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Parodies

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parody
A parody is a creative work designed to imitate, comment on, and/or mock its subject by means of satirical or ironic imitation. Often its subject is an original work or some aspect of it (theme/content, author, style, etc.), but a parody can also be about a real-life person (e.g. a politician), event, or movement (e.g. the French Revolution or 1960s counterculture). Literary scholar Professor Simon Dentith defines parody as "any cultural practice which provides a relatively polemical allusive imitation of another cultural production or practice". The literary theorist Linda Hutcheon said "paro
metafiction
Metafiction is a form of fiction that emphasizes its own narrative structure in a way that inherently reminds the audience that they are reading or viewing a fictional work. Metafiction is self-conscious about language, literary form, and storytelling, and works of metafiction directly or indirectly draw attention to their status as artifacts. Metafiction is frequently used as a form of parody or a tool to undermine literary conventions and explore the relationship between literature and reality, life and art.
The Clouds
comedy by Aristophanes
Black Mass
satanic religious practice
INTERCAL
right|thumb|Don Woods (programmer)|Don Woods, one of the authors of INTERCAL, in 2010 thumb|Jim Lyon, the other author of INTERCAL, in 2005
YouTube Poop
video genre consisting of edited pre-existing media
mock-heroic poem
Mock-heroic, mock-epic or heroi-comic works are typically satires or parodies that mock the elevated style of common Classical stereotypes of heroes and heroic literature. Typically, mock-heroic works either put a fool in the role of the hero or exaggerate the heroic qualities in relation to a trivial subject.
travesty
literary genre
Gillberg
American professional wrestler
How to Irritate People
1968 film by Ian Fordyce
YTMND
Great Hippocampus Question
19th-century scientific controversy
Right to Censor
professional wrestling stable
Extravaganza
theatrical genre
Neoism
Neoism is a parodistic -ism. It refers both to a specific subcultural network of artistic performance and media experimentalists, and, more generally, to a practical underground philosophy. It operates with collectively shared pseudonyms and identities, pranks, paradoxes, plagiarism and fakes, and has created multiple contradicting definitions of itself in order to defy categorization and historization.
parody science
spoof of scientific writing or practice
stone louse
ficitious, rodent-like, rock-eating louse
One Epic Game
2011 video game
Blue World Order
professional wrestling stable
literal music video
viral video