Tag: Satire

Hang On To Your Chairs Ass Bomb poem by Bill Campana AZpoetry.com

Hang On To Your Chairs (Ass Bomb) by Bill Campana

“Hang On To Your Chairs (Ass Bomb)” by Bill Campana

Hang on to your chairs, I’m going back to school.

I’m getting my degree, a doctorate in science.
I’m going to MIT to study mathematics, quantum mechanics, nuclear physics
and whatever else it takes to get me to achieve my goal.

Because I am going to invent a bomb
a bomb that will shame all other bombs
I’m going to invent a bomb that will kill no one,
but will wipe everybody on their ass
right off your feet
flat on your ass
and then I am going to fire up another one
just in case I might have missed some people
who were sitting at the time
and then had gotten up just to investigate the commotion.

All over the world, on the appointed day
phones will ring.
The people calling will say,
“I fell on my ass at 10 o’clock this morning.”
and the people they are speaking with will reply,
“That’s funny… so did I…”

Newspapers will print enormous headlines:

AND THEN WE ALL FALL DOWN

DEATH TOLL ZERO AS WORLD FALLS ON ITS’ ASS

BILL UNLEASHES WEAPON OF ASS DESTRUCTION

I will show you,
that you can have a sense of humor,
that mass destruction just ain’t where it’s at.

Not terrorism, but performance terrorism.

So like that bomb the Soviet Union
dropped on us in the mid-sixties,
that bomb that made everybody want to say
the word “fuck”
freely
in public
forever.

Man, that was fucked up.

But when I walk down the street
with my silver squared
and my beard held high
people will say, “there goes Bill.
He invented the Ass Bomb.
He’s really not such a bad guy.”

I can see it now.
I will become Time Magazine’s “Ass of the Year”.
I will win the Nobel Prize for Ass
and with my winnings,
support an network of underground ass-droppers.
Getting through airport security
will be as easy as dropping trow.

And you will thank me.
Someday, you will ALL thank me,
from the bottom of your bottoms,
for being making global terrorism silly
and ground zero cleanup
nothing more than dusting off your pants.

So, hang on to your chairs.

I don’t know how I’m going to do this.
But, I’ll never find out
until I get up off my ass
and try.

Transcribed from “Hang On To Your Chairs (Ass Bomb) from The Hit List 2 by Bill Campana.

Listen to the poem “Hang On To Your Chairs (Ass Bomb)” from the spoken word album The Hit List 2 by Bill Campana.

About the poet Bill Campana

Summary and Analysis of “Hang On To Your Chairs (Ass Bomb)” by Bill Campana

Bill Campana’s poem “Hang On To Your Chairs (Ass Bomb)” is a wild, irreverent ride through performance poetry and political satire, packed with wit, absurdity, and a surprising undercurrent of hope. With his trademark humor and grounded delivery, Campana envisions a world-changing invention—not a bomb of destruction, but one of disruption. This imagined “Ass Bomb” doesn’t kill or harm. Instead, it knocks everyone flat on their backsides—an act that, in the poet’s vision, serves to unite, disarm, and humble humanity in one shared, absurd experience.


Summary

In this hilarious and sharply satirical piece, the speaker declares his intention to go back to school and study complex sciences—quantum mechanics, nuclear physics, and mathematics—not to build a weapon of mass destruction, but a weapon of “ass destruction.” This bomb won’t maim or kill; it will simply knock everyone off their feet. Whether standing, sitting, walking, or talking on the phone, people around the world will fall to the ground in synchronized, undignified unison.

The poet imagines global headlines reacting to this act of performance terrorism:

“AND THEN WE ALL FALL DOWN”
“DEATH TOLL ZERO AS WORLD FALLS ON ITS’ ASS”
“BILL UNLEASHES WEAPON OF ASS DESTRUCTION”

The piece swerves between the ridiculous and the reflective, revealing the poet’s wish for a gentler, funnier kind of revolution—one that uses laughter instead of violence. He points to a cultural shift in the 1960s where, in his words, “that bomb that made everybody want to say the word ‘fuck’ freely in public forever” broke down barriers of censorship. Now, his own imagined bomb would break down political and ideological barriers with comedy, reminding people that “mass destruction just ain’t where it’s at.”

By the end, the poem circles back to a personal call to action. The speaker doesn’t yet know how he’ll accomplish this dream, but one thing is certain: he has to get up off his ass and try.


Analysis

Campana masterfully uses humor to critique our obsession with violence, weaponry, and the spectacle of destruction. By flipping the traditional function of a bomb—from devastation to harmless absurdity—he challenges societal norms around power and conflict resolution. His “Ass Bomb” becomes a metaphor for a unifying jolt, an equalizer that reminds everyone—world leaders, ordinary citizens, and even the poet himself—that we all fall down sometimes.

This poem is classic Bill Campana: irreverent, self-aware, deeply human, and delivered with a wink and a truth bomb. The poem functions not just as a performance piece, but also as a vision for an alternative kind of power—one that doesn’t rely on fear but on humility, connection, and shared laughter.

It’s also a subtle commentary on agency and action. As the poem ends with,

“I don’t know how I’m going to do this. / But I’ll never find out / until I get up off my ass / and try.”

Campana speaks not just of his fictitious invention, but of the creative act itself—the need to rise and create, even if you don’t have the blueprint yet.


➡️ Ready to experience more of Bill Campana’s bold, boundary-pushing poetry?
Visit his poet bio page on AZPoetry.com and discover why he’s considered one of the most iconic voices in Arizona’s spoken word scene.

Satellite TV Sports poem by Nick Fox blog artwork | AZpoetry.com

Satellite TV Sports by Nick Fox

“Satellite TV Sports” by Nick Fox

you’re listening to the voice of Nick
Fox the Total Sports poet in five four
three fabulous new diet I lost 500 lb
act now and you can for the one on the
Green Bay too and this is what I’m
talking about put that salad down you do
not need protein shakes or tofu diets we
have pork rinds and onion dip to take
care of your nutritional needs so just
rear back in that Parco lounger feed off
the sonic waves beaming back from your
jumbotron home theaters personal satellite
in orbit 50 miles above the Earth and give
your thumb a workout because it’s Fourth
and one on the green
May 2 down by 5 and
3 seconds on the clock
all right boys I want classic
sweep around the outside
the pulling guard slamming the linebacker
like 300 lb of Frozen processed beef as
the tail back steps over the line for
six and The Crowd Goes

Wild

and now a word from our sponsor
drink this beer and beautiful women will
have sex with you


okay we’re back just
in time for full court match and a no look
dish to a man for unconscious threes I
want somebody in the zone high up the
fray before changing the chain net with a
backward crunching Jam his blue penny
hardaways all over the defender eyepiece
before dropping back to Earth and
shouting back that on you sun

a chill 66


it’s the greatest show on frozen water
roaring across thin ice on hot blades
give me a 90 mph Slap Shot Rapier glove
save and now a word from our sponsors

if you subscribe to Sports Illustrated
today we will send you this free
football phone wow is that a phone
really that looks just like a football
is that really
Hey, Scooter get load of this deal!

okay we’re back just a time
for football the old-fashioned way with
Henderson bicycle kicks and no hands
allow give me the neverending roar of a
singing Brazilian crowd
chanting Ole Ole Ole Ole
not make the blazing feet for a

GOAL!!!

Oh that’s got to hurt, Bob

I’m the greatest of all

to they’re up in ring of
the fifth race Island Park out the box
is old sport in the lead Follow by
Taylor man DP catcher with Baltimore Joe
bringing out the rear and here they come
in the first turn

CH 57 it’s the
American Passtime on a perfect summer’s
day and a farm boy fresher the miners
strides to the plate it’s a 3-2 count in
a one-run game in the bottom of the 9th
and the base is Juiced and the whole
crowd is chanting say it with me
now

CHARGE!

and now a word from our sponsor

these Nike shoes proudly endorsed by
Michael Jordan Andre Agassi and Tiger
Woods are specially engineered by
starving overworked underpaid third world
children to make you into your walking
billboard for a multinational corporation

okay we’re back he swings on single and
drives to the Gap whole stadium raises to
its feet the C man fry the whole stadium
screaming slide Willy slide up settle in
our home plate under a column
safe
safe
and that is when you realize that this
is the American Dream in action my
friends it is 550 channels of ass
kicking fan rooting six shooting fun
this is the American Dream in action
even if the world outside can’t see but
who the hell needs a life when you got
satellite TV

Watch “Satellite TV Sports” by Nick Fox on YouTube

About the poet Nick Fox

In Satellite TV Sports, Nick Fox delivers a satirical, rapid-fire commentary on the overwhelming spectacle of televised sports and the relentless consumer culture that fuels it. Nick Fox was the founder of the Flagstaff Poetry Slam. The poem mimics the high-energy voice of a sports announcer, bombarding the reader with play-by-play action from various sports—football, basketball, hockey, soccer, horse racing, and baseball—all interwoven with exaggerated commercial breaks that promise instant gratification through consumption.

Fox’s use of repetitive advertising language and hyperbolic imagery mocks the way sports broadcasting transforms athleticism into a commercialized, almost religious experience. The poem critiques corporate influence, as seen in the cynical nod to Nike shoes being produced by underpaid laborers, and the hollow promises of beer commercials that link consumption to sexual success. Beneath the humor of this poem originally written in 2003, the poem asks a deeper question: Has the American Dream become nothing more than an endless loop of entertainment, advertising, and passive consumption?

The final lines drive the point home: “Who the hell needs a life when you got satellite TV?”—a sharp indictment of a society that prioritizes escapism over reality. The poem doesn’t just describe the sports experience; it exposes the machinery behind it, revealing how entertainment and advertising have merged into an unstoppable force that dictates culture and identity.

Fox’s signature style blends sharp wit, social commentary, and an uncanny ability to capture the absurdity of modern life. To read more about Nick Fox’s poetic career and unique voice, click here to visit his bio page.

Stand Your Concession Poem by Shawnte Orion | AZpoetry.com

‘Stand Your Concession’ by Shawnte Orion

Stand Your Concession

Please remember to switch
all handguns to silent

before shooting
impolite moviegoers

for texting
during the film

About the poet Shawnte Orion

Shawnte Orion’s poem offers a sharp, satirical glimpse into modern social irritations with his signature wit and dark humor. Known for blending pop culture and personal observations, Orion’s poetry often takes unexpected turns that leave readers both laughing and reflecting.

To learn more about Shawnte Orion’s unique style and his contributions to Arizona’s literary scene, visit his bio page on AZpoetry.com.

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