As far as I can tell, short jokes became less prevalent after Randy Newman’s “Short People” had been around for a while. Assuming I saw an actual change and that the song had something to do with it, this still might not be a good guide to action—Newman might be smarter about such things than the average satirist.
Interesting. One difference is that Randy Newman’s song was about prejudice against short people. The South Park episode, and ginger-baiting on Demotivators or other humor websites, is, I think, about prejudice against blacks and other races. Its message condemns prejudice against blacks—not prejudice against red-heads.
As far as I can tell, short jokes became less prevalent after Randy Newman’s “Short People” had been around for a while. Assuming I saw an actual change and that the song had something to do with it, this still might not be a good guide to action—Newman might be smarter about such things than the average satirist.
Interesting. One difference is that Randy Newman’s song was about prejudice against short people. The South Park episode, and ginger-baiting on Demotivators or other humor websites, is, I think, about prejudice against blacks and other races. Its message condemns prejudice against blacks—not prejudice against red-heads.
Another difference is that the South Park show had a call to action, and “Short People” didn’t.