February 9th, 2010

Quimby Reveals Plans to Protect Budapest From Protesting Cartoon Penises

Having received this video by rock band Quimby in our inbox, we’re still at a loss as to just what the hell is going on here, other than it’s not safe for work, unless your job is drawing penises all day. We’re still trying to figure out if it’s a reference to this, a comment on graffiti in the city, or if what it intends to state is that the protesters that go marching around Budapest are a bunch of dicks. Still, we’ll never look at the tunnel below the castle the same way again.

You can now comment on Pestiside.hu using you Facebook account, or anonymously via the comment form farther down the page. Note that unfortunately comments from the two systems are not threaded together, and if you want to be a nameless troll you'll have to suffer the indignity of our insufferable CAPTCHA system. Your choice!

  1. gyb says:

    They probably got the idea from this recent French AIDS awareness ad: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-puDqDfL1C0 , but then of course it got “reworked” to fit the clip. The original is much better.

  2. PiP says:

    Or maybe it was after I explained to them this NYE that ‘quim’ is an variant word for ‘cum’.

    True story that.

  3. Minnie the midget says:

    No it’s not! Quim refers to a woman’s personal bits.
    Google it.

  4. PiP says:

    Not in my part of the (barely) English-speaking world it doh, my vertically challenged friend. We use both meanings where I’m originally from, but the cum meaning is much more popular at the mo with the younguns.

    Can’t vouch for the rest of the English speaking world, bu roiund ma wai w’im bearly par o’it anywai! (or someting loike tha’)

  5. wolfi says:

    Look up the different meanings here:
    http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Quim

    Have fun!

  6. Minnie the midget says:

    PiP, what in the name of Ant and Dec is that
    dialect?

  7. PiP says:

    Ow’amya ower kid Minnie.

    In answer to your question: it’s deepest, darkest YamYam (often confused with the closely related but definitely inferior Brummie accent), as spoken in post-industrial places with such lovely sounding names as Gornal, The Lunt, Tipton, Brownhills and Bilston (the Black Country in central England).

    Written phonetically, the Black Country dialect makes about as much sense as it does when it’s spoken and I can’t claim to be an expert in trying to write it phonetically. It generally sounds like a bunch of 14th century Middle-English speakers dragging their voices through a gravel-pit and into a deep pool of tar, with random vowels and archaic grammar popping up all over the place, so I’ve tried to convey a similar feeling in my attempt at spelling it phonetically.

  8. Phil says:

    Hi Mr Bird just to inform you that i’m not that lzy, i don’t intend to talk like that in the long run, i feel proffesional in the way i talk but my writing and mathematic skills have slopped towards prehistoric stone carvings, i’m proud to say No, this is not me.

    Hogy vagy isti pisti?

  9. Dave says:

    strange, weird and fascinating all at the same time
    but I cannot post it on twitter lol :)

 
 
More content from Hungary's leading foreign-language media network
About Pestiside.hu | Become an All Hungary Member | Newsletters | Contact Us | Advertise With Us
All content © 2004-2012 The All Hungary Media Group. Articles, comments and other information on the All Hungary Media Group's network of sites are provided "as is" without guarantees, warranties, or representations of any kind, and the opinions and views expressed in such articles and columns are not necessarily those of the All Hungary Media Group.