What What In My Asshole

What What In My Asshole




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What What In My Asshole
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"What What" redirects here. For the hip hop vocalist What? What?, see Jean Grae . For the 2018 Dillon Francis album, see Wut Wut .
" What What (In the Butt) " is a viral video created by Andrew Swant and Bobby Ciraldo for the song of the same name by Samwell . [1] It is known for its numerous blatant and camp references to homosexuality and anal sex . The lyrics of the song, a production of Mike Stasny, mostly revolve around the title. The video was made in Milwaukee, Wisconsin [2] and uploaded on Valentine's Day 2007 to YouTube . [3] As of October 2021, the video has over 72 million views. [4]


On 5 March 2007, with regard to the Christian imagery in the video, Samwell said, in an interview with KROQ-FM , that the opening image is "not a cross, but a flaming symbol that [he] just happened to use". [5] According to Stasny, however:
"[Samwell] wanted it because he's a Christian but he doesn't do Christian morality . For him, having a burning cross is a way to pay respect to his beliefs." [3]
The video also parodies the flower petal scene from the movie American Beauty ( 1999 ). [6]

On April 8, 2007, Brownmark Films released an interview with Samwell, in which he discussed the public reception of the song at length. [7]

In April 2008, Samwell appeared on the BBC television show Lily Allen and Friends for an interview and performed a live version of "What What (In the Butt)" with choreographed dancers. [8] The video was also featured in episode #53 of ADD-TV in Manhattan. [9] "What What (In the Butt)" was an official selection at the Milwaukee International Film Festival and the Mix Brasil Film Festival. [10] [11]

In June 2010 Samwell appeared on an episode of Comedy Central's Tosh.0 , television show about viral videos. The segment told the story of how the "What What" video was created, followed by an acoustic duet version of the song by Samwell and Josh Homme , lead singer for Queens Of The Stone Age and guitar player for Kyuss . [12]

In 2009, the creators of the video, and Samwell himself, claimed that a feature film called What What (In the Butt): The Movie was in the works. [13] [14]

On November 12, 2010, Brownmark Films filed a copyright infringement lawsuit against MTV Networks , South Park Studios, and Viacom for their use of "What What in the Butt" in a 2008 South Park episode. [15] In July 2011, a federal judge decided that South Park's use of the video fell under the fair use exception to copyright law, and thus the defendants did not owe damages. The decision was unusual in a copyright lawsuit because it was made on a motion to dismiss , before summary judgment . [16] [17] The appeal was dismissed by the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals on June 7, 2012. [18] Additionally, the district court awarded attorneys' fees to the defendants because the lawsuit was "objectively unreasonable". [ citation needed ]

In January 2013, a behind-the-scenes video was released which showed footage from the original 2006 green screen shoot. [2]


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"What, What In the Butt" is a song featured in the Season Twelve episode, " Canada on Strike ".

Eric Cartman comes up with a plan to earn money for the striking Canadians by featuring Butters Stotch in a viral music video. The video is replica of Samwell's "What What (In the Butt)" and becomes an internet sensation.

On November 12, 2010, Brownmark Films filed a copyright infringement lawsuit against MTV Networks, South Park Studios, and Viacom for their use of "What What in the Butt" in a 2008 South Park episode. In July 2011, a federal judge decided that South Park's use of the video fell under the fair use exception to copyright law and thus the defendants did not owe damages. [1]

I said: "What what, in the butt"
I said: "What what, in the butt"
I said: "What what, in the butt"
I said: "What what, in the butt"

You wanna do it in my butt, in my butt?
You wanna do it in my butt, in my butt?
You wanna do it in my butt, in my butt?
Let's do it in the butt,
OKAY!

It's okay, if you have a little fright
Don't you worry, I won't bite (not that hard)
If you want it, I'll give you power
Just be gentle, I'm delicate like a flower

Give it to me, if you please
Give it to me, if you please

I said: "What what, in the butt"
I said: "What what, in the butt"
I said: "What what, in the butt"
I said: "What what, in the butt"

You wanna do it in my butt, in my butt?
You wanna do it in my butt, in my butt?
You wanna do it in my butt, in my butt?
Let's do it in the butt,
OKAY!


Why Being an Asshole Can Be a Valuable Life Skill
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We typically don't think of being an asshole as a good thing, but there's a difference between "good" assholes and "bad" assholes.
E ighty years ago, researchers began one of the longest and most complicated projects to understand human behavior in history. It would take almost 50 years to complete. But their work would define an entire field of psychology.
It started with an idea: that people have different fundamental character traits and these character traits are inherited and stable throughout one’s life. It was the idea of personality.
The problem was that there were an infinite number of human behaviors, so how could you know what was caused by someone’s personality, and what was caused by all the shit going on around them?
To test and find stable personality traits, researchers would have to make an exhaustive list of all of the possible human behaviors and then measure these behaviors in a lot of people over a very long time to determine what was fundamental personality and what was just noise and bullshit.
The project started out humbly enough. In 1936, Gordon Allport and Henry Odbert pulled out a dictionary and went through every single entry, writing down any word that could potentially describe human behavior. 1
Talk about a one-way train ticket to Boresville.
But this work was actually very important because our understanding of human behavior is bounded by words. Therefore, to get a full sample of pre-defined human behavior, you have to go through the whole damn dictionary.
In the end, they assembled a list of 4,500 words that describe all the crap humans do. Everything from “fetishize” to “bootlicking” to “scatological” were probably on the list… well, that is, assuming those words were in the dictionary back then.
The next project was to start going through the list and grouping them into large categories that encompassed as many words as possible. Words like “talkative,” “wordy,” “loquacious,” and “garrulous” could all be thrown under the “talkative” umbrella. Words like “mopey,” “whiny,” and “self-pitying” could all be thrown under a “melancholy” umbrella. And so on.
This took almost 10 years. Then another psychologist named Raymond Cattell came along, and based on Allport and Odbert’s research, declared 16 fundamental personality traits that defined all human behavior. 2 But as time went on, it became clear that many of these traits came and went in people over time and/or based on their circumstances, and other traits remained relatively consistent over time. Each time a trait was observed to fluctuate too much, psychologists threw it out.
What was left in the 1960s was five stable traits: extraversion, openness to new experience, agreeableness, conscientiousness, and neuroticism. These five categories were deemed to be able to explain all human behavior. But it would be another 20 years before they had sufficient research and data to back up this claim.
By the 1990s, we had data and everyone threw a party. Well… the extraverts threw a party. And then people high in neuroticism got really anxious and fussed about what to wear.
The point is, these five traits have since become known as the Big Five Personality Traits, and they are one of the most established and scientifically-driven measurements in the field of psychology. Which, in case you haven’t been paying attention, has very few established and scientifically-driven measurements. 3
The Big Five are relatively stable over time. 4 They persist through circumstance. There’s a significant genetic component. They partially determine who you are, the choices you make, and how well you do in life.
On average, extraverts experience more positive emotions , have wider social networks, and, likely as a result, make more money. People who are conscientious are healthier and live longer, probably because they wash their hands after they piss. People with high levels of neuroticism struggle emotionally and are more likely to lose jobs, get divorced, and become depressed. People who are more open to experience tend to be creative, risk-taking, and political liberals. People who are low in openness to experience tend to be politically conservative and bad at hosting orgies.
But out of all of the Big Five Personality Traits, one of the five stands above them all in determining professional success : agreeableness.
Or rather, a lack of agreeableness. 5
Basically, assholes make more money. Often, a lot more money.
Now, it’s easy to lament that this is just more evidence of how fucked up the world is, and how the meanest and cruelest in our society are always the ones who get ahead.
But I think that’s a whiny and immature way to look at it. Just because you are nice doesn’t mean you are good. And just because someone is mean doesn’t mean they’re a bad person.
In fact, I believe the world needs its fair share of assholes. And that being an asshole is a valuable life skill. What I mean by “being an asshole” is a willingness to be disliked and/or to upset other people . As we will see, sometimes hurting someone’s feelings (or just being willing to hurt someone’s feelings) is a necessity, both for ourselves and also for the greater good. And I believe that if more of us were able and willing to “flip the asshole switch” occasionally, the world would be a better place.
Discover tips to become more self-aware, empathetic and emotionally intelligent. 49-page guide. Just drop your email below.
Let’s say you have two sides of a business deal. Let’s also assume this is a big, important business deal that will potentially generate a lot of money for all involved and is also good for the world.
Now, let’s say that one side has learned the ineffable skill of being an asshole and the other has not. That is, one side is totally willing to be disliked and the other is not.
What’s going to happen? Well, it’s obvious: the asshole is going to steamroll the other side and get a deal that heavily favors them. Run this situation millions of times over the course of multiple decades and you end up in a situation where assholes run the world. No surprise.
But let’s run the experiment again with two non-assholes—two people unwilling to be disliked.
Both sides come together, and instead of pushing for every small advantage for their side, they don’t want to be assholes, so they agree to terms that are fine but not stellar for themselves. The deal still gets done, but that deal will be sub-optimal because neither side pushed to the full extent of their capabilities. Therefore, a
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