This is one that has been festering for some time, so please forgive the Phrase Freak if he goes “off the Bale” a bit. Like many changes to the English language, the meaning of this word has become twisted. Once, it defined something that was done without a method or choice, something determined by chance.
It did not mean something unexpected, strange, improvised, capricious, absurd, and cheese-eating monkeys flying out of my butt. (See that last one was absurd, a non sequitur for sure, but it was not random, even if it might have seemed that way to you.)
Now the Great Beast (Facebook) has slouched its way into the Bethlehem of my daily routine with an epidemic of lists (which by their nature tend to be the opposite of random) giving me supposedly “random” facts about the people I love and admire. Many of these people are incredibly literate. Way smarter than me. Yet they have fallen under the sway of the googly-eyed siren that spawned the phrase, “that’s, like, so totally random.”
It is easy to mistake great complexity or subtlety for randomness. I’d be willing to bet that most of those lists are:
- carefully chosen
- written to achieve a specific effect
- tomato paste.
I’m afraid this usage gets eight gobsmacks out of ten. We’re on full alert now people!

Other freakish phrases:
Shovel Ready | specific timetable | full patch | IED | on the ground
You can check the definition of random yourself. Yardsitck! Alltop and humor-blogs.com lack of coherence should not be considered random either.














February 20, 2009
You may be right…
…but I bet that didn’t stop you from writing your own list
I fought against this list for weeks, but finally, I myself broke down. Man was it ever heard to think of 25 things.