In Tucson, Arizona, people-novice hunters mostly-kill wild, stinky, tusked pigs that roam the Sonoran Desert in small packs. The name for these beasts is "javelina" (pronounced have-uh-lee-nah), and it's my favorite example of a beautiful word for an ugly thing. A girlfriend of mine once told me that, were it not a violent hog, she'd consider naming a daughter Javelina, and I didn't disagree.
"Classy" is exactly the opposite. To summon forth "classy," one must first smash his tongue against his teeth while simultaneously coughing up a hard "c." Soon enough comes the "assy," which, if spoken without due diligence, can make anyone, regardless of origin, sound like a Fran Drescher caricature. File it between irregular verbs and Mandarin in the ever-growing case against the English language: while the name of some dusty, rotten pig trots softly through the lips, classy-more a sickening cluck than a word-is meant to connote elegance, fashion, dignity, goodness.
Perhaps, like the Black Eyed Peas, it wouldn't be so bad were it not so frequent. As of late, however, "classy" has become inescapable, an easy go-to for opinionated yet unimaginative people the world around. Conan O'Brien's exit from The Tonight Show was a major event for the Twitter crowd, many of whom heralded it with the hashtag "#classy." In fact, Twitterers find a great many things classy, including P. Diddy's son, Jay-Z's nightclub, the Duke men's basketball team, Barack and Michelle Obama, the Hope for Haiti telethon, Tom Hanks, red velvet cake and "older artist men who use the word darling."
Other Twitter users sarcastically deemed Fox News classy for its decision to not air the Haiti telethon. (These days, the sarcastic use of "classy"-meaning, "not at all classy"-threatens to eclipse the word's primary meaning.) Some more things that aren't classy are: The Onion, Megan Fox and some guy's girlfriend, who passed gas so loudly it rattled his bed. (He didn't comment on whether it's classy to Twitter your significant other's farts.) Katy Perry is both trashy and classy.
Twitter is neither the genesis nor main offender of the classy craze. Elsewhere, in a sports story from 1915 headlined "PRINCETON DOWNS GEORGETOWN, 13 TO 0; Fumbles Disastrous for Heavy Visiting Team; Tigers Win by Classy Playing," a New York Times reporter wrote that Princeton won because "they were better coached on the fundamentals, displayed more individual brilliance, and possessed a better kicker than the visitors." Nowadays, the Times regularly publishes a fashion reporter, Suzy Menkes, who could be more accurately described as a "classy correspondent." In four articles since mid-December, Menkes has found four separate things deserving of the adjective: Viktor & Rolf's autumn 2010 collection, Salvatore Ferragamo's autumn 2010 collection, Hermès' image and a smattering of Louis Vuitton backpacks. Backpacks: what class.
On Amazon, classy turns up Sassy, Classy, and Still Sparkling: Celebrating Life After 50, Sassy Southern-Classy Cajun and The Legends of Wrestling-"Classy" Freddie Blassie: Listen, You Pencil Neck Geeks. In other words, something that middle-aged women, Louisiana low-country people and professional wrestlers have in common is their refinement.
They're in great company. Because the world's biggest celebrities of the moment are classy too, and they-the crispy, gelled cast of Jersey Shore, of course-won't let you forget it. Short-lived Seaside Heights guidette Jolie knew she was classy the moment she was able to go two full days without humping one of her roommates. Sammi knew she was classy because she'd never wear thong underwear and a bra in a jacuzzi absolutely brimming with drunk jocks. And now, Snooki knows she's classy because she refused to associate with Jerry Springer at some crappy casino restaurant in Connecticut.
Much like centuries of horrific racism killed Martin Luther King Jr. just as much as a bullet, the Jersey Shore kids aren't solely responsible for the ultimate horrors of "classy"-but they're undoubtedly its James Earl Ray.
One of the worst kids in my middle school was named Josh Arvisu. He was a squat, broad-shouldered bully, and his facial hair grew as quickly as his anger. He would strut around campus, literally throwing his weight around. If you crossed him, he'd hit you (I once watched him beat a kid up for saying that Bone Thugs-n-Harmony sucked). I remember disliking Josh for a variety of reasons, but the biggest was that I couldn't comprehend where the hell he got off. How does a chubby kid with a mullet, a kid whose only contribution to the world was a barely there crustache, go around assessing what is and isn't cool? Shouldn't one have to be cool before one can tell everyone else what's cool? Maybe David Bowie could go around kicking people's asses for liking Bone Thugs-n-Harmony, but Josh Arvisu?
The point is that in order to have the right to use the word classy, you should first have to prove that you are, in fact, classy, which is problematic, because classy, like "sexy," is a title that's largely self-defined. This makes it even more silly and gross than it already is. To clarify: Obviously, classy is derived from "class," which is defined by the Merriam-Webster English Dictionary as "a group sharing the same economic or social status." In other words, by defining someone or something as classy, not only is a person saying, "There is a hierarchy in society that I like and in which I wholly believe," they're also saying that they belong to such a rarefied level of this social stratification that they get to pick and choose what is and isn't allowed into their golden fold. Isn't that silly and gross?
Worse still is that most all the people who regularly use the word classy-guidettes, Twitter folk, America's first legal gigolo-would be hastily dismissed as ruffian jokes by the kinds of blue-blooded, colonizing cake-eaters they're invoking every time they utter the term.
Conan O'Brien's final week wasn't classy; it was mostly dignified and occasionally temperamental. Jay-Z's nightclub isn't classy; it's dark and expensive. The Jersey Shore kids definitely aren't classy; they're TV stereotypes who charge money to stand around dance floors. And lest I begin to sound like what I've just decried, I should tell you that I'm not classy either; I'm a writer-editor who once ate half a P'Zone out of the garbage. I'd just like us all to agree that because everything's classy, nothing's classy. And it's about time we begin to describe the good things in our world with equally good words. Classy is lazy, inaccurate and tainted with idiotic bigotry.
You can keep calling all the bad stuff "fucking bullshit."
Cord Jefferson is a writer-editor living in Brooklyn. His work has appeared in National Geographic, GOOD, The Root and on MTV.

Javelina are some good eatin', especially BBQ'd.
Maybe it's because I've read too much Asterix, but even the mention of the words 'wild pig' gets my mouth watering
I can't wait till the next time Josh Arvisu Googles himself.
But it's actually a helpful little word. Whenever people use "classy" unironically, they are outed as those whose opinions are worthless.
So there's that.
I don't know about this article; it seems to me that being the CLASSY POLICE isn't the most awesome use of one's time either, as it implies you are some kind of cool cultural guardian. But cultural guardians are never particularly cool, as you so aptly proved with the anecdote regarding Josh Arvisu. Your Tilda Swintons and Marilynne Robinsons and Martha Stewarts don't run around yelling at people to "get their mitts off [their] cultcharul signifiers, see?" because they are too busy doing classy things, like cohabiting with centaurs and burnishing cypress REAL HARD. I'm also skeptical of this sentence: "In other words, something that middle-aged women, Louisiana low country people and professional wrestlers have in common is their refinement." It's funny, but the problem is that you failed to qualify the term "middle-aged women." Had you said "middle-aged women who deify sassiness" or "middle-aged women who aspire to become characters from third-rate plays," I could have begun the long journey towards agreeing with you. But all you said was "middle-aged women" which doesn't make sense because I'm pretty sure that middle-aged women are the main proponents of "classiness," refinement, et. al. Also, I don't know if I think it's classy when people disdain to use serial commas in essays. What are you, a farmhand?
There are some other issues, such as when your attempt to convince us of Josh Arvisu's evil centers around his [perceived] ugliness, as well as his hormonal precocity. Those lower classes, with their pronounced sexual characteristics! They're like animals! Also, your invocation of MLK was kind of inappropriate, given the latent racism and classism present in your critique of Klassiness Enthusiasts ("E'en the Users of Twitter Doth Countenance to Pretend to Classiness' Throne!!!!!") Not that Twitter is the tool of the proletariat, but I've noticed a lot of writers like to use it as shorthand for the unwashed masses.
Which comes to my main complaint regarding this article: your outrage seems to stem from the fact that these peasants Just Don't Know what classiness really means. You get closest to being blatant about this when you invoke the bluebloods who would be horrified by Snooki's presumptions. However, I submit that it is you who don't understand what classiness means. It's a term that was originally intended to connote that something or someone seemed to be of a high class or station in society. In other words, the concept of classiness is predicated upon the worst kind of elitism and imperialism. Terms such as "refined" and "sophisticated" don't carry this rhetorical baggage, and so are much better suited to describing things or people that are "classy." Meanwhile, if The People want to appropriate "classy" to mean "a person of good character" or "scrupulous" or "tacky" or whatever, it's a much better use for the term than if it still meant "high-toned." I no more regret the death of classiness than I regret the death of "mighty white of you."
It's still a funny essay, but I hope Josh Arvisu grew up to be hot.
What does Goons say? Marry me (in Connecticut)?
Hey there. Javelina is a Spanish word, not an English one. So, apples and oranges.
Sorry, bastardization of a Spanish word. My bad. Carry on...
First they came for Bone Thugs-n-Harmony, and I said nothing...
Only if there will be a chocolate fountain.
COMPLETE FAIL! No citation of Freddie Blassie, who signalled the crossover from non-ironic to completely ironic usage.
No wonder you are reduced to eating garbage!
Are you saying that Freddie Blassie is not classy, you pencil necked geek?! I outta punch you in the nose.
He is mentioned in the 6th paragraph.
Oh holy crap.
...okay, fair's fair. Will the dumpster behind Subway do?
Since when did the word "fail" become a noun? I find it even more irritating than "my bad" or "classy." Also, "class act" seems to be the most common usage, as if it were all simply theater, which...
But I fucking LOVE elipses.
All the world is a stage...
Who died and made you William Safire? Oh. Well, then, carry on.
Classy is ancient. Snooki and Twitter can't touch classy's legacy.