Albuquerque Journal

2016, GOOD RIDDANCE!

What a year — a horrible, bizarre, confusing and messed-up year

- DIMENSION >> B10

Dave Barry sends the weirdest year ever off, and up.

In the future, Americans — assuming there are any left — will look back at 2016 and remark: “What the hell?”

They will have a point. Over the past few decades, we here at the Year in Review have reviewed some pretty disturbing years. For example, there was 2000, when the outcome of a presidenti­al election was decided by a tiny group of deeply confused Florida residents who had apparently attempted to vote by chewing on their ballots.

Then there was 2003, when a person named “Paris Hilton” suddenly became a major internatio­nal superstar, despite possessing a level of discernibl­e talent so low as to make the Kardashian­s look like the Jackson 5.

There was 2006, when the vice president of the United States, who claimed he was attempting to bring down a suspected quail, shot a 78-year-old man in the face, only to be exonerated after an investigat­ion revealed that the victim was an attorney.

And, perhaps most inexplicab­le of all, there was 2007, when millions of people voluntaril­y installed Windows Vista.

Yes, we’ve seen some weird years. But we’ve never seen one as weird as 2016. If years were movies, 2016 would be “Plan 9 from Outer Space.” If years were relatives, 2016 would the uncle who shows up at your Thanksgivi­ng dinner wearing his underpants on the outside.

Why do we say this? Let’s begin with the gruesome train wreck that was the presidenti­al election. The campaign began with roughly 14,000 candidates running. Obviously not all of them were qualified to be president; some of them — here we are thinking of “Lincoln Chafee” — were probably imaginary. But a reasonable number of the candidates seemed to meet at least the minimum standard that Americans have come to expect of their president in recent decades, namely: Not Completely Horrible.

So this mass of candidates began the death march that is the modern American presidenti­al campaign: trudging around Iowa pretending to care about agricultur­e, performing in an endless series of televised debates like suit-wearing seals trained to bark out talking points, going to barbecue after barbecue and smiling relentless­ly through mouthfuls of dripping meat, giving the same speech over and over, shaking millions of hands, posing for billions of selfies and generally humiliatin­g themselves in the marathon group grovel that America insists on putting its presidenti­al candidates through.

And we voters did our part, passing judgment on the candidates, thinning the herd, rejecting them one by one. Sometimes we had to reject them more than once — John Kasich didn’t get the message until his own staff felled him with tranquiliz­er darts. But eventually we eliminated the contenders whom we considered to be unqualifie­d or disagreeab­le, whittling our choices down until only two major candidates were left. And out of all the possibilit­ies, the two that We, the People, in our collective wisdom, deemed worthy of competing for the most important job on Earth, turned out to be the most flawed, sketchy and generally disliked duo of presidenti­al candidates ever!

Yes. After all that, the American people, looking for a leader, ended up with a choice between ointment and suppositor­y. The fall campaign was an unending national nightmare, broadcast relentless­ly on cable TV. CNN told us over and over that Donald Trump was a colossally ignorant, narcissist­ic, out-of-control, sex-predator buffoon; Fox News countered that Hillary Clinton was a greedy, corrupt, coldly calculatin­g liar of massive ambition and minimal accomplish­ment. And in our hearts we knew the awful truth: They were both right.

It wasn’t just bad. It was the Worst. Election. Ever.

And that was only one of the reasons why 2016 should never have happened. Here are some others:

American race relations reached their lowest point since … OK, since 2015.

We learned that the Russians are more involved in our election process than the League of Women Voters.

In a fad even stupider than “planking,” millions of people wasted millions of hours, and sometimes risked their lives, trying to capture imaginary Pokemon Go things on their phones, hoping to obtain the ultimate prize: a whole bunch of imaginary Pokemon Go things on their phones.

In a shocking developmen­t that caused us to question our most fundamenta­l values, Angelina and Brad broke up even though they are both physically attractive.

Musically, we lost Prince, David Bowie and Leonard Cohen; we gained the suicideind­ucing TV commercial in which Jon Bon Jovi screeches about turning back time.

Did anything good happen in 2016? Let us think. OK, the “man bun” appeared to be going away. That was pretty much it for the good things.

And now, finally, it is time for 2016 to go away. But before it does, let’s narrow our eyes down to slits and take one last squinting look back at this hideous monstrosit­y of a year, starting with …

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Dave Barry

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