Why Chaucer Said ‘Ax’ Instead Of 'Ask,’ And Why Some Still Do : Code Switch : NPR
Sketch comedy duo Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele joke that because they’re half-white, they’re constantly switching back and forth. “If it happens four times in a sentence,” Key says, “[you’re] probably going to get two axes, two asks.”
Talking over each other, they add:
“But when a cop comes up to you, you definitely use a lot of 'asks.’
"Ask away, officer, ask away!”
“Anything you want to ask me, I’ll be happy to answer, officer.”
If anyone asks, there’s a new Key & Peele on tonight.
popculturebrain:
nprmusic:
When I first heard the song, just a few years ago, I just thought he had written it for me. [It’s] just a beautiful expression of how we are toward each other as people — we don’t think that we are sufficient for each other; that no one wants to know the real me or the whole me.
— From Fresh Air, Steven Colbert on Ben Folds Five’s “The Best Imitation of Myself”
Photo: Kris Long
Is there video of this performance?
Not online. It’s from the taping of this episode.
PS Listen to that Fresh Air interview. It’s wonderful.
Interview: Stephen Colbert, Author of ‘America Again: Re-becoming the Greatness We Never Weren’t’ : NPR
“You get a feeling that everybody of the sort that I’m modeling really has one foot out of the boat right now, and I really I hope Mitt — I mean listen, I have my own political views, but as a performer I hope he does something positive tonight so that there’s something for me to rally behind, because that’s what my character wants to do. … He wants to have a candidate that he can champion, and that just doesn’t exist in Mitt Romney right now. He’s just a walking wound.”
Obviously, anyone can go out there and go, ‘F—-, f—-, f—-, c—-, c—-, c—-, piss, piss, piss,’ whatever. And, like, it’s not gonna do anything, unless at the root of it there is this heart and this soul,