‘Riding the Dog’ has long been a way of saying one is going to ride a Greyhound Bus.
No doubt many people came up with the phrase, since it’s so obvious. But do we know approximately when the phrase became popular, among which demographic it was most popular, the first printed or filmed record of its use, etc.? (I have an idea it became popular in the '30s, but I’m looking for a citation.)
Popular? Never heard the phrase before. As a young lad, my father was working at a job in Southern Oregon. Once a month my mother would pack up herself and 4 kids under 6 years old and we would take the bus to visit my dad. It would take the better part of 24 hours to travel from Tacoma to Grants Pass. We did this I think on 5 different occasions. The part I remember most was we had to sit in the back in the smoking section. I wanted to ride up front so I could watch the road go by.
Too late to ETA: Google returns only a few hits relevant to your usage of the phrase. A 2002 Washington Post column. A 2014 short story collection by Sybil Rosen. One Youtube video, which appears to be a vidcap of a 1980s PBS documentary. Stuff like that.
The usage seems legit but rather rare in the Googleverse. Seriously, a monkey riding a dog is the much more relevant application of the phrase, apparently.
I haven’t heard it either, although I agree it seems like it should be common. There’s a song by Harry Chapin called “Greyhound” which includes the line, “It’s a dog of a way to get around.” That’e the closest I can get, though.
Yeah, I didn’t know what this thread would be about either, until I opened it. There’s also a song by John Mellencamp called Minutes To Memories in which he describes taking a Greyhound trip. One of the lines goes: “The rain hit the old dog in the twilight’s last gleaming.”
I can think of similar phrases - riding the red pony, riding shank’s mare, effing the dog, (all very different meanings) but never riding the dog. Though when you say it, it’s easy enough to guess what it means.
Ridin’ the Dog is familiar to me. Seems I’ve mainly heard it in the south, and then mostly from black folks. Urban Dictionary draws a blank though, so maybe I dreamt the whole thing.
I first learned the phrase here on the 'Dope a few years ago. And have never seen nor heard it anywhere before or since until this thread.
Sounds like it’s probably a regionalism or at least limited to a particular demographic. The fact the heyday of Greyhound was 50+ years ago now doesn’t help. It may well have been a phrase my parents would’ve used in the 1950s if they’d had a reason to. But they didn’t, or at least not around toddler me.
Another song - “Home in my Hand” by Ronnie Self - “Went down to the Greyhound station
to catch an outbound dog”. It’s probably one of those usages that is more likely to be seen as colorful by writers than actually turn up in everyday speech.
I believe “Riding the Grey Dog” is used in Neil Gaiman’s American Gods, so either an English transplant came up with it on his own or it is common enough that he found it during research.