Boy Bravado
It’s great to be closing in on 60 and to have a young son. How else could a guy in my demographic tune in so directly to the world of boys? For my son’s twelfth birthday, I drove him and seven other pre-adolescent fellows to a place out in the Mojave foothills called “Mountasia” (just a blistering hop-skip-and jump from Magic Mountain). Mountasia, as an aside, is a very parent friendly little collection of amusements (go-carts, lasertag, bumper-boats and video games). The food was crap but so what? You didn’t have to shlep everywhere to keep track of scattered children, and the place is too tame to attract the gangs Magic Mountain features.
But back to my point. At the park, my wife and I drifted away from the kids ( I read the New Yorker- a fascinating piece about the internecine battle waged by American Protestants in the early 20th Century), so the real interaction was in my van, coming and going. I’m calling what I was subjected to “boy bravado,” and I’m sure you know what that is.
“Dude, did you see Undertaker do a crippler on Big Show last night?” (on WWE, World Wrestling Entertainment, that is).
“Man, he was so in submission!”
“Dude, check that Harley!”
“Cool!”
The Harley in question zipped past us, its purposely defeated muffler allowing an ungodly roar to shatter the surrounding atmosphere. The shaded, leathered and booted man who straddled this machine must have seemed iconic to the boys, a WWE demi-god sent down to redeem our sins. My faithful Ford Windstar, vintage 1995, bearing only the virtue of being paid for, seemed diminished then to my passengers. I was repeatedly urged to “book it!”, but, as I told them with attempted humor, you can only book my van when it’s going downhill.
The boy-bravado continued non-stop during every moment of the journey, both there and back. In addition to wrestling and motor-vehicles, it encompassed recollections from the last school year of various boys and girls who had been humiliated in a variety of ways, perhaps by doing something physically clumsy, or saying or doing something stupid that everyone could laugh at. The experience was almost like conducting a focus group on the elements of boy society. I could have written up my observations and sold them to video game producers, making sure they stocked their scenarios with ample mayhem- as if they don’t already know all about that. Actually, I followed what seemed a more novel line of thought- the continuation of boy-bravado into adulthood. As one can verify from any newspaper, we commonly express the doings of our culture in a male language of conquest and submission. One can translate these expressions into imaginary boy-bravado conversations. Thus, from this morning’s L.A.Times Calendar section:
“Dude! Did you see that ’40 Year Old Virgin’ kicked ‘Red Eye’ down to second place?”
“Shit, ‘Eye’ made a measely $16.5 million!”
“Wait, dudes! ‘Penguin’ is kicking ass for the long term box-office!”
From the Business section:
“Dude, Google is selling another 14 million shares!”
“Oh, dude, they’re going to take in about FOUR BILLION!”
“Shit, dude, they have a MASSIVE acquisition plan!”
“Oh yeah, dude! They’re going to wire up half the United States with Wi-Fi!”
It’s a bit obvious how boy-bravado infuses the front page, with its group upon group struggles, its crime and pain, but, and yes, here it comes, the obligatory gibe at President Bush, has not the President employed boy-bravado as his primary vehicle in the selling of his policies? We had our asses kicked on 9/11, so we have to KICK SOME ASS! RIGHT NOW! Never mind whose ass we kick. Never mind the subtleties of responsibility, of cause-and-effect. The important thing is to kick ass as soon as possible so that we will be a nation of men, not pussies. Behind this patently stupid front, of course, is much sophisticated reasoning, so that huge sums of money can be amassed for insiders, while the rest of us have a WWE event serve as foreign policy.
As we approached Mountasia, the boys turned their focus to the attractions to come. Many had been to the park before, and they opined on which rides were the best. There was consensus that everything was good except the bumper-boats, which were “gay.” This I had to see- gay bumper-boats! It turned out that the best place to read my New Yorker was at a shaded table right next to the bumper-boats. These were large inner tubes seating two, equipped improbably with gasoline powered outboard motors which putt-putted the tubes lazily around a pond, so that every once in a while they bumped gently into another tube and its passengers. Gay, indeed! It was actually a perfect setting to finish my New Yorker article, in which I learned that Billy Graham’s son kicks ass on the liberal wing of the Protestant Church.

2 Comments:
It's funny that you compared the WWE bravado with Bush. I inherited a quarter of that birthday party the next day, and we watched WWE SummerSlam, which took place in Washington DC. About an hour into the show they went into the audience to show a couple of celebrities that were there, and both of them were from some Republican Comittee something-or-other.
The truth is that wrestling is just about the gayest form of entertainment there is (I can say from experience that it's gayer than the bumper boats). The whole bravado surrounding it reminds me of something I heard about pink Dodger hats. The hats were made for girls, but it turns out a bunch of gangsters wear them, because they are so tough and badass, that not even a pink Dodger cap can change it. I think that if you can watch wrestling and stay above it and love it, then it shows to others that you are so comfortable in your heterosexuality that watching a group of shaved, half-naked beefcakes tackling eachother doesn't at all strike you as gay. It's just like the pink hat, only unlike the hat, which might shade your eyes from the sun, wrestling has no practical function.
9:41 AM
All this father-son debate is quite touching-!
Mike Timpson watches wrestling.
That is all I have to say
about THAT.
7:58 PM
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