Funerals are sad occasions, as the circle of family, friends, and acquaintances becomes broken with the loss of someone dear to them. And there's the chill draft of mortality that we mostly successfully ignore on an everyday basis but now must be confronted! In dealing with this final passage, different cultures have evolved different coping rituals or activities.
In New Orleans, for example, we have the Jazz Funeral, the wake or visitaton, above-ground graves, and the decoration of the cemeteries for All Souls' Day (Nov. 2). And some families do have the Irish wake, with its sometimes comical eulogies and imbibing of alcohol.
However, in Taiwan there is a custom of having strip teasers provide entertainment at funerals. It is considered respectful there to have this kind of entertainment. Some elderly persons have expressed their wish that they have strippers to provide entertainment; they take it as a sign of respect for the deceased for a large number of people to show up and apparently they try to sweeten the occasion with stripping and pole dancing.
I have no idea how this would play here: surely the ministers and priests would object to strippers comingling with a religious ceremony; and our would-be-orators might find making a eulogy after the bumps and grinds to be a tough act to follow! On the other hand, strippers go provide a true indication that life must go on! Laissez les bon temps rouler!
Still, it's something to think about. I wonder if they could get some Chippendales guys to dance when I meet my demise?
http://jalopnik.com/5820328/the-funeral-strippers-of-taiwan
In New Orleans, for example, we have the Jazz Funeral, the wake or visitaton, above-ground graves, and the decoration of the cemeteries for All Souls' Day (Nov. 2). And some families do have the Irish wake, with its sometimes comical eulogies and imbibing of alcohol.
However, in Taiwan there is a custom of having strip teasers provide entertainment at funerals. It is considered respectful there to have this kind of entertainment. Some elderly persons have expressed their wish that they have strippers to provide entertainment; they take it as a sign of respect for the deceased for a large number of people to show up and apparently they try to sweeten the occasion with stripping and pole dancing.
I have no idea how this would play here: surely the ministers and priests would object to strippers comingling with a religious ceremony; and our would-be-orators might find making a eulogy after the bumps and grinds to be a tough act to follow! On the other hand, strippers go provide a true indication that life must go on! Laissez les bon temps rouler!
Still, it's something to think about. I wonder if they could get some Chippendales guys to dance when I meet my demise?
http://jalopnik.com/5820328/the-funeral-strippers-of-taiwan
nothing really shocks me
ReplyDeleteand I try to never judge
this just seems tacky
and expolits the young women
then again, I've been to many a tacky Irish wake for family
I want a party and a concert and then cremate and send me a flying
Maybe they could have twirling tassels!
ReplyDeleteI think I'm going to go die in Taiwan..... wait....
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like it would beat the type of funerals that Baptists have hands down! Not to mention those interminable Fundie ones!
ReplyDeleteI want my funeral to be held at the Boobie Bungalow in Southern Tennessee.
I think that this is truly despicable and vulgar. Why do some people make even funerals into occasions to wallow in squalor? I agree with Dianne, this exploits young women. It makes older men into beasts.
ReplyDeleteIt would definitely increase attendance at funerals. Even more than when the office-seekers go to visitations near elections.
ReplyDeleteIt would also provide more employment for strippers.
Stripping is one of the seven lively arts.
ReplyDeleteIt sounds kind of campy, in a way! Would she also perform lap dances?
ReplyDeleteFor what it's worth, strippers can make great annual incomes in some locales. Strangely, one of those is North Dakota.
ReplyDeleteI woun't mind seeing a traditional Taiwanese stripper funeral. It sounds like it could lift people's spirits, or something else! Like trouser tents?
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteDianne -- Yes, it is a bit tacky. But, surprisingly, tacky is no stranger anywhere.
ReplyDeleteAnon -- And where would those tassels go?
Elvis -- That sounds like a classy place.
Mike -- Don't be too quick to go.
Kristen -- Obviously, this is not for everyone; nor is wedding bungee jumping.
Bakku-San -- I don't know. Hopefully, not for the Guest of Honor.
Heidi -- I was amazed; some strippers make more than $100,000/year.
Jon -- It can raise those too.
Why is people getting drunk at a funeral more meritorious than is watching someone strip?
ReplyDeleteThere will definitely be strippers at my memorial service. But, they'll be in the crowd mourning with the rest of the folks who attended.
ReplyDeleteJay
If there's going to be dancing at my funeral, I'd just as soon it was me doing it.
ReplyDeleteI would think he would have preferred the strippers when he was alive to enjoy them!
ReplyDelete