Flynt, 805 F.2d 484, 487 (4th Cir. 1986) (Wilkinson, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing) (“Nothing is more thoroughly democratic than to have the high-and-mighty lampooned and spoofed.”)

At bottom, parody functions by catering to a reasonable reader—one who can tell (even after being tricked at first) that the parody is not real. If most readers of parody didn’t live up to this robust standard, then there would be nothing funny about the Chinese government believing that a pudgy dictator like Kim Jong-un was the sexiest man on Earth. Everyone would just agree that it was perfectly reasonable for them to be taken in by the headline....

This is the fifteenth page of a convoluted legal filing intended to deconstruct the societal implications of parody, so the reader’s attention is almost certainly wandering.

Ha ha. I could have elided that.

That’s understandable. So here is a paragraph of gripping legal analysis to ensure that every jurist who reads this brief is appropriately impressed by the logic of its argument and the lucidity of its prose: Bona vacantia. De bonis asportatis. Writ of certiorari. De minimis. Jus accrescendi. Forum non conveniens. Corpus juris. Ad hominem tu quoque. Post hoc ergo propter hoc. Quod est demonstrandum. Actus reus. Scandalum magnatum. Pactum reservati dominii.

See what happened? This brief itself went from a discussion of parody’s function—and the quite serious historical and legal arguments in favor of strong protections for parodic speech—to a curveball mocking the way legalese can be both impenetrably boring and belie the hollowness of a legal position.

Well done!!

That’s the setup and punchline idea again. It would not have worked quite as well if this brief had said the following: “Hello there, reader, we are about to write an amicus brief about the value of parody. Buckle up, because we’re going to be doing some fairly outré things, including commenting on this text’s form itself!”

Taking the latter route would have spoiled the joke and come off as more than a bit stodgy. But more importantly, it would have disarmed the power that comes with a form devouring itself.

For millennia, this has been the rhythm of parody: The author convinces the readers that they’re reading the real thing, then pulls the rug out from under them with the joke. The heart of this form lies in that give and take between the serious setup and the ridiculous punchline.

As Mark Twain put it, “The humorous story is told gravely; the teller does his best to conceal the fact that he even dimly suspects that there is anything funny about it.”

Not only is the Sixth Circuit on the wrong side of Twain, but grafting onto the reasonable-reader test a requirement that parodists explicitly disclaim their own pretense to reality is a disservice to the American public.

It assumes that ordinary readers are less sophisticated and more humorless than they actually are. And the stakes here are significant, involving no less than one of many more or less equally important components of social and political discourse. [Citation omitted.]

The Onion intends to continue its socially valuable role bringing the disinfectant of sunlight into the halls of power. See Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 67 (1976) (quoting Louis D. Brandeis, Other People’s Money and How the Bankers Use It 62 (National Home Library Foundation ed. 1933)). And it would vastly prefer that sunlight not to be measured out to its writers in 15-minute increments in an exercise yard.

42 comments:

rhhardin said...

Best lawyer ad: "Reasonable doubt at a reasonable price."

richlb said...

Isn't Ann a notable satire hater?

gilbar said...

it's simple.. Any ONE person is unreasonable, and full of it.
BUT.. When you add them up; the unreason cancels out.

One person is Very Bad at guessing the weight of a girl.
Ten people are better at it
100 people are pretty darn good at it
https://www.npr.org/sections/money/2015/08/07/429720443/17-205-people-guessed-the-weight-of-a-cow-heres-how-they-did

npr has to pretend to guess cows, not girls.. because they are not reasonable

Dave said...

I enjoy when rhetoric, especially comedy, is inserted into otherwise serious documents. It humanizes the the writers, and I think the entire process.

Here is Randazza's amicus on behalf of the Language Creation Society in Paramount vs. Axanar, over the copyright of the Klingon language.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BzmetJxi-p0VSjRuWjVyUWdwbm8/view?resourcekey=0-xrfe1R246nOz6TagiLOzCA

I read the Onion brief in its entirety, and both the onion and the klingon brief I found through instapundit.

Achilles said...

A free country requires a populace that can take care of itself and do the right thing when nobody is looking. This responsibility is on the people.

It also requires the sardonic in it's leaders. Leaders must be able to accept they are limited, fallible, and really no better or more entitled than everyone else.

This police department must be punished. As publicly and as humiliatingly as possible.

Those in authority must be worthy of respect that is freely given. These shitheads want to rule through fear.

Gahrie said...

you stop believing that democracy is possible. If you don’t believe that most people are ultimately reasonable, why on Earth would you want them to be in charge of everything?

Which is exactly what our Founding Fathers thought, and precisely why our government was deliberately designed NOT to be a democracy, and to limit the effects of democracy as much as possible. The more democratic we have become, the more expensive, powerful and larger the government has become.

Pettifogger said...

I understand the despair at relying on the common sense of the ordinary person. But if you can't do that, how could we possibly rely on the common sense, much less good will, of whoever claws their way to power?

Saint Croix said...

ha ha ha

So I clicked on the link. "I'll read the brief," I said to myself.

Read the first sentence.

The Onion is the world’s leading news publication,
offering highly acclaimed, universally revered coverage of breaking national, international, and local news
events.


This is borderline parody. It's actually kind of similar to the bragging from the New York Times: "All the news that's fit to print." That's not true, either, NYT!

So the first point is made, that the free speech clause gives people the right to exaggerate and say things that are not true.

And then we get to the second sentence, where they just fucking kill it.

Rising from its humble beginnings as a print newspaper in 1756, The Onion now enjoys a daily readership of 4.3 trillion and has grown into the single most powerful and influential organization in human history.

I literally quit reading after that. Boom! Case closed, you won, it's over.

Saint Croix said...

Smoove B, by the way, has advice for lovers who are on a budget.

Yancey Ward said...

Remind me again how many times The Babylon Bee has been "fact checked" and/or cancelled online?

Left Bank of the Charles said...

The brief was compelling in many respects, but I felt they gave the game away by labeling parts of the brief as parody. Here’s how it’s done in classic Onion style:

President Joe Biden has taken executive action to change U.S. policy on marijuana, pardoning all prior federal offenses of simple marijuana possession, while also urging state governors to follow suit and asking federal officials to start a review process of how marijuana is classified. What do you think?

“Sounds like Biden’s dealer got picked up.”

TOMMY YORK, POWER DISTRIBUTOR

“If we legalize marijuana possession, then people are only going to get harder drugs planted on them by the police.”

SONJA RILEY, SCALE OPERATOR

“Doesn’t this just let innocent people off the hook?”

FREDRIC HOLDEN, WARRANT SERVER

Rollo said...

You can't assume that people will show great wisdom, but you could figure that most people are sane and not looking to make trouble. If that's changed then we really are in trouble.

baghdadbob said...

No reasonable prosecutor...

-- James Comey

WWIII Joe Biden, Husk-Puppet + America's Putin said...

"Like boxes of shit in your house?
Get a cat."

See Pet Page A-6.

Saint Croix said...

When C.S. Lewis first published The Screwtape Letters, it was in serial form in a newspaper.

One of the readers got so mad when he read the letters, he cancelled his subscription. And the reason he gave was because of all the bad advice in these letters. It seemed to him the advice was not only erroneous, it was positively diabolical!

Gahrie said...

You can't assume that people will show great wisdom, but you could figure that most people are sane and not looking to make trouble. If that's changed then we really are in trouble.

Let's grant that most people are not looking to make trouble. Seems reasonable. Let me suggest to you that the problem instead is that people have become totally inconsiderate, as in literally not considering how their actions affect others, because fuck them I'm looking out for number one. They're not being malicious, they just don't care.

Spend a week paying attention to how often you see jaywalking, no turn signals, cutting people off, running red lights. When this is your world, that's how you get people walking into stores and clearing off shelves into garbage bags, and flash mobs of teenagers running rampant.

And yes, we really are in trouble. Before we can restore the Protestant work ethic, common courtesy and a sense of community, we have to agree that those are actually good things.

mikee said...

Using satire is the final and most horrible item on the list of Doug Pirhana's terrifying behaviors.

Saint Croix said...

The fucking Snopes guys crack me up.

Did CNN Purchase an Industrial-Sized Washing Machine To Spin News?

Fact Check Finding: Parody

Maybe you can get the federal government to cut you a check!

Concerning Survey Finds Too Many People Believe Snopes Is a Legitimate Fact-Checking Website

Lem the artificially intelligent said...

Disinformation Governance Board hardest hit.

Holy cow, I just googled "disinformation" and that's the first thing that popped up.

Richard said...

I suspect the capacity for reasonableness is built in, mostly. But it can be overcome with sufficient dedication.
I have a relation who claims to be afraid to drive through a nearby rural county--upper midwest--because of all the guys with plaid shirts and rifles. Nobody's been shot or shot at. I inquired about that and the response was, 'Why do you need dead people?"

The Right Sort of Person not only has to advertise being afraid to drive through that county, they have to actually believe it.

More people have been murdered or assaulted in her upscale town just too big to be a small town. That number is low, but higher than said scary county.

Maybe it's because the scary county voted for Trump, after they unflipped forty percent of the votes. Completely accidental.

Saint Croix said...

The Latin discussion makes me think of the "fetus" word.

Baby if we love them.

Fetus if we don't.

Jupiter said...

"But if you stop believing in reasonable people ... you stop believing that democracy is possible."

No. But you stop believing that it works well. It doesn't. As Churchill said, it is the worst possible form of government. Except for all the others. Churchill had some experience with democracy.

Dave said...

What I like in both the onion and the klingon brief is that the writers transgress the speech rules that are being sought after in each case. The onion engages in parody in its brief; randazza liberally sprinkles klingon all throughout a brief that disputes paramount's claim to hold copyright over the klingon language.

mccullough said...

Didn’t know the Onion was still around. Thought it decomposed from cowardice.

The Supreme Court justices are old enough to understand parody.

They didn’t grow up with the Left’s Censorship.

Hustler v Falwell is from the 80s.

The majority will strike down the law.

KBJ’s concurrence will emphasize that she doesn’t believe this ruling should be extended to public universities because in that unique situation parody trigger warnings are necessary. “It would be most anomalous if our finest public universities could not utilize the crucial tool of employing trigger warnings that our most selective institutions of higher learning deem necessary to protect our most elite 20-year-olds from years of turmoil proximately caused by the perusal of a blog post that failed to warn an unsuspecting Harvard undergraduate before informing that undergraduate that not only was Harvard an all-male college until 1970 but that in those days only males with a penis were eligible to matriculate.”

Dave Begley said...

An ordinary and reasonable person is shorthand for a jury of 12.

Lloyd W. Robertson said...

Some examples I find funny, although they are not really meant to deceive then get a laugh.

1. Speech/letter from Chief Seattle. The "original" was written by a white settler in 1887, supposedly recalling a meeting he attended thirty years earlier. It's pretty clear he wasn't at the meeting, he never had any actual notes from the meeting, and a meeting involving the main participants, happening in a different year, did not include any of the famous speech, or even touch on the same topics. In the 70s one altered version of the "original Smith" became hugely popular in the environmental movement. "We, the indigenous people, understand about land and environment, whereas we have no such thing as private property." The implications that private property owners manipulate or harm the environment, people with communal property don't, or the indigenous never did, are all questionable at best.
2. The Gettysburg Address as delivered in Eisenhower-ese. Originally in the New Republic, but there are several versions. From memory: "We have to hit some of these ideas, these concepts you might say, further down the fairway."
3. Coyote v. Acme, Ian Frazier. Speaking of lawyers.

Bender said...

yes, we really are in trouble

But perhaps we need better examples of the end of civilization than not using a turn signal, etc.

Tom T. said...

This is all well and good, but at the same time I suspect Petri would denounce the existence of pro-life pregnancy centers because they might fool people into thinking that they're abortion clinics.

n.n said...

#DemocraticDictatorialDuality

That said, demos-cracy is aborted at the twilight fringe.

Gahrie said...

But perhaps we need better examples of the end of civilization than not using a turn signal, etc.

The whole point is that it starts with the small stuff, and grows when the small stuff is ignored.

J Melcher said...

Parody in law shows up in the works of A.P. Herbert, particularly in his review of the Common Law standard of "A Reasonable Man" (who might understand a work as parody) and the case of Fardell vs. Potts.

Tom_Ohio said...

Reasonable People are not equal to Politicians, do not compare the 2 .
Most politicians are just lie dispensers with a mouth, telling a group in front of them what they might want to hear.
This case was about an agency of government taking umbrage and retaliating against a person's free speech rights/right to parody the more powerful.
If you want to know who rules you than look for the people that you are not allowed to make light of / make fun of.
Some of the case law cited in the brief was highlighted by Steve Lehto and seemed powerful and on the mark and this brief was indeed prepared by a high powered law firm.

Big Mike said...

Of course there’s such a thing as a “reasonable person.” I see one i the mirror when I shave in the morning.

BarrySanders20 said...

This is why radical Islamists have no sense of humor. Not optimistic. And not confident they are right.

The Godfather said...

Although lawyers were (probably still are) subject to jury duty in DC and Maryland, where I lived and practiced, I was required from time to time to spend a day in the courthouse for jury duty, but was never picked for a jury. But when I semi-retired and moved to Florida, I not only was called for jury duty, I was actually picked for a jury. When the jury was seated, the judge noted that the jury included a lawyer.
It was a minor criminal case involving a private sale of a controlled substance. Both the prosecutor and the defense attorney were clearly inexperienced (it may have been the first trial for both of them). The prosecutor put the arresting officer on the stand who tesified that he'd taken something suspicious from the defendant. He then put on a techie from the crime lab who testified that he had tested a sample and found that it was a particular controlled substance.
At that point, the prosecution rested.
The judge asked defense counsel if he wanted to make a motion. Counsel clearly didn't get the hint, so the judge dismissed the case on the ground that there was no evidence to connect the substance taken from the defendant to the substance that was identified by the techie as illegal. The judge thanked the jury for their service, and he told the jurors that if they didn't understand why he'd dismissed the case, they could ask their fellow juror, me. My fellow jurors generally seemed to think that a crook was let off on a technicality.

Narayanan said...

what is the difference between 'reasonable person' and 'rational person'

Richard said...

Does a reasonable person believe the prosecution?

tim maguire said...

The reasonable person standard is not built around any particular person. That said, I think most people are reasonable, though I understand Alexandra’s despair given that she spends most of her time around journalists.

Rusty said...

richlb said...
"Isn't Ann a notable satire hater?"
She hates/dislikes sarcasm as humor.

mikee said...

Hillary, tired of being ridiculed by The Onion, had her supporters buy it.

https://theintercept.com/2016/01/26/ha-ha-hillary-clintons-top-financial-supporter-now-controls-the-onion/

Václav Patrik Šulik said...

Put the 9 Justices in order from most to least likely to laugh at that paragraph.

Two Ties:
1. Kagan
1. Thomas
1. Gorsuch
4. Coney Barrett
5. Kavanaugh
6. Alito
6. Sotomayor
8. Brown Jackson
9. Roberts

Kirk Parker said...

Lloyd W. Robertson,

There's also "Two Gentlemen of Lebowski".