• commentary
  • SUNDAY NOVEMBER 4 2007 12:00 PM

I Won't Say Va-Jay-Jay. You Can't Make Me.



I'm watching Oprah the other day and before you start yelling at me, hang on! I was not home twiddling my twat at 3 p.m. on a weekday. I'm a functioning member of society with many jobs. I was watching her show, on my time, on the DVR. Anyway, I recorded this episode because the topic of discussion was about intersex folks, or hermaphrodites if you want to be old school about it. There was a girl who was born as a woman with male hormones. She had breasts but not her period. She was born with testicles that were inside her body, lodged up near her bladder. Ouch.

Obviously the testicles were removed and she lives a normal life now. She's married to a man and has always identified herself as a straight woman. I found myself wondering, "Does she have a...?" Then Oprah broke the ice and said, "So, do you have a va-jay-jay?" The audience squealed with delight. Wheeee! Our sassy black friend said, "Va-jay-jay" and cocked her head! Tee-hee! We're all old enough that penises have entered our vaginas and babies have come out of our vaginas but we fully support the term va-jay-jay! Let's applaud!

I decided that I was being a snob. Who am I to judge Oprah's audience? I'm watching the show too, aren't I? If these ladies want to get loose and giggle at Oprah's slang, well then fine. Perhaps Oprah's producers don’t want moments to get too tender or technical. Perhaps Oprah is encouraged to say silly words that infantilize the way women talk about their bodies to lighten the mood and ease into commercial.

And then I stumbled across an article in the New York Timescalled, "What Did You Call It?" Oprah's va-jay-jay moment was not just some weird one-off thing that I happened to see. Apparently, this is like a huge thing. Oprah says "va-jay-jay" every chance she gets.



Just in case that clip was unclear, Oprah said, "My va-jay-jay is paining me."

I don’t really have a huge problem with that particular clip. Oprah is doing some stunt and trying to be funny. I'm not the comedy police. My issue has nothing to do with whether or not this clip is funny. (For the record, it is not funny.)

The problem I have is that Oprah uses the word "va-jay-jay" when she's not joking. She looked in the face of a transgendered person, who has had enough shit to deal with regarding her sex organs, and referred to this woman's hard-earned vagina as a va-jay-jay. What is wrong with the word vagina? Is it too clinical sounding? They were just discussing penises and testicles in that intersex segment. Why does the word vagina need to be cutesified?

"It began on Feb. 12, 2006, when viewers of the ABC series, "Grey's Anatomy" heard the character Miranda Bailey, a pregnant doctor who had gone into labor, admonish a male intern, "Stop looking at my vajayjay." The line sprang from an executive producer's need to mollify standards and practices executives who wanted the script to include fewer mentions of the word vagina. The show's most noted fan, Oprah Winfrey began using it on her show, effectively legitimizing it for some 46 million viewers each week."


My beef is not with "Grey's Anatomy." I've never seen the show. It's absurd that adults can't say vagina twenty-thousand times an hour if we want to but whatever. Oprah has done countless shows with Dr. Oz about men's health where the word penis is said over and over. She's done shows where she had someone describe to her what "tossed salad" means. You know there are no censors telling Oprah what she can and can't say.

In fact, I remember back when Howard Stern was fighting the FCC he often brought up that Oprah was allowed to talk about certain body parts without getting fined and he wasn’t. Stern couldn’t say "anal sex" but Oprah could because her show is considered educational. Why this refusal to say vagina? Oprah was sexually violated as a kid. She fought the odds and grew up to be a billionaire, trend-setting philanthropist and this is what she wants to do with her power? She wants to build schools for girls in Africa and say va-jay-jay?

Gloria Steinem weighed in on this issue:

"I'm hoping that the use of this new word is part of the objection to only saying vagina since it doesn’t include all of the women's genitalia, for instance the clitoris, in the way that the vulva does."


Oh Gloria, you optimistic, slightly out-of-touch first wave feminist. Of fucking course that is not the reason Oprah and her audience object to saying vagina. Oprah and her drones think that they are the epitome of irreverent and adorable with their slang. Maybe it's stupid of me to be up in arms over a word. But not saying the word is a subtle implication that there is something wrong with discussing your body and something inherently wrong with your body, especially when there really isn’t a male equivalent to va-jay-jay. I suppose there is pee-pee, but who says that after age eight? In my opinion, embracing the term "va-jay-jay" as an acceptable way to refer to the vagina in an otherwise serious conversation is the equivalent of arguing that taking your shirts off for Joe Francis is a form of feminism. We can do what we want with our bodies! We can talk about our body parts like we're little kids! Now, if you'll all excuse me, I have to go tinkle out of my front bum.

 

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Comments
TheWriter

TheWriter

Fort Worth, TX
June 2006

NOV 05, 2007 11:37 AM

I prefer to say vagina in all cases.

But who cares what I think? I'm just a vagina-less manchild who has no stake in such things...

And as for Oprah, she's got enough money that I don't think it would matter if she called it a pink-mouthed snack-snarl on national television. She can afford to be eccentric like that.

MistressMissy

mistressmissy

Grand Rapids, MI
March 2003

NOV 05, 2007 11:47 AM

You know I find it ironic that it started because producers thought vagina was a termed used to often in Grey's Anatomy.
They had a whole episode about penis fish for cripes sake!

blazenlow1313

blazenlow1313

Pottsville, PA
August 2004

NOV 05, 2007 11:59 AM

i much prefer the term cooch or vadge or even pussy to va-jay-jay. im not a big fan of the word vagina though.

Katalya

Katalya

Albuquerque, NM
October 2007

NOV 05, 2007 12:06 PM

so what did the woman answer when oprah asked if she had a vajayjay? thats what i want to know! shocked

Jaded_Dreams

Jaded_Dreams

Christiansburg, VA
May 2007

NOV 05, 2007 12:38 PM

I have friends who use the word Va-jay-jay.

I hate it. And refuse to say it.

Cigarette

Cigarette

Cleveland, OH
April 2004

NOV 05, 2007 12:59 PM

I first heard the word used by MC Paul Barman, on the song "MTV Get off the Air, Part 2" off of It's Very Stimulating which came out in 2000. And I started using it when in a more joking context.

So apparently a Jewish rapper out of Brown University is setting the curve on slang.

halfjack

halfjack

Allston, MA
June 2005

NOV 05, 2007 02:32 PM

my older sister used to call it a va-jay-jay when we were little. i think that says enough

lavenir

lavenir

Turlock, CA
June 2007

NOV 05, 2007 02:44 PM

Wait...Oprah deals with an issue as delicate as intersex, and your main concern is the use of a slang term that she'll likely abandon in the next 12 months?

Horrorflick

Horrorflick

Detroit, MI
February 2003

NOV 05, 2007 03:42 PM

I'm still a big fan of "pussy" myself, but that's just me I guess...

Scapino

Scapino

Greensboro, NC
September 2007

NOV 05, 2007 08:16 PM

I agree with the people who are saying that "Vagina" sounds too clinical. I think it sounds like a disease: "I'm very sorry Mr. Smith, but you have a terminal case of vagina!"

However, I also think that asking a trans-gendered person whether or not they have a "va-jay-jay" is symptomatic of how limited the discourse on sex in this country is. People need to get a grip and talk about sex like it actually exists as a serious part of ourselves, and not via some cute aphorism. I'm not saying that genitalia can't have cute names, but I would posit that those people weren't giggling because sex is fun or funny, but because they are afraid of getting too close to actually talking about the real thing. That's a big problem in a country that has really shitty sexual education for teens (especially down here in the South), and an even bigger problem for the poor trans-gendered person Oprah was patronizing and othering on her show.

I guess the question is, how can we have any kind of real discussion about sex or gender when an entire sector of this country have popular role models who can't refer to their own genitals as what they are?

Anyway, as a male I don't really know what to refer to the vagina as anymore. There are so many titles for it that have negative connotations, and I like to think of myself as being sensitive to that kind of thing. I think the semantics do matter, and should matter.

seraphicchaos

seraphicchaos

Lewistown, PA
January 2007

NOV 05, 2007 08:51 PM

the book the vagina monologues had a whole chapter on nicknames for vagina. the whole point of the chapter was to embrace the various names people use for vagina, and in a way, to take back vagina as a whole and tell people it's okay to use the word vagina but it's not a bad thing to use whatever word you want...more of a celebration of vagina, i guess i'm trying to say.

having said that, why would anyone say penis and testicles and then use the word vajayjay in a serious conversation? heh.

Emi

Emi

SUICIDEGIRL

USA

NOV 05, 2007 10:06 PM

it would have been funny if borat had asked that question.

GonzoChaote

GonzoChaote

Vancouver, BC
March 2007

NOV 06, 2007 12:29 AM

Volpone said:
I agree with the people who are saying that "Vagina" sounds too clinical. I think it sounds like a disease: "I'm very sorry Mr. Smith, but you have a terminal case of vagina!"

However, I also think that asking a trans-gendered person whether or not they have a "va-jay-jay" is symptomatic of how limited the discourse on sex in this country is. People need to get a grip and talk about sex like it actually exists as a serious part of ourselves, and not via some cute aphorism. I'm not saying that genitalia can't have cute names, but I would posit that those people weren't giggling because sex is fun or funny, but because they are afraid of getting too close to actually talking about the real thing. That's a big problem in a country that has really shitty sexual education for teens (especially down here in the South), and an even bigger problem for the poor trans-gendered person Oprah was patronizing and othering on her show.

I guess the question is, how can we have any kind of real discussion about sex or gender when an entire sector of this country have popular role models who can't refer to their own genitals as what they are?

Anyway, as a male I don't really know what to refer to the vagina as anymore. There are so many titles for it that have negative connotations, and I like to think of myself as being sensitive to that kind of thing. I think the semantics do matter, and should matter.



Motherfucking +1

GonzoChaote

GonzoChaote

Vancouver, BC
March 2007

NOV 06, 2007 12:35 AM

Clidna said:

GonzoChaote said:
It seems trivial at first blush, but considering the way that language has been molded to either consciously or unconsciously undermine women with slang terms for the vagina (see "cunt") over the years, I'd say there's something to it.


The same thing goes for guys (see prick, dick, etc)... they just don't complain about it.



Well because we've got the power in society and can't be undermined by references to what's ultimately the symbol of our power. That's the magic of patriarchy.

Moribund

Moribund

Atlanta, GA
April 2005

NOV 06, 2007 06:22 AM

The use of the word "va-jay-jay" confuses the already unclear question. Depending on the specific type of androgen insensitivity the interviewee had she might have actually had a true vagina or perhaps a blind vaginal pouch. The inferred question was probably more properly "Do you have a vulva?"

Let's be specific with our terminology shall we?

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