2387: Blair Witch
Explanation
This explanation may be incomplete or incorrect: Created by an INFANT BLAIR WITCH. Needs general cleanup/expansion..? Do NOT delete this tag too soon. If you can address this issue, please edit the page! Thanks. |
The Blair Witch Project is a found footage horror film released in 1999. For the marketing campaign of the film, the producers created the legend of the Blair Witch, a supernatural being whose legend originates in Burkittsville, MD. As was common in Protestant societies at the time, a woman was ostracized from the community on account of witchcraft. This woman, who tends to conflict in name with various versions of the lore, would supposedly attempt to inflict revenge upon the community that exiled her, and these fearful people fled from the town.
The comic takes a humorous turn on the legend, suggesting that, while the film was confirmed as 'faked/misrepresented footage', the Blair Witch is instead a separate species that is being tracked by the IUCN Red List. With the rise of camera-phones in the modern age, sightings of beings that are most likely fictitious (such as Bigfoot and the Loch Ness Monster) are becoming rarer over time, due to lack of credibility of a reported sighting without visual evidence. A species which has not been notably documented for a long time would indeed be moved to the "possibly extinct in the wild" category, as Megan notes.
In attempting to understand this in a way that does not involve refuting the existence of the Blair Witch, Megan cites habitat loss as the reason why encountering a Blair Witch might be more difficult. Habitat loss is in fact one of the most prominent and concerning reasons for extinction in recent years. Megan claims that suburban projects have fragmented the witch's "spooky forest" ecosystem, a reference to the many species that are dying off due to encroachment, logging, and similar human activities. Migration due to climate change is also an observable phenomenon in animal populations (and some plant populations, depending on their mode of travel while in seeds; those that rely on animals to germinate will migrate as well).
Megan then proposes a plan to catch and breed Blair Witches in an attempt to resurrect the species. This final panel is more obviously humorous, as even if the Blair Witch did exist separate from humans, there is only one, and thus any attempt to breed and repopulate would be futile. It may be possible that this is not a problem, but if it is, it could also raise the objection that any pair of Blair Witch may both be female, and thus unable to reproduce. This could be resolved by (a) assuming that Witches can (sometimes?) be male as well, or (b) assuming that, much like Tremblay's salamander, where females can reproduce with a male of a related species (most likely human, in which case this project would definitely not meet APA standards of ethicality!). The phrase "Blair Witch Reintroduction Project" is a reference to The Blair Witch Project.
The title-text suggests that the comic is a lecture, as Megan's whiteboard and baton/pointer/whatever would suggest. A (presumed) student asks whether Megan is concerned that witches won't breed in captivity (a serious real-world concern to the IUCN). If this is a press conference, the question would be asked by a reporter instead. Megan replies that they are worried that there will be breeding, but biologists are unsure how the breeding occurs, calling it "harrowing" (presumably because they have captured the Blair Witch and it has set a curse on their laboratory as she supposedly did in Burkittsville).
Transcript
- [Megan is standing in front of a screen looking away from it at an audience off-panel. She is holding a stick, pointed at the chart behind her. The chart is seen from a steep angle, but there is clearly some black figure, stick human like, maybe a depiction of a Blair Witch. Above is an unreadable line of text, and below are two smaller rectangles a smaller one aboe the other, the small seems to be empty, but there seems to be some kind of graph in the bottom one.]
- Megan: Other than the fake 1999 video, there have been no Blair Witch sightings in 30+ years.
- Megan: The IUCN redlist says the witch is "possibly extinct in the wild."
- [A close-up of Megan's face. The screen behind her is now clearly visible and shows a habitat map, with four separate shaded areas enclosed in a dotted line. The dotted line and one of the areas goes to the upper edge op the screen indicating they continue beyond the shown area. Beneath the dotted line and to the right there are three small squares, one of them clearly shaded the same way as the areas above. Next to each there is an unreadable label.]
- Megan: Development in the Maryland suburbs has fragmented the spooky forest habitat.
- Megan: Climate change will push any remnant populations north.
- [Back to the original setting, Megan is standing with the stick pointing downwards, and the chart is out of frame.]
- Megan: That's why we plan to capture any surviving witches and establish a breeding population.
- Megan: Then, in time, the Blair Witch Reintroduction Project can begin.
Discussion
The whole Blair Witch legend didn't exist before the movie. This doesn't seem too evident from the explanation, which is written as though there was a historical basis for it.172.69.33.245 03:23, 19 November 2020 (UTC)
https://www.google.com/search?q=single+sex+lizard+species&oq=single+sex+lizard+species
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Mexico_whiptail Not the result that I can't remember right now, a tropical location? Has (moving to had) an all female lizard species. SDT 162.158.75.46 03:28, 19 November 2020 (UTC)
Have you considered the possibility that the Blair Witch, if female, could be bred with human males? They may not need Blair Witch males to reproduce. I seem to remember that some parthenogenic lizards need to have sex with a male of a different species to reproduce. The male sperm does not contribute to the genome of the offspring but is required to trigger necessary hormonal, etc. changes. I could not find a reference to this. (~Unsigned?~)
- It's a bit sparse, but mentioned in here anyway: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tremblay%27s_salamander (meanwhile, I was going to mention either the 'Jurassic Park' thing or the Komodo Dragon as an example (but WZ-parthonegenisis of isolated females would produce just male offspring). Maybe they have sequential hermaphrodism, probably protogynous given what we might consider the active population's active gender-bias. 108.162.229.86 06:04, 19 November 2020 (UTC)
Why is the pointer called a baton? If it's not called a pointer, why not call it a wand?J Milstein (talk) 04:35, 19 November 2020 (UTC)
- I've never seen anyone call it a "baton" before this analysis. Maybe it's a foreign thing? 172.68.65.214 09:45, 19 November 2020 (UTC)
- I would associate "baton" primarily with music conductors (but also relay races) where English has adopted the French/similar word for "stick". Meanwhile "pointer" might be right, but in my head relates more to a mouse-cursor these days, if there's a projected image. "Stick" itself seems to fit (there's much symmantic overlap, given it's just a different linguistic root of the same broad concept) but with not enough context could easily be a twig, thumb-drive, etc, so not entirely sure if it's the ideal replacement. English is complex like that, and I don't think there's a simple name that's universally better than any other. An imperfect search on an online store under office items gives "telescopic pointing stick" or (rarer) "...rod", from which we might drop the telescopic aspect given that's not an obvious/relevent detail above. But it was interesting to ponder... 162.158.158.7 17:38, 19 November 2020 (UTC)
- I'm pretty sure they're called "pointers". And in modern times the physical sticks have been replaced with small laser devices, and they're called "laser pointers". Barmar (talk) 17:49, 19 November 2020 (UTC)
- "Baton" is the French (and perhaps other languages) word for "wand," although it can also refer to the musical conducting stick. Duraludon (talk) 02:04, 20 November 2020 (UTC)
Can we keep the captured specimens in a brothel and ask them to enchant themselves to be irresistible to men? That way the conservation project can pay for itself, and it would merely be whoroing instead of harrowing. I'll show myself out. 172.68.142.195 19:01, 19 November 2020 (UTC)
I got the feeling that the quotation marks in 'harrowing' are there because there is a wording joke. Since I lack vocabulary, I could not understand it, but it felt like a sex joke. Whoroing may be the intended one. (20/11/2020)
- by context, it's in quotes because she quotes the biologists. 162.158.91.231 17:14, 20 November 2020 (UTC)
- it's also an agricultural term. After you plough the land, you harrow it. The gerund is "harrowing". Probably a typical activity in the type of landscapes the comic references? 162.158.158.43 20:07, 20 November 2020 (UTC)
- Another possible definition could be this, from the Chilling Adventures Of Sabrina series? [1]
- To harrow and to plough (plow) were methods of "tilling fertile soil" (old sense of tilling). As such, both terms were used as euphemisms for coitus (or to ravish) as in, "He harrowed his wife." "Harrowing" as a word (not a gerund) means "acutely distressing" as in, "Joe had a harrowing experience," and breeding Blair witches certainly would be such an experience, if they were real. So I think Randall has pulled off a truly epic pun. CoyneT (talk) 04:50, 22 November 2020 (UTC)