The Online Community of Salt Lake City Weekly Newspaper–News, Restaurants, Dining, Music, Nightclubs, Arts, Events & Entertainment.
Article Archive
Sign up for City Weekly's...
Newsletter - Free Stuff - Dining Info - Music Info

Email:

Text CITYWEEKLY to 10958
to receive updates on Free Stuff & Events
A Bar Named Sue, Area 51, Auravis Systems, Bakers C&C, Beehive Bail Bonds, Bingham Cyclery, Caffe Molise, City Dogs, Couterpoint Studios, Cucina Deli, Datatix, Designer Glass Works, Diamond Parking, Discovery Gateway, Fanzz, Fat's Grill, First Tracks (Bella Fleck), Fortis College, Gallivan Center, Got Lashes, Gracie's, Gundmundson, India House, Italian Villiage, Last Samurai, Light Touch, MacDocs, Mi Ranchito Grill, Michael Starks, Epic, Mountain Med Vein, Mulligans Golf, Park City Film Series, PC Laptops, Piper's Quilts, Red Maple Chinese, Red Wing Shoe Store, Rice Fusion, Jackie Williams Skin Care, Ruth's Diner, Salt Lake Art Center, SL Pizza & Pasta, Sky Bar, SLC Golf, Snow College, Snowbird, Sound Warehouse, Studio Soiree, Taj of India, Taste of India, Tavernacle, The Vault, Trails, Triumph of SL, U of U Humanities, U of U Science, U of U Cont. Education, Urban Lounge, Utah Grizzlies Hockey, Utah Imports, Utah Trailways, Westminster College, Zucca Trattoria,

CITY WEEKLY FREE MOVIE NIGHT
City Weekly & Brewvies present: Drop Dead Fred @ Brewvies, 677 S. 200 West, Wednesday Nov. 25, 8 pm. Arrive early, limited seating (21+).
d_d_f.jpg


PROUDLY SUPPORTS
Buy Local FirstHumane SocietyPlanned Parenthood
SLC Arts CouncilDowntown Alliance

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
Home / Articles / Features / Deep End /  Teeming Testosterone
. . . . . . .
Wednesday, May 20,2009

Teeming Testosterone

What to do with Utah’s superfluous menfolk.

By D.P. Sorensen

The first signs that something was wrong in the state of Utah were scattered reports of males barging into female restrooms. Experts, asserting the right of hindsight, say there were earlier indications that men were availing themselves of the inviolable female bastion: toilet seats in the upright position, sticky stains on white porcelain, mysterious puddles on the tile floor.

What was going on? Was the phenomenon just another skirmish in the eternal battle of the sexes? Had there been an increase in dyslexia, always a predominantly male affliction, which resulted in the perceptual glitch of turning a W into an M?

Only last week did the answer come in on the subject of lavatory violations. It turns out that Utah has the fourth highest ratio of men to women in these United States, according to the Census Bureau: 50.5 percent men, 48 percent women, and 2.5 percent other. (A big surprise was that Beaver County had the fewest females.) Of course, men being the expendable sex, nature has been more prodigal in the production of males, their statistical advantage diminishing with age as men outdo women in the death department, succumbing as quickly as possible to hunting accidents, heart attacks and a variety of stupid accidents.

Governor Huntsman took time out from packing for China to appoint a task force on the situation. An unreliable source in the governor’s office has supplied the Deep End with a preliminary top-secret memo:

Memo: An Inquiry Into the Surplus Male Situation, or Utah Men No Longer the Jolliest That You Have Ever Seen.

Cause: Four possible causes have been suggested: increased motility of male homunculi, insufficient secretion of the gynodynamic hormone in the guadocanal, idiopathic segmentation of the Mason-Dixon gene, or numerationally challenged census takers.

Consequences: Consultations with the General Authorities of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints indicate ambivalence about the surplus male situation. Good news: gratifying increase in number of young Mormon males entering the mission field. Bad news: alarming numbers of horny returned missionaries roaming the campus of Brigham Young University.

Symptoms: For a long time, observers have witnessed an increase in crossdressing of Utah males, and not just on Halloween. Researchers speculate that the Maxwell-Fickinger Gender Equilibrium might be manifesting itself in the general population, as the two sexes seek to selforganize into equal numbers.

Exacerbations: The male surplus situation is made worse by the lesbian craze sweeping the nation. Once just a widely disputed hypothesis, the lesbian craze is now accepted as scientific fact, largely due to an Oprah show on the subject.

Benefits: An overwhelming number of women have expressed relief at no longer having to wait in interminable restroom lines at theater and sports events, except, of course, at those venues where prostate-impaired men crash the female facilities.

Solutions: Solutions to the surplus male situation fall into three broad categories: Social, surgical and marital. Social solutions involve some form of redistribution, such as exporting (or “donating,” which is the preferred expression) excess males to other states or countries.

Surgical solutions would take the form of gender reassignment to achieve equalization of the male-to-female ratio. Informal surveys of surplus males indicate a surprising willingness to undergo the surgical solution, and the willingness may indicate that the surgical solution might backfire, resulting not in an increased number of females available for matrimony, but fewer.

Said one potential transsexual, “Hey, if it meant I could take showers with females, I’d do it at the drop of a hat. But marry some guy? No way, Jose.”

Perhaps the best solution is the marital one. Utah already has a long tradition of plural marriage, and the only difference now would be a plurality of husbands instead of wives. This is known as polyandry. Random polling has indicated that many women would look at polyandry in a positive light. A typical response was, “I don’t care what Dr. Laura says, one husband is not enough. I’m just getting started when George peters out. I like the idea of a fresh player from the bench.”

The task force refused to consider gay marriage, on the grounds that it was totally against nature.

 

  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
 
 
Close
Close
Close