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Yoko Ono Did Not Eat Corgi: Lawyers

Yoko Ono

According to Yoko Ono's small army of lawyers, she emphatically did not eat corgi meatballs with the performance artist Mark McGowan, as reported here and across the web last month. McGowan engaged in the PETA-approved stunt to protest the Royal family's alleged cruelty to animals. Corgis are the Queen's favourite breed of dog.

I must admit that I am disappointed that Yoko didn't partake in the political stunt. To make matters worse, according to her lawyers the allegation that she was involved was "highly defamatory", "offensive" and "extremely distressing to her". When I heard the news that Yoko had participated in McGowan's latest political intervention, her credibility as an agent of social change shot way as far as I was concerned. Now that I know this is not the case, she is once again irrelevant in my eyes, or, in her own words, little more than "the wife of an ex-Beatle."

So if Yoko isn't eating Corgis what is she actually up to? A brief news search will find that she has recently broken the silence over John Lennon's last words before his murder. (Yoko: "Shall we go and have dinner before we go home?" John: "No, let’s go home because I want to see Sean before he goes to sleep.") She also admitted in the same interview that she almost aborted their son Sean, but was convinced otherwise by John.

Posted by Rob Maguire on June 26, 2007 in

McGowan and Yoko Ono Eat Corgi in Royal Protest


A tuxedo clad Mark McGowan ate a corgi yesterday in protest of the British Royal Family's treatment of animals. The controversial performance artist and vegetarian ingested meatballs made from a corgi—the Queen's favourite breed of dog—live on the radio, sharing his meal with Yoko Ono.

This latest stunt by McGowan was meant to draw attention to Prince Philip, who the artist slammed for "shooting a fox earlier this year, letting it struggle for life for five minutes and then beating it to death with a stick."

The corgi from which McGowan's meatballs originated died on a corgi breeding farm. Perhaps McGowan should have enlisted the Prince's hunting skills, as the meat looked like it could have used a bit of tenderizing.


Previously on Art Threat: McGowan invites you to kick Geoge Bush's ass.



Posted by Rob Maguire on May 30, 2007 in

Guerrilla Gardener Hits London, Current TV

Current TV—a global television network broadcasting user made content—currently features this short documentary that follows a guerrilla gardener as he seeks to make one London neighbourhood a greener place.

Posted by Rob Maguire on April 17, 2007 in

















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