Every year, just after school
begins the temperature drops to let the trees know that it’s time to change
colors. Getting into the car is enjoyable again, which is a stark contrast to a
summer-long dread of the greenhouse effect. The nights become cool and crisp
and you can see your breath in the light of the full moon. The leaves and the
cornstalks become brittle and the crops must be gathered before the winter sets
in. It’s autumn again, my favorite time of the year.
Historically a time of harvest and
the last feasts before winter, we have adapted other traditions in our urban
society, one of the most popular of which is Halloween. Despite its roots in
witchcraft and black magic, modern commercialism has lassoed and made safe the
enigma of the eerie for mainstream consumption by selling horror films and making
it acceptable to play dress-up for a couple weeks of the year.
However, and quite ironically in
view of the trend toward sterile and innocent fun on Halloween, there has
arisen from the stew of costume parties and trick-or-treat events an evil
perhaps greater than that of Halloween’s esoteric beginnings. I am speaking, of
course, of “spooktacular”. This
accursed hybridization of the words “spooky” and “spectacular” has been rearing
its ugly head everywhere I turn! Even such once-revered organizations as Sea
World and Hooters have thus signed their souls away in the name of cheap
advertisement1, and I will remain a bystander no longer. Indeed,
there is much more that needs to be done than one blog post, but I hope and
pray that mine will be a voice of clarity and serve as a rallying cry for those
who have similarly descried the devious ways of “spooktacular”.
Throughout the eons, mankind has
drawn humor from wordplay. Drawing connections between seemingly unrelated
subjects through similarities in the words they are assigned by a language is
as fundamentally funny as Larry poking Mo in the eyes. Throughout the ages,
however, the two have stratified and been given the respective designations of
“low” and “high” comedy. This stands in direct parallel to class stratification
in this regard: the use of language associations is more burdensome on the
brain and therefore a mastery of “the pun” designates schooling and a quick
wit. In fact, the more exclusive the jargon that is utilized in the successful
formation of a pun, the more pleasure the participants experience, due to the
added sense of accomplishment and inclusion.
It’s true that “nerd humor” is frowned upon occasionally in our culture, but I
can’t help but ask, “by whom?” Almost from the point a newborn opens his eyes
he laughs at slapstick, but puns referencing quantum physics can be generated
and understood only after years of sophisticated education. It can thus be held
as desirable to be able to participate in this level of discourse, and slightly
callow to ridicule it.
“Spooktacular” unfortunately is
the exact philosophical opposite. It goes against all of the progress humanity
has made. Firstly, not only is it overused, but its continued use denotes a
lack of imagination. This overuse bestows the term with a cloud of “Halloweenish”
generality, and in effect taints the root words it has hijacked for its own
base purposes. The word “spectacular”, for example evokes the feel of extreme
goodness, particularly relating to the visual sense, e.g. its relation to the
word “spectacle”. All of this wonderful connotation is lost in relation to its
dastardly cousin, because there is no longer anything remarkable about a “spooktacular”
gathering. “Halloween” is a concise and accurate enough modifier to describe
any event that could ever be simultaneously dubbed “spooktacular”, and it lacks
the contrived and (frankly) lame sense of humor.
It is a counterfeit pun at best to
begin with and, while it once possibly caused laughter or a fleeting smile on
the face of a passer-by, it at best is ignored by those who encounter it in
light of the battery of Halloween-themed puns with which amateur advertisers
inundate us during the month of October, and at worst serves only to darken the
brow of the more enlightened shopper. So please, whether you are posting an
event on Facebook or designing a billboard for a haunted house, have a little
dignity and strike the word “spooktacular” from your vocabulary. Use other humorous
devices to complement your summary. Your exceptionalism will not go overlooked
by those of us who still care about the English language.
1According to a Google Image search.
1According to a Google Image search.