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In the Australian sketch comedy show [[The Ronnie Johns Half Hour]], the [[The Ronnie Johns Half Hour#The Nihilists| Nihilist]] character Sigmond usually holds a straw in his right hand. We are later told that this straw is for felching.
In the Australian sketch comedy show [[The Ronnie Johns Half Hour]], the [[The Ronnie Johns Half Hour#The Nihilists| Nihilist]] character Sigmond usually holds a straw in his right hand. We are later told that this straw is for felching.


la diary du lammond (uncensoered edition) 1999



==References==
==References==

Revision as of 18:58, 21 August 2007

Euan Lamond, 24, from the sleepy village of Aberdour situated in the sleepy Kingdom of Fife pioneered modern felching techniques with his partner Brian, the irish wolfhound. Tiring of the traditional trafic cone Euan formed an irreplacible bond with the dog through the medium of a straw. The rest as they say is history..........

WITHOUT EUAN, RICHARD GERE WOULD HAVE NOTHING!

Template:Three other uses Felching is a sexual practice in which semen or other fluids are sucked out of another person's vagina or anus. The individual sucking the semen may swallow it or pass it, mouth to mouth, to a partner. The colloquial term for the latter act is snowballing.

Cultural references

The earliest appearance of the word appears to have been in the work of the Zap Comix underground cartoonists, Robert Crumb, Rick Griffin, Victor Moscoso, S. Clay Wilson, "Spain" Rodriguez & Robert Williams in 1975. The Zap collective published two sexually themed comic books, Snatch and Jiz and decided to continue pushing the envelope by publishing a book named Felch . According to Williams:

OK, since we didn’t get in any trouble with Snatch and Jiz, and a couple of these other comics, I was partying one night with Crumb, Wilson and these other guys. And Wilson mentioned to me, he says, "I was talking to Ken Weaver and he had this real interesting word." I said what, "what it?" A word called "felch." I said, "what does that mean?" He said, "it is a real old term and it means orally withdrawing semen from someone’s lower digestive track after having anal sex." I said, "there’s a word for something like that?" That’s incredible that not only is there a word like that, but it has a provenance. Hell yeah, we’re going to do a felch comic. So I talked to Crumb, "yeah we’re going to do a felch comic."

Crumb's contribution was a parody of an editorial cartoons featuring "John Q. Public" felching "Mother Nature/Lady Liberty" after she has had anal sex with a Pravda-style "rich man".[1] Williams produced a felching themed solo work in 1975 titled The Nectar of Satan.[2]

The term has appeared in several films, such as John Waters' movie A Dirty Shame, starring Tracey Ullman, Johnny Knoxville, Selma Blair, and Chris Isaak. Big Gay Al's pianist in the film South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut was playing an instrument made by Felcher & Sons. Captain Hero, from the cartoon show "Drawn Together," defeated a villain named the "Mad Felcher" in the episode "Ghostesses in the Slot Machine." The spoof Johnny English (2003) includes a minor character named Felch.

In the film Dumb & Dumber, Lloyd and Harry have an argument in a hot tub over a past love they shared named "Fraida Felcher."

In Chuck Palahniuk's novel Invisible Monsters, the main character explains the meaning of this word to her parents at Thanksgiving dinner.[3]

In the Australian sketch comedy show The Ronnie Johns Half Hour, the Nihilist character Sigmond usually holds a straw in his right hand. We are later told that this straw is for felching.


la diary du lammond (uncensoered edition) 1999


References

  1. ^ Robert Crumb: The Complete Crumb Comics, Volume 10. Fantagraphics Books, 1993. ISBN 1-56097137-1. Reproduction of cartoon from "Felch Cumix" 1975.
  2. ^ Robert Williams. "Robert Williams, 'Underground(s)'". ImageTexT: Interdisciplinary Comics Studies. Retrieved 2006-12-02. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  3. ^ Chuck Palahniuk: Invisible Monsters. W. W. Norton & Company, 1999. ISBN 978-0393319293.