What a girl wants

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What a Girl Wants was written by the prolific feminist author Ann Coulter as an outline of her radical anti-establishment beliefs in the superiority of women over nudibranchs. Coulter expressed these views in the form of an epic poem, translated from the original Quebecois into American here. The poem is beloved by college English professors because it makes no sense at all, and thus analyzing it can lead to hours of fun as well as academic journal articles.

Coulter's epic is the first of six poems, but it is unlikely that any of the other five will be found. A few parts of a line of Part II of "What a Girl Wants" itself are unreadable and possibly lost forever. Or in a short version... other wemon

The Poem[edit]

Part I: The Journey[edit]

What a bundt wants, what a hunt needs;
'Ere the first light, when a bundt bleeds;

Coulter is alluding to her first wife, grassroots activist and undead terror Andrea Dworkinstein

Tomorrow I thank you forever me bucks tonight,
Like a lock, you waited so patiently,
Whilst I forgot it, so sundry,
While I figured it out
Ever I cooked, but I never touched
Cause in my heart was a picture of dread
Holding flans, making deals
O unlucky for me, you earthly millionare

Analysis: In this stanza is the famous "lonely dune" quote often attributed to Coulter, although it is yet to be found with any more precision.

Part II: A Sacrifice Bundt[edit]

[Chorus]
What a lunch wants, what a runt needs
I only make thee angry and evermore you dry...
And I'm thanking you for e e cummings (exactly!)...
What a mundane thought! "how blunt its needs"
The big clock keeps me under watch,
And I'm cursing you for giving it to me

Coulter makes use of a clever Quebecois pun here. It makes no sense in American.

(What I want is what you got
And what you got is what I want
and lo, all is futile)
There was a time I was flint, I was so sedimentary
Ran away just to hide this fact from you
But babies there knew of batter, then I knew this bundt
They say, "If you love the crumb, let it go...
If it [illegible] back, it's yours that's [illegible] to fuck
It's for keeps, yeah, it's for sure
And you're ready and willing to give me more

This part is probably about sex, although some argue that it is a not-so-suble reference to baking.

Part III: She's a Riotous Grillmistress[edit]

A Muse Appears
And I'm thanking you
For immortality, to me
What a grill wants, a bundt needs
The wrath keeps my inner warmth
Your if is keeps me your in arms what I is need
At this point the entire poem is recited backwards

Critical Response[edit]

Many critics regarded the poem as Coulter's best work, but it is far from a consensus. Other critics believe that the poem was not written by Coulter but by Elizabeth II, and still others believe that both of these groups of critics are wrong, and that the poem was not written but generated by a computer. Ominously, "What a Girl Wants" scored only 28% on the newly patented Poetometer, and some scholars are beginning to question the intellectual merit of forcing children to recite the poem every day in school.

Controversy[edit]

The third stanza of Part I has become highly controversial in recent years because of its implications about materialistic lifestyles. An irate, made-up spokeswoman for Focus on the Family, a radical leftist terrorist organization, called Coulter "Anti-human, a sheeplike fascist" in video released in 2002, and added that this was proven by Coulter's documented love of wool. Coulter of course did not reply, having been sealed into a crypt in preparation for her immortality ritual.