Why Outhouse Doors Have Crescent Moon Cutouts
In a lavatorial video essay, Today I Found Out, host Simon Whistler explains the long-running trope about the crescent moon cutouts that adorn every outhouse door depicted in cartoons and media, but were far less prevalent in reality. The truth is, the specific design has nebulous origins at best.
So who came up with the crescent moon trope and why? Well, this isn't clear. "as for the first known actual instances of the crescent moon cutout on outhouses, as alluded to, these wouldn't start showing up until around the mid-20th century, first in cartoons and comics.
Whistler goes onto explain his own theory about the crescent moon adornments and mooning. This then takes him into the story of the deadliest fart in history.
Related Laughing Squid PostsThe Reason Modern Society Uses Seven-Day WeeksHow Potatoes Came to Be Called SpudsHow Gecko Feet Are Able to Stick to Almost Anything and Why They Don't Stick to TeflonFor that, let us offer our own little hypothesis. While nobody knows for sure because the crescent moon trope seems to have originated not on real outhouses, but rather in various comics and other humor based media around the mid-20th century in the United States, perhaps it may have been referencing the practice of dropping your drawers hanging your butt over something- aka mooning someone. "So, yes, the first known mooning in recorded history apparently not only included a fart in the general direction of someone but resulted in a riot and the death of reportedly over ten thousand people" From this fact, we're going to go ahead and crown this the deadliest fart in history and we challenge everyone to come up with one to beat it"
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The post Why Outhouse Doors Have Crescent Moon Cutouts first appeared on Laughing Squid.