Anal probing

Anal probing is the insertion of an instrument into the anal cavity of a human or animal to assess the condition of the lower bowel. Instruments used include pliers, tongs, fiber-optic cables, syringes, eye droppers, thermometers, and specialized balloons. Anal probing is most often used to identify digestion problems; however, it can also be used to identify parasites, organ damage, anal flooding, anal bruising, and foreign objects in the rectal cavity.

In popular culture

Anal probing by aliens is a common theme in popular culture that originates with the book Communion: A True Story (1987) by Whitley Strieber:

There were clothes strewn apart, and two of the stocky ones drew my legs apart. The next thing I knew I was being shown an enormous and extremely ugly object, grey and scaly, with a sort of network of wires on the end. It was at least a foot long, narrow, and triangular in structure. They inserted the thing into my rectum. It seemed to swarm into me as if it had a life of its own. Apparently, its purpose was to take samples, possibly of fecal matter, but at the same time I had the impression I was being raped and for the first time I felt anger.[1]

In 1989, this book was made into a movie starring Christopher Walken. Alien anal probing has been a comedy staple since 1995, when Saturday Night Live did a segment about it.[2] It is also referenced in the following examples:

References

  1. ^ Strieber, Whitley, Communion: A True Story (1987), pp. 20-21.
  2. ^ New York Magazine - Vol. 28, No. 11. "Saturday Night Live at twenty"

See also