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Skin As Canvas
by Burt Prelutsky
It seems that the late Lord Charles Beresford was such a devotee of fox hunting,
he had a hunting scene tattooed across his buttocks.
I'm guessing that most people would agree that Lord Charles gives new meaning
to English eccentricity. But who knows? At the rate the rest of you are getting
yourselves tattooed, I may soon be the only person in America who hasn't gone under the
needle. And, quite frankly, I'd like to know what you folks could possibly be thinking.
Did you all get that drunk while next door to a tattoo parlor?
The pain and the cost aside, what exactly is your message? What am I to make of
the inky hearts, roses, and barbed wire, with which you've decided to adorn your bodies?
The tattoos that most confound me are those I see on black basketball players.
I'm afraid that whatever the designs and messages NBA stars are toting around on their
arms and torsos are lost on me. Blue and purple simply don't register on dark skin. They
look like Rorschach ink blots, as if instead of having the work done by a tattoo artist, the
work was jobbed out to Jackson Pollack wannabes, who had the athletes lie on the floor
while they dripped paint on them.
I once wrote a MASH episode in which little Radar O'Riley decided to change his
image by getting himself a tattoo, after, of course, first fortifying himself with a couple of
shots of Grape Nehi. Hawkeye and B.J. tried to talk him out of his goofy plan, with
Hawkeye pointing out the idiocy of putting banal artwork on one's body that one would
never think of hanging on one's wall.
In the old days, there were only a few types of people who went in for tattoos.
They were young sailors, three sheets to the wind while on shore leave; guys in prison;
and jungle savages. These days, it's women, perhaps even more than men, who seem to
have it done. Don't ask me why. I refuse to believe that Angeline Jolie is totally
responsible for this widespread lunacy, but she can't escape all culpability. I mean, I've
never even seen her in a movie, and even I know that she covered her body like a
billboard proclaiming eternal devotion to Billy Bob Thornton, whom she now refers to as
old what's-his-name.
You don't even want to think about the pain and money it's cost her to have all
vestiges of Billy Bob removed from her body parts. It's probably easier and cheaper to
restore Baghdad.
And keep in mind that, unlike art masterworks, an investment in these things
doesn't increase over the years. On the contrary, down the road a piece, today's roses are
going to end up looking a lot like acorns.
Finally, it's mere conjecture on my part, you understand, but I suspect that Lady
Beresford had a little tattoo of her own, which read "I'm With Stupid."
—(06/12/06)
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Mr. Prelutsky lives and writes in the San Fernando Valley.
He has been a humor columnist for the L.A. Times, a movie critic for Los Angeles magazine and has written for the New York Times, TV Guide, Modern Maturity, Emmy, Holiday, American Film, and Sports Illustrated.
For television, he has written for Dragnet, McMillan & Wife, MASH, Mary Tyler Moore, Rhoda, Bob Newhart, Family Ties, Dr. Quinn and Diagnosis Murder.
You can learn more about Burt and his latest book, Conservatives Are from Mars (Liberals Are from San Francisco) at his home page. Write Mr. Prelutsky at:
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