Review: Bowling - Candy-colored rhythmic organizer

by Cowtipper on Mar.23, 2009, under Content

Bowling ballsAs an activity, bowling is as bare-bones as you can get. Ten semi-phallic white pins stand erect at the end of a long corridor, and your job is to use your big black ball to knock them down. Actually, I’m not sure if I’ve ever used a black ball; they’ve always come in a bewildering array of fruity, often iridescent colors that give me cravings for Jolly Ranchers. If this is a really subtle form of gay activism, bowl on, brotha’!

When you think about it, it’s almost a miracle that bowling has become so ubiquitous, with alleys in virtually every modern city in the world. The set-up never changes; it’s always you, a sphere, and some objects to destroy stationed 60 feet away. After you’ve played a few times and have faced every combination of pins remaining, you’ll never encounter a new situation again. But perhaps therein lies its greatest strength as a social event; you never actually have to pay attention to the damned game. Sure, when it’s your turn, you may get pulled away from that hair-fiddling fake-laughing flirt session with the gal that’s ambiguously into you, but on the plus side, she gets a guilt-free game-induced reason to escape your clutches. Bowling is a social metronome, shuffling interactions at a regular interval and making sure that clingers have to release their claws from time to time. It’s like speed dating, but everyone has a ball.

The best part is that if your group is particularly boring or sick of each other, the game itself picks up the slack. There is something strangely hypnotic about watching someone taking shuffling steps, going into a ritualistic wind-up, and unleashing with pure open-mouthed anticipation, at which point their body tenses, fists half-raised, body trembling and undulating as they use their telekinetic powers to assassinate that stubborn 9-pin. With the ball tumbling past it by inches comes no less than the realization that our hand is powerless against the cruel whims of fate. All we can do is throw our heart behind the blasted thing and the pins either fall or they don’t. Bowling is like life writ small, but with twenty chances instead of one. Even the most miserable and luckless among us has a decent shot of at least one instance of fleeting glory, which is probably why we’re so willing to pay for the privilege.

Barack Obama bowlingObama gives hope to us all with his astonishing score of 37.

Oh, and let’s not forget those adorable, slip-and-slide bowling shoes and their magic dance-inducing powers. If Michael Jackson got a nickel for every bowling moonwalk we did, well, he’d still be a creepily ambiguous kiddy-diddler. But I suspect that all we need to do to turn those awkward 8th grade school dances into a night at the Roxbury is polish the wood floor, play sounds of smashed pins on the speakers, and give them all bowling shoes. Or hell, just take’em bowling. They’re 8th graders.

Pros: Rainbow pride, everyone’s a social butterfly, avant garde performance art, sexy shoes, being better than the President at something, involuntary moonwalking, and a chance to pretend, for one fleeting moment, that we are masters of our domain.
Cons: Bowling itself’s pretty fucking boring.
Grade: B+





6 Responses

  1. bobmarley says:

    Bowling is NOT boring!! Its an art form like taijiquan where you must make your body function as one, in complete harmony. Obama has a lot to learn and he must, for the sake of our country and the world. Bowling is more important than any sacred book, fool! ;)

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  2. Cowtipper says:

    bobmarley: Bowling is NOT boring!! Its an art form like taijiquan where you must make your body function as one, in complete harmony. Obama has a lot to learn and he must, for the sake of our country and the world. Bowling is more important than any sacred book, fool! ;)

    Oh bob, I had no idea that bowling was such an important spiritual trial! How about diverting the AIG bonuses to bowling lessons for the entire Obama administration- what do you say?

    By the way, I love how the first person I offend with this site is not a Christian or a Muslim, but a bowling fan.

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  3. Ellie says:

    What I like best is the cold, heavy feeling of the balls, and trying them to find one with the right sized finger-holes… and the ridiculous bouncing pins filmclips they show when someone scores a half-strike.
    Good times.
    Can I request a review on pavements?

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  4. bobmarley says:

    Cowtipper:
    Oh bob, I had no idea that bowling was such an important spiritual trial! How about diverting the AIG bonuses to bowling lessons for the entire Obama administration- what do you say?
    By the way, I love how the first person I offend with this site is not a Christian or a Muslim, but a bowling fan.

    Thats a good idea, Obamas bowling skills need the money more than some rich insurance assholes. They can also start a fund for innercity kids, put bowling shoes on every foot in america. Thats the dream my friend.

    Yea im telling you the christians and the muslims aint shit, i believe in the holy 300, put that in your project.

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  5. Cowtipper says:

    Ellie: What I like best is the cold, heavy feeling of the balls, and trying them to find one with the right sized finger-holes… and the ridiculous bouncing pins filmclips they show when someone scores a half-strike.
    Good times.
    Can I request a review on pavements?

    Ah, completely forgot about the filmclips! Ever see the dancing turkey animation? Only happens when you get three strikes in a row, but it was one of the funniest things I’ve seen.

    By “pavements”, do you mean road surface, asphalt, that sort of thing?

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  6. PANIC ATTACK says:

    I don’t have much to say except the balls in the first picture look absolutely delicious. They’re more like Mentos than Jolly Ranchers, by the way.

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