Square Roots and Massive Melons
Americans have the most peculiar obsessions, not least when it comes to
melons. And when the melons are cubical, well, their rigid little brains just
explode. Take the square watermelon, which, as of this writing,
went on sale last year in Japan.
Only 400 are grown each year. They cost 10,000 yen each (about $80-90). And
they’re only sold in specialty shops in Tokyo and Osaka. For good reason,
most Japanese people have never heard of them. And yet they pervade American
pseudo-literati culture; another symptom, I guess, of the shallow Japanese fetish which is
slowly infecting this country. The square watermelons even appeared in an episode of The
Simpsons where our favorite family
goes to Japan,
Thirty Minutes Over Tokyo.
As George Benard Shaw is often paraphrased, the only difference between
England and America is the language. So it goes without saying that
homeomorphisms of fruits and vegetables would appeal to them, too. And the
English being on the whole rather smarter than Americans, and yet not endowed
with a sunny southern clime, it’s inevitable that
they would invent spherical carrots.