by James C. Sherlock
The story behind the jokes is true, well-documented, and strange. From X:
Comedy is funniest when it is based on an underlying truth. Freitas offersย a hilarious satire.ย
Attorney General Jay Jones is lit up by Mr. Freitas for actual typos. Virginia (Virgnia) and Senator (Sentator) were misspelled in a court filing seeking a delay in the certification of the Virginia Supreme Court’s decision finding the recent redistricting process illegal under the Virginia Constitution. He also lampoons Jones for the misspelling of Attorney (Attoney) on his official website and Lucas for misspelling Senator (again, unaccountably, Sentator) in her press release about her recent arrest.
The satire is funny because it is so well done and true. A fascination for the audience that makes it funnier is that the errors are so inexplicable in the modern era. This author has been forced to override his spell checker to let him even quote each of the misspellings.
What is not funny is Jay Jones’ ongoing struggles. Before his election, he made a terrible error in an infamous early morning text that revealed extremely dark thoughts – he expressed a wish for the death of a political opponentโs children.
Now this. Were the embarrassing errors that were the subject of the Freitas lampoon committed again in the early morning?
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