As snarky writers go, I'm pretty good at admitting whenever one of my flippant comments goes awry — especially when it's one about a musician who's built an enduring four-decade career out of snark.
I couldn't help but slip in a little cynicism when, back in early December, the Minnesota State Fair announced that '80s pop-music satirist and onetime MTV star Weird Al Yankovic would be among its first two 2019 grandstand headliners. It didn't help that Hootie & the Blowfish was the other.
In 1985 I was the perfect age, 12, when Weird Al first hit it big with "Eat It," his gluttonous spoof of Michael Jackson's "Beat It." Even back then, though, I wondered how long the hits and the yuks could last.
Turns out there are plenty current and former 12-year-olds who are still very much into the accordion- and punchline-squeezing satirist. I heard blowback right away from many of them about his grandstand concert coming up Tuesday — part of the Strings Attached Tour with a full orchestra, a large production that underlines how serious things can get in Weird Al land.
"He seems to take his music and comedy very seriously," said Jon Copeland of Minneapolis, a regular at First Avenue and other underground shows, explaining why his teenage son and daughter are also now Yankovic fans.
"He writes clever, well-crafted parodies that are funny and silly but never seem mean-spirited. In fact, the bands and artists he parodies are often in on the joke and honored."
Andrew Bursaw, a longtime fan from St. Paul, put it this way: "He's a niche artist that has transcended time with parody songs that found a way to be catchy while poking fun at the songs' original counterpart."
Even some musicians and tastemakers in the cool Twin Cities scene came to Yankovic's defense.