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  • This would have been a talk that I gave at a live show with an audience,

  • but it's June 2020 as I record this,

  • so instead, I am at home, talking to my camera,

  • and possibly my neighbours if they can hear me,

  • and also cursing the drivers with loud engines who seem intent

  • on making as much noise as possible directly outside my flat today.

  • I asked 64,000 people about the children's rhyme "Jingle Bells, Batman Smells".

  • And here is what I found out.

  • When I was a kid, the next line of that was "Robin flew away".

  • That was how the song went in my school. No more lines.

  • Turns out there are multiple completing versions, including the one that

  • singer and actor Robert Goulet sang on the Simpsons in December 1993.

  • That version goes, "Jingle Bells, Batman smells..."

  • "Flew away" versus "laid an egg". Two different bird jokes.

  • And here's the hypothesis that I want to test:

  • that the Simpsons measurably changed which version of that song was popular.

  • That kids who saw that episode, either when it first aired or in reruns,

  • either learned it for the first time from there,

  • or it replaced the version they knew.

  • Because, according to various pop histories,

  • that song was around for decades before the Simpsons.

  • It probably started in California in the 60s,

  • inspired by the Adam West Batman TV series, then it was spread by military kids

  • moving around America and the world with their families. Probably.

  • There are other Jingle Bells parodies,

  • including some really genuinely awful bigoted ones,

  • I am not considering them. I'm asking, very specifically,

  • about the one where Batman smells.

  • Never mind that it's entirely the wrong part of the year.

  • It's 2020. Time is meaningless. Let's talk about Jingle Bells in the middle of summer.

  • So. I sent out a survey.

  • First, I asked each person for two bits of information:

  • the year they were born, and the country they were in when they were eight.

  • I figure eight years old is about the right time for a kid

  • to be endlessly singing this at their friends in the playground.

  • Now, if the person answering said they were from the US or UK,

  • I asked for their zipcode, or the first part of their postcode,

  • from when they were a kid.

  • That meant I could very roughly put a pin in a map for each of them.

  • And there are those pins, thank you very much to everyone who responded.

  • And then, I asked two questions:

  • first, what they called the most basic playground chase game,

  • what Americans call "tag", and then second,

  • to complete the song: Jingle Bells, Batman Smells.

  • For both those questions, I didn't offer any suggestions,

  • I didn't want to prompt with any words that might make people go

  • "oh, yeah, sure, that one I guess?"

  • They had to remember.

  • Which was probably a good idea,

  • but it meant that sifting through this data was a nightmare,

  • because give people a blank text box

  • and some of them will decide to tell you their life story in it.

  • In the analysis, I only included respondents who used the word "Robin" in their answer.

  • That's because for the first couple of hours of that survey being out,

  • I hadn't made it clear that you could just leave that answer blank if you didn't know.

  • So quite a lot of people who didn't know the song interpreted the question as

  • "make up some lyrics of your own". That's my bad.

  • I suspect a few people back then also Googled the answer,

  • but I don't think that'll have affected the final results all that much.

  • That also removed people who were just quoting either Spongebob Squarepants or Madagascar.

  • Those versions were just invented by scriptwriters and forced into kids' heads by marketing.

  • I don't want to count those here.

  • I was going to filter out anyone who didn't use either "flew" or "egg",

  • but it turns out more than 1,000 people know the next line of the song as "Robin ran away"?

  • I think if you don't have a bird pun in that line, you're missing out, but who am I to judge?

  • I also filtered anything that was obviously spam or malicious.

  • When all that was said and done, once all that filtering was finished,

  • I had answers from 42,886 people who knew some version of the song with "Robin".

  • Here's the breakdown by year of birth, and by geography.

  • Now, while I'm still counting answers from earlier years,

  • I'm only going to show graphs from 1973 and onwards,

  • because those are the birth where I have more than 50 replies

  • from both the US and UK.

  • The graphs get weird before then, and I think that's because

  • the number of people who put in false birth years

  • starts to have a really significant effect.

  • I also can't collect data from anyone born in 2007 or later,

  • because the law's very strict on collecting data from kids under 13.

  • So with all that in place, I tracked keywords for the various versions of the song.

  • If you had a completely unique version, I wasn't going to count it,

  • because it might contain personal information.

  • Shoutout to the one person who was insulting their siblings in their answer,

  • at great lengths, and also explained all the jokes.

  • But if a few people had roughly the same version, I did include a check for it.

  • So. Let's talk about those many other variants.

  • I'm not musical, and frankly, singing a half-dozen ridiculous versions of Jingle Bells

  • sounds like something that will very much come back to haunt me,

  • but I do know someone who can perform these far better than I can.

  • Jack.

  • That version was only sent in by a few Australians,

  • but also two people from north-west Washington DC.

  • So maybe they were diplomatic or army kids? No idea.

  • Oh, and in other versions of that,

  • it's Donald Duck and Mickey Mouse doing the stabbing.

  • Because children are monsters.

  • And on that note, let's cover the thirty-nine people,

  • again, from all over the world,

  • who all share this second verse.

  • That was one of the less violent versions of it,

  • one ends with a request to be shot in the head.

  • Now, like I said, I did rule out any answer that didn't include Robin,

  • but I do want to highlight just one international version of Jingle Bells,

  • just to show that this is not entirely an English-speaking joke.

  • Sweden has many variations on this:

  • The colour and particular private part of the bear that's painted appear to change between people.

  • Now we get to the most common versions.

  • One is almost exclusive to the UK and New Zealand,

  • because those are the countries that use the word "motorway" for big highways.

  • More than two thousand people have some variation on this:

  • There are a long cast of characters,

  • all of whom lost some usually-intimate part of their body or clothing,

  • on various motorways that change depending on where in the UK you are.

  • In south Wales, it's "on the M4 motorway".

  • In Scotland, the M9.

  • 62 people, almost all Australians, said the last line of that should be:

  • TAA being a now-defunct Australian airline.

  • However, that is better than the two Scottish people who said it should be:

  • And the idea of 90s kids-TV fever-nightmare Mr Blobby

  • just defecating in the middle of the--

  • --I can't say that!

  • Then there's this one from 221 mostly-British people, where after Robin flew away:

  • And then from 23 British people, mostly 80s kids:

  • Kojak, fictional TV detective with a lollipop part of pop culture in the UK in the 80s.

  • Again, British, more than 100 people.

  • Version after version after version of the song came up

  • as being popular over here but not in the US or Canada.

  • There was only one significant variant I could find

  • that was definitely North American:

  • More than 1500 people know that version,

  • including more than 15% of the Canadians who replied.

  • Almost no-one outside North America has heard it.

  • There were a couple of smaller American variations.

  • 90 people, with a big cluster in the Pacific Northwest.

  • The exact year changes, but almost everyone in that group agreed

  • that Robin "laid" the gun.

  • And the final North American variant is:

  • Which just seems a bit half-assed, frankly,

  • like it got made up by a parent

  • trying to give the kids something more wholesome to sing?

  • But it was only 35 people.

  • America seems to have way fewer regional variations than the UK,

  • and I have no idea why.

  • That doesn't just happen for songs, either.

  • In this book from 1959, "The Lore and Language of Schoolchildren",

  • Iona and Peter Opie conducted a survey of dozens of schools in Britain,

  • asking about the words and rhymes they use.

  • It is a famous piece of research,

  • but it's also a catalogue on how children are really cruel to each other.

  • There's a whole chapter in here on nicknames and epithets,

  • and I'll just read from the table of contents here:

  • they have a list of names for Spoil-sports, Sourpusses, Spitfires,

  • Clever-dicks, Dafties, Fools, Dunces, Copycats, Gibbers, Cheats, Swankpots,

  • Nosey Parkers, Stare-cats, Cowards, Crybabies, Sneaks, Crawlers, Bullies.

  • Plus, there's a whole section on "tortures and hair-pulling",

  • and a separate chapter on physical appearance insults.

  • Children are monsters.

  • Anyway, what this book also has are maps.

  • They're the best known bit: this old copy here actually has its spine broken

  • on one of the map pages, presumably because someone photocopied it.

  • This map covers "truce terms", the words that kids use to say that they are

  • temporarily out of a game, because they've got stitch,

  • or they're tying their shoelaces.

  • In the UK, those words change not just in different parts of the country,

  • but even from one town to the next.

  • And that's why I asked about the game that people call "tag".

  • Because if you're American, of course it's called tag,

  • more than 96% of Americans and Canadians replying said it was called tag,

  • and almost everyone who disagreed misidentified a different game

  • and wrote something like "hide and seek",

  • maybe because they didn't think I'd be asking such a simple question.

  • In America: it's. called. tag.

  • In Britain, only 29% of people called it tag.

  • Not only are there different names, but just like the Opies did for truce terms,

  • you can draw a map of what "tag" is called around the UK.

  • For some reason, America tends to be one massive, homogenous blob,

  • even for games and songs that are made up more recently,

  • whereas Britain has loads of variants.

  • Which brings me, finally, to the big question.

  • Is it "laid an egg" or "flew away"?

  • And did the Simpsons change it?

  • So first of all, let's compare the basic numbers.

  • Now, all I'm doing here is showing the percentage of people who said "laid an egg"

  • out of all the replies who knew some version of the song.

  • And you can see, "egg", by far the most popular.

  • 78% said it's "egg". So it seems like there's a clear winner:

  • until you break it down by country.

  • More than 98% of Americans said it was "laid an egg".

  • 98% percent! You can't get 98% of Americans to agree on anything.

  • Of course the Simpsons chose it.

  • Only someone who grew up outside the US would ever think that sounds wrong.

  • But "Robin flew away" is clearly the British version.

  • But remember, the answers were also broken down by year of birth.

  • For the US, it's always a very high percentage, of course.

  • But if the Simpsons had an effect in the UK, then we'd expect to see that 90s kids,

  • which means people born from the early eighties onwards,

  • they would be more likely to know the "egg" version.

  • And I wish, I wish, I wish, I had a camera on my face when I first saw that data.

  • I could not ask for better proof of that hypothesis.

  • Can I 100% trace that back to the Simpsons?

  • No, of course not, there could be some other factor.

  • But the Simpsons was one of the most important pop-culture shows in the UK in the mid-90s,

  • a lot of folks will have seen that episode,

  • and I cannot think of any other reason for that change.

  • And it also explains why the change happens everywhere in the UK at once:

  • this isn't a local version that spread outward from a single location,

  • it's a version that appeared everywhere,

  • probably because it was imposed by television.

  • And as the Simpsons drifts into history,

  • as kids aren't watching it any more,

  • the British versions of the song are reasserting themselves.

  • Yes, America, Robin might well lay an egg for you, but over here? He flies away.

  • - Thank you, Jack.

  • - Thanks! Today's sponsor is...

  • - No!

This would have been a talk that I gave at a live show with an audience,

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