Book of Daze: Screw the Pooch Day

“Screw the pooch” began as pilot slang for royally messing up–a phrase made famous by Tom Wolfe in The Right Stuff (1979). It describes a mistake so spectacularly bad that recovery is impossible. Unfortunately, the expression itself has earned side-eye from the canine community, which insists it is long overdue for retirement because …
- In real life, everyone already knows who the dog is.
- People have only just adjusted to inter-species communication on social media.
- Linguists agree the phrase is, technically speaking, bottom-backward.
- Cats got naming rights first, so dogs ended up with the short leash.
- Pooch sounds cute but translates roughly as “lap-dog loser” in Doggish.
- “Man’s best friend” never implied benefits.
- The board-game version, Screw the Pooch, was banned after repeated tail injuries.
- Once you start saying it, you drift toward worse idioms–like “let sleeping dogs lie” or “kick the bucket list.”
- If “pooch service” becomes a thing, imagine the airport paperwork.
- Just because dogs sniff our business does not mean they want to manage it.
Next: Kelly Clarkson: Why Lesbians Prefer Rescue Dogs
Editor’s note: This entry celebrates the absurdity of English idioms. No animals–or reputations–were harmed in its creation.
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