How did these two phrases originate? I know what they mean, but I’d like to get the history if someone knows it. As in, what book, TV show, movie, pop-culture-item they were spawned in, how they entered mainstream usage, whether they were part of a fad that is now dead (cf 1920s style death rays), and so on and so forth.
Well, I distinctly remember the “Pull my finger” line from Beavis and Butthead, where Butthead asks Beavis to pull his finger and promptly rips a loud gaseous anal emission.
If I remember John Goodman’s interpretation of Babe Ruth correctly, Ruth was the genius who first made “Pull My Finger” popular among the intelligentsia.
I don’t have any real references for this, but it seems like some avuncular type in Sumerian times HAD to have come up with the connection between pulling your finger and breaking wind. I mean, people didn’t just start farting, and there have been wacky uncles and randy granddads since time immemorial. That one has to be ancient.
Much like the ever popular “You go, Girl,” “Talk to the Hand” came into being because of the Ricki Lake show, I believe. Those crazy loud black girls on that show did more to suburban slang than anything else ever did, IMO.
I had heard “Talk to the Hand.” in late 1995. I am in Chicago. It was a black women thing. They would put their hand in front of them, palm forward, and say “talk to the hand, 'cause the ears are not listening.”