IN JEST THIS Melvin Durai
Well, yes, these Indians are playing a bigger game
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America’s National Spelling Bee was once again won by not one but two Indian-American contestants. Yes, for the second year in a row, the world’s most popular spelling competition ended in a tie. The organisers exhausted all the words in the English language, even words borrowed from languages spoken in Latvia, Burundi, Mongolia, Papua New Guinea, and Harlem, New York.
Dr. Jacques Bailly, the official pronouncer, tried unsuccessfully to stump the two remaining contestants, Vanya Shivashankar and Gokul Venkatachalam, with made-up words such as “scherenschnitte,” pyrrhuloxia” and “barackobamaphobia.”
It’s the eighth year in a row (and 13th time in 17 years) that Indian-American contestants have won America’s Spelling Bee, but who’s keeping track? It’s really not a big deal, as shown by the news ticker on an Indian broadcast network: “Breaking News: Indian-American Spellers Match Boston Celtics’ Record of Eight Straight Titles.”
In case you were busy and didn’t get a chance to gauge the reaction to the spelling bee on the Internet, let me give you a taste of what the comments were like on a popular news site.
LiverpoolFan: “A tie? Why did it end in a tie? Shouldn’t they have penalty kicks or something?”
JustSurfing: “Yeah, I hate how they ended it. I was hoping for overtime.”
FunGirl: “They ran out of words. What could they do?”
JustSurfing: “Why not have an overtime period in which they try to spell the names of all the Indian contestants? That would be more challenging.”
Cletus Spuckler: “Every year, I hope an American will win OUR spelling bee, and every year, a freaking Indian wins OUR spelling bee. It’s time to send Americans to India to win their spelling bee.”
FreeThinker: “What a stupid statement, Cletus! It wasn’t ‘a freaking Indian’ who won the spelling bee. It was ‘two freaking Indians.’ There were two of them.”
Cletus Spuckler: “Two of them? Man, I need to stop drinking. I thought I was seeing double.”
Belieber: “It’s not enough that one Indian wins. Now it’s two of them. I’m telling you, next year, it’ll be three of them, then four of them. They’re not happy with just one spelling champion every year. I’m sure they all got together and planned this. Someone needs to investigate.”
Cletus Spuckler: “Yeah, the spelling bee is fixed. It doesn’t make sense that Americans aren’t winning. Indians are so corrupt. They’re probably paying off the judges. Did you see that there was an Indian judge this year? Someone needs to check his bank account.”
CricketFan: “You guys are full of sh–. Stop calling them Indians. They’re not Indians. They’re Americans! They were born in America.”
FreeThinker: “I don’t believe it. Look at their names. Those aren’t American names.”
Cletus Spuckler: “I want to see their birth certificates. They’re probably like Obama – born in another country but pretending to be American.”
BollyGirl: “It wouldn’t matter. The spelling bee isn’t just for Americans. In 1998, a Jamaican won it.”
Cletus Spuckler: “That’s it, then. I’m not watching it anymore – until they let Americans win it again. I’m going to start a petition: Stop letting foreigners into our country who can spell.”
CricketFan: “I don’t know why I read comments on the Internet. It’s like a convention of morons.”
FreeThinker: “I’m not a moron. I have an advanced degree.”
CricketFan: “Oh sure. Advanced degree of brain deterioration.”
CricketFan: “What I love about these spelling bee kids is that they’re so dedicated. Instead of playing sports and videogames like so many kids, they spend all their time studying words. They eat, drink and breathe words.”
Cletus Spuckler: “I knew it. They’re not human. They’re breathing words, not oxygen. They’re robots sent from India to take over America. Someone needs to investigate.”