Cut to the chase.


It took me much more time that I expected, but after searching my Google search history, and my desktop search without any success, a more plodding (some might call it systematic) search through my browser history brought me to the article I'd been reading that caused me to want to know just what "more cowbell" is. It turned out that the article in question, The death of the double entendre, in the Toronto Star web site, referred to the topic in the context of bemoaning that:
Advertising has forgotten how to be subtle. Worst of all, it requires no cultural competencies to decode.
The author of that piece mentioned "more cowbell" as an example of an in-joke of the undergraduate college crowd - not subtle, but demanding a particular cultural competence.

From there it was simply a good guess that I'd found that article via Arts and Letter Daily - a guess that was easily confirmed by running a search for the word "double" on that site's main (and almost only) page.

And there I had it. I'd gained cultural knowledge from well outside my sphere of experience, and I'd even searched for, and found how I'd learned about all this in the first place. Yet another example of having fun.



Go to: More (than I ever wanted to know about) cowbell, or
Go to: Having fun