It’s been two years since the world lost this comedic genius. He was loved by millions and there is a funny thing about it. All these people who mourned the loss of this great man, never knew him on a personal level. I am one of those people. Yet, he connected with so many, we all felt we lost someone close to us. We saw him as an uncle, a father, a brother, or maybe that neighbor that everyone just loved. I was crushed when I heard about his passing. You’re shocked and in disbelief. You just can’t accept it. You won’t believe it. The night he died was a night I will always remember. It holds a place in my heart to a man that could make your bad day into something better. It was one of those crazy random happenstances that made that night into more than just a random night of drinking and having fun.
Tag Archives: death
Bullied To Death- A Poem
Whoever said “South Park” is bad for you was wrong. I was inspired by a recent episode I watched. The episode was from season 6. It was titled, “The Death Camp of Tolerance“. According to Wikipedia (a very reliable source of information), the storyline is as followed:
In this episode, Mr. Garrison is promoted from his position as the kindergarten teacher to teach the fourth grade. He had been previously demoted for admitting to being gay. However, realizing that getting fired for being gay could allow him to sue the school for millions, he decides, along with his partner, Mr. Slave to perform outrageous sex acts in the classroom.
The children complain about Mr. Garrison’s inappropriate activities, but their parents mistakenly think they are complaining about his homosexuality. The parents believe that the children are being intolerant and send them to the Museum of Tolerance, where all sorts of gags occur, such as the children going on a ride through the “Tunnel of Prejudice”, where speakers project all sorts of slur words at them and waxworks of minorities in stereotypical poses. The tour guide lectures the children about how Cartman being fat is his own life choice, before a smoker is spotted outside the museum and the tour guide and the parents lay into him in the same way they attempted to teach the children not to do with minorities.
To read the rest of the article, click here.
It was a pretty good episode. I forgot how funny this show was. I never look to the show for deeper meaning or some sort of political statement, but at least this episode struck a creative cord and got me to write something.
You play hurtful games
And you call me names
Names that ring inside my ear.
And everyday
Those kids will say
Bastard, loser, fag or queer.
They push me down
upon the ground
With no chances to defend.
And on the floor
I say, “No more.”
Begging, pleading for it to end.
Now at home
I sit alone
With all my peers to blame.
I have no hope
But just this rope
To aid to end the shame.
I step outside
Of a world that died
As I stand up on the deck.
I make a noose
But not too loose
And wrap it around my neck.
A final cry
To leap and die
To end their words of hate.
For when I’m dead
From this world of dread
They know they made my fate.
Thank you all
For heeding the call
Of a life to end so young.
For when it’s time
You’ll pay the crime
Of the boy that you all hung.
Thanks for reading.
Kirk