The Mail on Sunday

Whack a mole

Why everyone’s talking about...

- STEVE BENNETT

What’s whack-a-mole? Something like guacamole, the avocado dip?

Ha! It’s how Boris Johnson describes the Government’s new coronaviru­s policy: local lockdowns to bash down the infection rate where it flares up, such as in Leicester. The name comes from the arcade and fairground game in which moles continuous­ly pop out of holes in a machine at random, and players have to clobber them with a mallet to make them disappear.

Sounds like a case for the RSPCA?

Fake moles, obviously. Although activists from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals have complained that it promotes cruelty. Also, t here has been academic research into whether it desensitis­es players to violence. (Findings: probably not.) After the financial crisis, in 2009, a Whack-a-banker version was installed among the amusements on Southwold Pier in Suffolk. It encouraged players to inflict retributio­n on capitalist­s for causing the economic crash. But the mallet broke because players were too aggressive and it had to be replaced. ‘I knew people didn’t like bankers, but I had no idea they disliked them quite so much,’ said its designer, Tim Hunkin.

But who came up with the original?

Maybe i nspired by the tradit i onal Splat The Rat game popular at village fetes, where you have to hit a replica rat as it falls quickly down a drainpipe.

A version that originated in Japan in 1975 was spotted by two carnival operators in the US who saw its commercial potential. Both staked competing claims as to who successful­ly adapted it.

But Bob’s Space Racers has the rights to the game and sells a home edition, which it says is ‘whacking good fun’, from its base in Whac-A-Mole Way, Holly Hill, Florida. Most recently, the firm has ventured into selling hand-sanitiser machines.

So is whack-a-mole a good analogy for the Government’s Covid-19 policy?

Let’s hope not, since the phrase describes a repetitive and ultimately futile task of ‘whacking’ an adversary that, despite numerous attempts, keeps popping up somewhere else.

 ??  ?? HOLE LOT OF FUN: An arcade game ready to play
HOLE LOT OF FUN: An arcade game ready to play

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