At the risk of starting another extended discussion on the (lack of) merits of PULP FICTION, the following just recently occured to me: when Christopher Walken visits young Butch, the boy is watching CLUTCH CARGO on tv. Clutch, for those who don't know, was a sort of experimental show that featured "animation" so minimal it hardly deserves the name. The moving lips of actors were superimposed on figures that were mainly otherwise static, as a sort of reductio ad absurdum of the Hanna-Barbera school of Less is More (money) cartoon-making. At any rate, the inclusion of this in PULP FICTION was nudging me until I remembered (from my misbegotten childhood) the particular episode that Butch is watching. It features Clutch and his youthful sidekick and loyal dog in an adventure with an Eskimo. That episode was no less racist than most of Clutch's adventures (and so melds into the whole Tarantino/race discussion that's been going on), but I remember a tagline from the show. The Eskimo keeps saying something like "Ooggle-oogle!" at various times, and at the end of that particular story arc, Clutch's young pal decides that the word means "whatever you want it to mean." I suspect this may have some bearing on the discussions about the "meaning" of the briefcase, the use of "nigger," and the film as a whole! --Don Larsson, Mankato State U., MN