LizzieMaine
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Brooklyn gags were one of the biggest cultural memes in the US during the 1940s, starting with the Dodgers' unsuccessful run for the National League pennant in 1940. Suddenly radio comedians began portraying the borough as the domain of a strange tribe of fanatical, insane, two-fisted working class baseball fans -- hello, Frankie Germano, whattaya say Hilda Chester -- and the fad caught on, fueled by the Dodgers actually winning the pennant in 1941, only to lose their momentum in the World Series due to the Mickey Owen incident. It got so ubiquitous that all a contestant on a quiz program had to do was say that they were from Brooklyn, and the audience would respond with laughter and applause. It didn't help that Leo Durocher, the Dodger manager who was seen as the living embodiment of Brooklyn even though he was actually from Massachusetts, actually became something of a radio comedian himself, appearing frequently as a guest star with the likes of Fred Allen and Jack Benny and playing up the Brooklyn gag to ridiculous extremes. Allen's Brooklyn-baseball parody of "H. M. S. Pinafore," with Durocher singing the lead, was probably the peak of the Brooklyn comedy craze. William Bendix also made a good living for quite a few years playing variations on the stereotypical Brooklyn character.
The meme finally produced a counter-strike in the formation of the "Society For The Prevention Of Disparaging Remarks About Brooklyn," which itself became a big part of the joke.
These sorts of Brooklyn gags were at their peak in the mid to late 1940s, but trickled on into the early fifties until the Dodgers finally won the World Series in 1955. It wasn't funny anymore after the team finally won -- the whole point of the gag was that Brooklyn was the home of Lovable Losers. Chicago Cub fans please take note.
The meme finally produced a counter-strike in the formation of the "Society For The Prevention Of Disparaging Remarks About Brooklyn," which itself became a big part of the joke.
These sorts of Brooklyn gags were at their peak in the mid to late 1940s, but trickled on into the early fifties until the Dodgers finally won the World Series in 1955. It wasn't funny anymore after the team finally won -- the whole point of the gag was that Brooklyn was the home of Lovable Losers. Chicago Cub fans please take note.