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{{trope}}
{{trope}}
{{quote|"And now we must duel, like two glimmering banjos on a moonlit stoop!"|'''Dimentio''', ''[[Super Paper Mario (Video Game)|Super Paper Mario]]''}}
{{quote|"And now we must duel, like two glimmering banjos on a moonlit stoop!"|'''Dimentio''', ''[[Super Paper Mario]]''}}


A character who [[Title Drop|talks like a simile]] uses similes in their speech pattern the way a machine gun uses bullets: swiftly, mercilessly, and in quick succession, to the point where [[Metaphorgotten|this quality becomes a prominent character trait]]. In a lot of these cases, [[Self Demonstrating Article|the similes they use will be about as unusual as a school of fish in the Sahara and more complex than space shuttle wiring]], but still the offender will churn them out as they talk, either in casual conversation or in the narration, as though coming up with them as they go along was as natural an act to them as picking on [[Acceptable Targets|acceptable targets]].
A character who [[Title Drop|talks like a simile]] uses similes in their speech pattern the way a machine gun uses bullets: swiftly, mercilessly, and in quick succession, to the point where [[Metaphorgotten|this quality becomes a prominent character trait]]. In a lot of these cases, [[Self-Demonstrating Article|the similes they use will be about as unusual as a school of fish in the Sahara and more complex than space shuttle wiring]], but still the offender will churn them out as they talk, either in casual conversation or in the narration, as though coming up with them as they go along was as natural an act to them as picking on [[Acceptable Targets]].


A staple of the [[Private Eye Monologue]] and of characters from the [[Deep South]]. Has some similarities with [[Dissimile]]. Also see [[Strange Syntax Speaker]], [[Like Is Like a Comma]].
A staple of the [[Private Eye Monologue]] and of characters from the [[Deep South]]. Has some similarities with [[Dissimile]]. Also see [[Strange Syntax Speaker]], [[Like Is, Like, a Comma]].

{{examples|Examples:}}

== Comics ==

* [[Calvin and Hobbes|Calvin]], when in character as Tracer Bullet.
* Similarly, in ''Pibgorn'', a noir-ish detective {{spoiler|(who was actually a demon but didn't know that until fairly recently)}} ''always'' uses this for his [[Private Eye Monologue|dialogue]].


{{examples}}
== Literature ==
== Literature ==

* [[Terry Pratchett]]'s [[Lemony Narrator|narration]]. ''[[Signature Style|Always]]''. But especially in [[Discworld]].
* [[Terry Pratchett]]'s [[Lemony Narrator|narration]]. ''[[Signature Style|Always]]''. But especially in [[Discworld]].
* ''[[The Hitchhikers Guide to The Galaxy]]'' is chock full of them, particularly negative similes describing exactly what something is unlike:
* ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy]]'' is chock full of them, particularly negative similes describing exactly what something is unlike:
{{quote| "(Vogons ships) hung in the sky, in much the same way that [[Dissimile|bricks don't]]"}}
{{quote|"(Vogons ships) hung in the sky, in much the same way that [[Dissimile|bricks don't]]"}}
* Eddie Valiant in ''[[Who Censored Roger Rabbit]]?'' by [[Gary Wolf|Gary K. Wolf]]. This quality did not carry over into [[Who Framed Roger Rabbit|the movie.]]
* Eddie Valiant in ''[[Who Censored Roger Rabbit?]]?'' by [[Gary Wolf|Gary K. Wolf]]. This quality did not carry over into [[Who Framed Roger Rabbit?|the movie.]]
* Eilonwy of ''[[Prydain Chronicles|The Prydain Chronicles]]'' seasons this with a heavy dash of [[Cloudcuckoolander]].
* Eilonwy of ''The [[Prydain Chronicles]]'' seasons this with a heavy dash of [[Cloudcuckoolander]].
{{quote| "It's silly to worry because you can't do something you simply can't do. That's worse than trying to make yourself taller by standing on your head."}}
{{quote|"It's silly to worry because you can't do something you simply can't do. That's worse than trying to make yourself taller by standing on your head."}}
* [[Philip Marlowe]], [[Trope Codifier]] for the [[Private Eye Monologue]].
* [[Philip Marlowe]], [[Trope Codifier]] for the [[Private Eye Monologue]].
* ''[[The Lies of Locke Lamora]]'', mostly in the narration.
* ''[[The Lies of Locke Lamora]]'', mostly in the narration.
* In ''[[The Pickwick Papers]]'', this is part of Sam Weller's shtick. His father, Tony, does it too.
* In ''[[The Pickwick Papers]]'', this is part of Sam Weller's shtick. His father, Tony, does it too.
{{quote| ''"All good feelin', sir--the wery best intentions, as the gen'l'm'n said ven he run away from his wife 'cos she seemed unhappy with him."''}}
{{quote|''"All good feelin', sir--the wery best intentions, as the gen'l'm'n said ven he run away from his wife 'cos she seemed unhappy with him."''}}
* The narrator of Matthew F. Jones' novel ''The Cooter Farm'' includes at least one simile in almost every paragraph.
* The narrator of Matthew F. Jones' novel ''The Cooter Farm'' includes at least one simile in almost every paragraph.
* [[PG Wodehouse (Creator)|PG Wodehouse]] definitely deserves a place here, as both [[Douglas Adams]] and [[Stephen Fry]], who are both very adroit users of this trope, took their props from him.
* [[P. G. Wodehouse]] definitely deserves a place here, as both [[Douglas Adams]] and [[Stephen Fry]], who are both very adroit users of this trope, took their props from him.
{{quote| "At five minutes to eleven on the morning named he was at the station, a false beard and spectacles shielding his identity from the public eye. If you had asked him he would have said that he was a Scotch business man. As a matter a fact, he looked far more like a motor-car coming through a haystack."}}
{{quote|"At five minutes to eleven on the morning named he was at the station, a false beard and spectacles shielding his identity from the public eye. If you had asked him he would have said that he was a Scotch business man. As a matter a fact, he looked far more like a motor-car coming through a haystack."}}
* [[Homer]] is noted for [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homeric_simile long similes] that go on for several lines.
* [[Homer]] is noted for [[wikipedia:Homeric simile|long similes]] that go on for several lines.
* Also a frequent thing in ancient Celtic epics.
* Also a frequent thing in ancient Celtic epics.
* ''[[Memoirs of a Geisha]]'' is full of these, to the point of distraction at times. The main character's entire motive throughout most of the plot is to get with this one guy, and nearly at the end, when she thinks she's lost her chance forever and has resigned herself to an empty life, they have a scene together where they both admit their mutual attraction. The prose is all tense and brimming with emotion, and he finally goes to kiss her... and [[Moment Killer|she ends the chapter by comparing him to a maid she once saw sneaking a pear in her old geisha house]].
* ''[[Memoirs of a Geisha]]'' is full of these, to the point of distraction at times. The main character's entire motive throughout most of the plot is to get with this one guy, and nearly at the end, when she thinks she's lost her chance forever and has resigned herself to an empty life, they have a scene together where they both admit their mutual attraction. The prose is all tense and brimming with emotion, and he finally goes to kiss her... and [[Moment Killer|she ends the chapter by comparing him to a maid she once saw sneaking a pear in her old geisha house]].
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* Massie Block from [[The Clique]] series continually uses "Are you an X? Then why are you ?"
* Massie Block from [[The Clique]] series continually uses "Are you an X? Then why are you ?"


== Live Action TV ==
== Live-Action TV ==

* Jeremy Clarkson of ''[[Top Gear]]'' (and also in his newspaper articles). The effect is amplified by the fact that many of them reference random subjects pulled out of nowhere apparently on the spur of the moment.
* Jeremy Clarkson of ''[[Top Gear]]'' (and also in his newspaper articles). The effect is amplified by the fact that many of them reference random subjects pulled out of nowhere apparently on the spur of the moment.
** "It's an Audi! It weighs as much as ''the moon!''"
** "It's an Audi! It weighs as much as ''the moon!''"
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** He could probably make good money selling a best hits compilation DVD of his similes over the years. "Tastes exactly [[Tastes Like Feet|like a hot Turkish urinal]]"?
** He could probably make good money selling a best hits compilation DVD of his similes over the years. "Tastes exactly [[Tastes Like Feet|like a hot Turkish urinal]]"?
*** In one interview, Clarkson actually attributed his success to this, saying that when he first became a motoring journalist, cars were more boringly samey than they had been for years, and he stuck out by his strategy of picking on something really minor and using an outrageous metaphor to describe it ("that rev counter looks like a woman's bits!")
*** In one interview, Clarkson actually attributed his success to this, saying that when he first became a motoring journalist, cars were more boringly samey than they had been for years, and he stuck out by his strategy of picking on something really minor and using an outrageous metaphor to describe it ("that rev counter looks like a woman's bits!")
* "[[Black Adder|You really are as thick as clotted cream, that's been left out by some clot, and now the clots are so clotted, you couldn't unclot them with an electric de-clotter,]] [[Butt Monkey|aren't you, Baldrick?]]"
* "[[Blackadder|You really are as thick as clotted cream, that's been left out by some clot, and now the clots are so clotted, you couldn't unclot them with an electric de-clotter,]] [[Butt Monkey|aren't you, Baldrick?]]"
** "As cunning as fox that's been made Professor of Cunning at Cambridge University."
** "As cunning as fox that's been made Professor of Cunning at Cambridge University."
*** [[Up to Eleven|"... as cunning as a fox what used to be Professor of Cunning at Oxford University but has moved on, and is now working for the UN at the High Commission of International Cunning Planning..."]]
*** [[Up to Eleven|"... as cunning as a fox what used to be Professor of Cunning at Oxford University but has moved on, and is now working for the UN at the High Commission of International Cunning Planning..."]]
*** "The stickiest situation since Sticky the Stick Insect got stuck on a sticky bun."
*** "The stickiest situation since Sticky the Stick Insect got stuck on a sticky bun."
*** Not a sticky stick? They missed one.
*** Not a sticky stick? They missed one.
* Narrator [[Myth Busters (TV)|Robert Lee]] does this quite a bit, though it's often forgotten because he [[Pungeon Master|performs more wordplay than a British crossword]].
* Narrator [[MythBusters|Robert Lee]] does this quite a bit, though it's often forgotten because he [[Pungeon Master|performs more wordplay than a British crossword]].


== Music ==
== Music ==
* This device is very widely used in rap and hiphop while comparatively nonexistent in other genres.

* [[Nightwish]]'s song 'whoever brings the night' begins with the line "We seduce the dark with pain and rapture, like two ships that pass in the night."
* This device is very widely used in rap and hiphop while comparatively nonexistant in other genres.
* [[Nightwish (Music)|Nightwish]]'s song 'whoever brings the night' begins with the line "We seduce the dark with pain and rapture, like two ships that pass in the night."
** That [[Dissimile|doesn't work]].
** That [[Dissimile|doesn't work]].
* Pete Wentz, lyricist of [[Fall Out Boy]] is fond of this trope, to the point where it's in almost every song.
* Pete Wentz, lyricist of [[Fall Out Boy]] is fond of this trope, to the point where it's in almost every song.
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** Of those, only the tiger, Lady Godiva, and the atom bomb are similes.
** Of those, only the tiger, Lady Godiva, and the atom bomb are similes.


== Newspaper Comics ==
* [[Calvin and Hobbes|Calvin]], when in character as Tracer Bullet.
* Similarly, in ''Pibgorn'', a noir-ish detective {{spoiler|(who was actually a demon but didn't know that until fairly recently)}} ''always'' uses this for his [[Private Eye Monologue|dialogue]].


== Radio ==
== Radio ==
* ''[[A Prairie Home Companion]]'''s Guy Noir, Private Eye is fond of these.
* ''[[A Prairie Home Companion]]'''s Guy Noir, Private Eye is fond of these.


== Real Life ==

* Irish Comedian Dylan Moran.
** [talking about 'The Rockafella Skank'] "I'm not saying it's a bad song. Or anything like that. I'm just saying that you could take a broom, dip it into brake fluid, put the other end up my arse and stick me on a trampoline in a moving lift and I would write a better song on the wall. That's all."
** [earlier] "This song sounded like a million fire engines being chased by ten million ambulances through a warzone and it was played at a volume that made the empty chair beside me bleed."
* Newscaster Dan Rather [http://www.thedailyshow.com/video/index.jhtml?videoId=125692&title=Election-Results---Dan-Rather was famous for this.]
* [[The Bible|Jesus]] and his parables. [[Ancient Greece|Socrates]], too.
* A stereotype of the [[Deep South]].


== Tabletop Games ==
== Tabletop Games ==
* The theme song of ''[[FATAL]]'' was likened by one reviewer to the [[Sesame Street|Cookie Monster]] chasing a drum kit being pushed down a flight of stairs.
* The theme song of ''[[FATAL]]'' was likened by one reviewer to the [[Sesame Street|Cookie Monster]] chasing a drum kit being pushed down a flight of stairs.



== Video Games ==
== Video Games ==
* The mysterious Dimentio in ''[[Super Paper Mario (Video Game)|Super Paper Mario]]''. See the page quote.
* The mysterious Dimentio in ''[[Super Paper Mario]]''. See the page quote.
** [[Intentional Engrish for Funny]]-spewing Fawful in the handheld ''[[Mario and Luigi (Video Game)|Mario & Luigi]]'' games does it as well.
** [[Intentional Engrish for Funny]]-spewing Fawful in the handheld ''[[Mario & Luigi]]'' games does it as well.
* This trope is invoked quite a bit in ''[[Chrono Trigger (Video Game)|Chrono Trigger]]'', most notably by Queen Zeal.
* This trope is invoked quite a bit in ''[[Chrono Trigger]]'', most notably by Queen Zeal.
* ''[[Max Payne (Video Game)|Max Payne]]'' in spades. Also the [[Show Within a Show|in universe show]] [[Blaxploitation|Dick Justice]].
* ''[[Max Payne (series)|Max Payne]]'' in spades. Also the [[Show Within a Show|in universe show]] [[Blaxploitation|Dick Justice]].
* Angel Starr from ''Phoenix Wright: [[Ace Attorney]]'' talks like this, and all the similes are about lunch. The metaphors are somewhat forced, though, as Phoenix [[Firstperson Smartass|silently]] notes.
* Angel Starr from ''Phoenix Wright: [[Ace Attorney]]'' talks like this, and all the similes are about lunch. The metaphors are somewhat forced, though, as Phoenix [[First-Person Smartass|silently]] notes.
* The entire cast of ''[[Metal Gear Solid]]'', who [[Realistic Diction Is Unrealistic|all talk exactly like]] [[Hideo Kojima]].
* The entire cast of ''[[Metal Gear Solid]]'', who [[Realistic Diction Is Unrealistic|all talk exactly like]] [[Hideo Kojima]].



== Web Comics ==
== Web Comics ==
* This trope is a staple of Dave Strider's vernacular in ''[[Homestuck]]''. Other characters also do this, but not to the same extent.
* This trope is a staple of Dave Strider's vernacular in ''[[Homestuck]]''. Other characters also do this, but not to the same extent.



== Web Original ==
== Web Original ==
* [[Zero Punctuation|Ben "Yahtzee" Croshaw]] does this quite often, his similes being outrageous and bizarre, often to [[Accentuate the Negative|illustrate the negative aspect of the video games he reviews]]. He's mentioned insults being as offensive as "being smacked in the balls with your own dead dog," voice acting as unpleasant as "being raped in the ear by a man wearing a sandpaper condom," (but that was his roommate, and "not in those exact words, obviously") and [[Super Mario Bros|Mario]] as "as big a sellout as a character can get without turning tricks for a penny on the New Jersey turnpike."
* [[Zero Punctuation|Ben "Yahtzee" Croshaw]] does this quite often, his similes being outrageous and bizarre, often to [[Accentuate the Negative|illustrate the negative aspect of the video games he reviews]]. He's mentioned insults being as offensive as "being smacked in the balls with your own dead dog," voice acting as unpleasant as "being raped in the ear by a man wearing a sandpaper condom," (but that was his roommate, and "not in those exact words, obviously") and [[Super Mario Bros.|Mario]] as "as big a sellout as a character can get without turning tricks for a penny on the New Jersey turnpike."
* Outrageous like-simile-talking seems to be a favorite trait of comedic video game critics, seeing that [[The Angry Video Game Nerd (Web Video)|The Angry Video Game Nerd]] is also well known for his scatological similes regarding the shitty games he plays. Certainly you've heard about this business with diarrhea dumps in his ear and roadkilled skunks and the downing-with-beer thereof?
* Outrageous like-simile-talking seems to be a favorite trait of comedic video game critics, seeing that [[The Angry Video Game Nerd]] is also well known for his scatological similes regarding the shitty games he plays. Certainly you've heard about this business with diarrhea dumps in his ear and roadkilled skunks and the downing-with-beer thereof?
* ''[[Things Mr. Welch Is No Longer Allowed to Do In An RPG]]'' list includes this:

{{quote|1455. Like a cow who goes to the well too often, I will stop speaking only in metaphors. }}


== Western Animation ==
== Western Animation ==
* [[Everything Is Big in Texas|Sandy Cheeks]] from ''[[SpongeBob SquarePants (Animation)|SpongeBob SquarePants]]''. It comes standard with her stereotypical [[Deep South|Deep Southern]] drawl.
* [[Everything Is Big in Texas|Sandy Cheeks]] from ''[[SpongeBob SquarePants]]''. It comes standard with her stereotypical [[Deep South]]ern drawl.
* The Script Assassin from ''[[Kappa Mikey]]''.
* The Script Assassin from ''[[Kappa Mikey]]''.
* [[The Tick]], moreso in the cartoon than the comic book series.
* [[The Tick (animation)]], moreso in the cartoon than the comic book series.
* Cathy from ''[[Monster Buster Club (Animation)|Monster Buster Club]]'' (usually in Gratuitous Rhapsodian)
* Cathy from ''[[Monster Buster Club]]'' (usually in Gratuitous Rhapsodian)
* ''[[Drawn Together]]'' is extremely fond of these.
* ''[[Drawn Together]]'' is extremely fond of these.
* [[Family Guy|This is just like that time that the writers of Family Guy referenced an eighties cultural phenomenon.]]
* [[Family Guy|This is just like that time that the writers of Family Guy referenced an eighties cultural phenomenon.]]
* Maguro of ''[[Sushi Pack]]'' has a tendency to do this.
* Maguro of ''[[Sushi Pack]]'' has a tendency to do this.
* Periodically, Clover from ''[[Totally Spies (Animation)|Totally Spies]]'' talks like this.
* Periodically, Clover from ''[[Totally Spies!]]'' talks like this.
* Rolf from ''[[Ed, Edd n Eddy (Animation)|Ed, Edd n Eddy]]''.
* Rolf from ''[[Ed, Edd 'n' Eddy]]''.
* [[Foghorn Leghorn]]
* [[Foghorn Leghorn]]

== Real Life ==
* Irish Comedian Dylan Moran.
** [talking about 'The Rockafella Skank'] "I'm not saying it's a bad song. Or anything like that. I'm just saying that you could take a broom, dip it into brake fluid, put the other end up my arse and stick me on a trampoline in a moving lift and I would write a better song on the wall. That's all."
** [earlier] "This song sounded like a million fire engines being chased by ten million ambulances through a warzone and it was played at a volume that made the empty chair beside me bleed."
* Newscaster Dan Rather [http://www.thedailyshow.com/video/index.jhtml?videoId=125692&title=Election-Results---Dan-Rather was famous for this.]
* [[The Bible|Jesus]] and his parables. [[Ancient Greece|Socrates]], too.
* A stereotype of the [[Deep South]].


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
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[[Category:Characterization Tropes]]
[[Category:Characterization Tropes]]
[[Category:This Trope Name References Itself]]
[[Category:This Trope Name References Itself]]
[[Category:Self Demonstrating Article]]
[[Category:Self-Demonstrating Article]]
[[Category:Talks Like A Simile]]
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Trope]]

Latest revision as of 20:40, 20 October 2019

"And now we must duel, like two glimmering banjos on a moonlit stoop!"
Dimentio, Super Paper Mario

A character who talks like a simile uses similes in their speech pattern the way a machine gun uses bullets: swiftly, mercilessly, and in quick succession, to the point where this quality becomes a prominent character trait. In a lot of these cases, the similes they use will be about as unusual as a school of fish in the Sahara and more complex than space shuttle wiring, but still the offender will churn them out as they talk, either in casual conversation or in the narration, as though coming up with them as they go along was as natural an act to them as picking on Acceptable Targets.

A staple of the Private Eye Monologue and of characters from the Deep South. Has some similarities with Dissimile. Also see Strange Syntax Speaker, Like Is, Like, a Comma.

Examples of Talks Like a Simile include:

Literature

"(Vogons ships) hung in the sky, in much the same way that bricks don't"

"It's silly to worry because you can't do something you simply can't do. That's worse than trying to make yourself taller by standing on your head."

"All good feelin', sir--the wery best intentions, as the gen'l'm'n said ven he run away from his wife 'cos she seemed unhappy with him."

  • The narrator of Matthew F. Jones' novel The Cooter Farm includes at least one simile in almost every paragraph.
  • P. G. Wodehouse definitely deserves a place here, as both Douglas Adams and Stephen Fry, who are both very adroit users of this trope, took their props from him.

"At five minutes to eleven on the morning named he was at the station, a false beard and spectacles shielding his identity from the public eye. If you had asked him he would have said that he was a Scotch business man. As a matter a fact, he looked far more like a motor-car coming through a haystack."

  • Homer is noted for long similes that go on for several lines.
  • Also a frequent thing in ancient Celtic epics.
  • Memoirs of a Geisha is full of these, to the point of distraction at times. The main character's entire motive throughout most of the plot is to get with this one guy, and nearly at the end, when she thinks she's lost her chance forever and has resigned herself to an empty life, they have a scene together where they both admit their mutual attraction. The prose is all tense and brimming with emotion, and he finally goes to kiss her... and she ends the chapter by comparing him to a maid she once saw sneaking a pear in her old geisha house.
  • Graham Greene would do this with abstract concepts. "The small pricked-out plants irritated him like ignorance."
  • Massie Block from The Clique series continually uses "Are you an X? Then why are you ?"

Live-Action TV

Music

  • This device is very widely used in rap and hiphop while comparatively nonexistent in other genres.
  • Nightwish's song 'whoever brings the night' begins with the line "We seduce the dark with pain and rapture, like two ships that pass in the night."
  • Pete Wentz, lyricist of Fall Out Boy is fond of this trope, to the point where it's in almost every song.
  • Clutch loves this, some songs are filled with similes.
    • Walking In The Great Shining Path of Monster Trucks: "Well I rolled Jesse Helms like a cigarette / And smoked him higher than the highest of the minarets / Jesse James couldn't even handle it / Started looking at me like I was Sanskrit"
  • In the Queen song "Don't Stop Me Now," Freddie Mercury compares himself to a shooting star, a tiger, a race car, Lady Godiva, a rocket ship on its way to Mars, a satellite, an atom bomb, and "a sex machine" (OK, maybe that last one isn't a simile).
    • Of those, only the tiger, Lady Godiva, and the atom bomb are similes.

Newspaper Comics

  • Calvin, when in character as Tracer Bullet.
  • Similarly, in Pibgorn, a noir-ish detective (who was actually a demon but didn't know that until fairly recently) always uses this for his dialogue.

Radio

Tabletop Games

  • The theme song of FATAL was likened by one reviewer to the Cookie Monster chasing a drum kit being pushed down a flight of stairs.

Video Games

Web Comics

  • This trope is a staple of Dave Strider's vernacular in Homestuck. Other characters also do this, but not to the same extent.

Web Original

  • Ben "Yahtzee" Croshaw does this quite often, his similes being outrageous and bizarre, often to illustrate the negative aspect of the video games he reviews. He's mentioned insults being as offensive as "being smacked in the balls with your own dead dog," voice acting as unpleasant as "being raped in the ear by a man wearing a sandpaper condom," (but that was his roommate, and "not in those exact words, obviously") and Mario as "as big a sellout as a character can get without turning tricks for a penny on the New Jersey turnpike."
  • Outrageous like-simile-talking seems to be a favorite trait of comedic video game critics, seeing that The Angry Video Game Nerd is also well known for his scatological similes regarding the shitty games he plays. Certainly you've heard about this business with diarrhea dumps in his ear and roadkilled skunks and the downing-with-beer thereof?
  • Things Mr. Welch Is No Longer Allowed to Do In An RPG list includes this:

1455. Like a cow who goes to the well too often, I will stop speaking only in metaphors.

Western Animation

Real Life

  • Irish Comedian Dylan Moran.
    • [talking about 'The Rockafella Skank'] "I'm not saying it's a bad song. Or anything like that. I'm just saying that you could take a broom, dip it into brake fluid, put the other end up my arse and stick me on a trampoline in a moving lift and I would write a better song on the wall. That's all."
    • [earlier] "This song sounded like a million fire engines being chased by ten million ambulances through a warzone and it was played at a volume that made the empty chair beside me bleed."
  • Newscaster Dan Rather was famous for this.
  • Jesus and his parables. Socrates, too.
  • A stereotype of the Deep South.