:eek: Thread Win!
The Noid needs no arguments for. He just is and his being becomes self evident towards the conclusions necessary for them to reach. In short: Not even Chuck Norris could avoid The Noid.
Probably zero times. Freshman year of college, now, that would be a different story…
I guess the way I see it though is this: How often does Eugene O’Neill come up in pop culture? My experience has been pretty much never (with this thread being the one exception). Even though references to the Iceman Cometh are common I doubt most people could tell you anything about where exactly the reference came from and who Eugene O’Neill was, unless they were somewhat well-read or educated.
I think that while the number of people aware of the Noid may be waning, it is likely that the number of people aware of Eugene O’neill is smaller and likely waning just as fast or faster. It’s not like he is being discussed in People Magazine or anything. Those with an interest in literature may know him but most people don’t care about old literature nowadays.
I would have no idea who the Noid is without that episode of Family Guy.
How do any of the factors you applied to Eugene O’Neill not applicable to the Noid (btw, I can’t believe I just typed that sentence)?
The number of people aware of the Noid is waning.
The Noid is not discussed in People magazine.
Is there anyone with any interest at all in old ad campaigns from the early 90s?
I don’t even know that these are useful factors for discussing how culturally relevant something is. I mean, I bet Lady Gaga is mentioned more in People magazine than is Shakespeare. But that doesn’t mean she’s more culturally relevant.