Comedians say the push for political correctness is no laughing matter

Reasonable commentary by Evan Carter on the limits of comedy:

Finding the balance between comedy that pushes the envelope and a routine that doesn’t offend anyone has been a precarious task for decades.

But many comedians today say that social media has put them under an unprecedented amount of scrutiny. Whereas a comedian’s ill-advised or offensive joke would once elicit boos or, at worst, a few cancelled gigs, it now ends up on social media, where it’s seen by millions.

Evan Carter, a Toronto comic who’s been performing stand-up since the early 1980s, agrees comics today have it harder than when he started in the business.

“There’s something that they don’t like and they’ve picked out two minutes of a one-hour show completely out of context, and the next thing you know — boom! — it’s on Twitter, it’s on Instagram, it’s on Facebook, and before you get off stage, you’re hated.”

Still, Carter, who teaches a course in stand-up comedy at Second City, doesn’t think political correctness is the enemy of comedy: “I think what’s the enemy of comedy is lazy comics.”

He says that even very risky material can be accepted by the audience if it’s intelligently written and delivered; he brings up Louis C.K. as an example of a popular comic who handles tough topics like spousal abuse or racism cleverly in his routines.

“Craft the joke, build a joke, so that the audience goes, ‘Yeah, I probably shouldn’t be laughing at this but I see your point and I’m willing to learn from it,'” is the advice he gives his students. “But if it’s somebody that’s just coming up and punching you in the face while you’re standing there with a line, with a word that’s just there to shock you? Well, that really doesn’t take much craft at all.”

Source: Comedians say the push for political correctness is no laughing matter – Arts & Entertainment – CBC News

Another balanced piece is by Steve Patterson:

My personal comedy mantra is to make fun of the “haves” not the “have-nots.” When there is someone in the public eye whose arrogance, attitude and ineptitude should be taken down a peg or two (or perhaps have the ladder kicked out from underneath them completely) I am all for it. But it should be done with witty wordsmithing, precise skill and, where possible, in a way that makes the target of the joke laugh along.

Mike Ward is a skilled comedian. He is a worthy wordsmith (in both French and English, which is no small feat). But he picked his target poorly in this case and now he is being told to pay the price. It happens that he is one of the few Canadian comedians who can afford the fine and will certainly profit more from this notoriety in the media. And Mr. Gabriel and his family can count a small “win” after being publicly shamed through no fault of their own (those heaving backlash against his family for initiating this complaint are, in my opinion, tiny-brained troglodytes).

So where does this leave Canadian comedians? I would say, keep working hard to make your jokes the best they can be. Choose your targets wisely. And I would have thought this would go without saying, but leave vulnerable people such as, say, children with facial deformities, out of your comedic repertoire. Unless they personally requested you to focus your sights on them. Then, make sure they’re laughing louder than anyone else at the joke.

Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to get back to writing jokes that will offend Donald Trump and any of his supporters, while hoping that he doesn’t sue me.

If a joke is offensive, is it punishable?

 

Don Macpherson: Quebec’s unfunny comics have no right to an audience 

Valid:

This year’s Oliviers awards show wasn’t the usual televised celebration of what some critics say is the overall mediocrity of Quebec humour. It was a protest rally against “censorship.”

There were stirring speeches by award presenters and winners. At one point, several comics dramatically mounted the stage, the lower half of their faces covered by dust masks with Xs in red tape on them, and stood in silence.

Were they demonstrating against the imprisonment and barbaric flogging by Saudi authorities of blogger Raif Badawi, whose wife and three children have settled in Sherbrooke? Or in support of the brave comics in other countries who risk imprisonment by using humour to criticize repressive regimes?

Neither. They were defending their own claim to a right to a television audience for jokes like this:

“Do you know why Jews give gold IUDs to their wives? Because they love to get into their money.”

That’s one of the jokes in an early version of the script, published in Le Journal de Montréal, for a presentation of an award during the Oliviers by star comics Mike Ward and Guy Nantel.

The theme of the script was freedom of expression, and that joke was an example of the ones about minorities, unattractive people and other underdogs in society that supposedly are no longer allowed on television.

The video opening of the show made it clear who was to blame for this situation: humourless pressure groups, including minorities.

Ward and Nantel didn’t perform their number in the show. They pulled out after failing in several attempts to rewrite their script to satisfy a lawyer for the company insuring the show’s broadcaster, Radio-Canada, and its producer, the Quebec comedy industry professionals’ association, against the cost of possible legal action.

(Yes, comedy is an industry in Quebec, supplied by a publicly supported “national comedy school,” of which Ward and Nantel are graduates.)

So what the comics were protesting against was that somebody else refused to put their money where the comics’ mouths were.

And while asserting their own freedom of expression, the comics in the audience applauded when one award winner, Louis Morissette, demanded immunity for them from criticism. The thin-skinned Morissette lectured the public that it must shut up and tolerate offensive humour, or change the channel.

Amid the adolescent tantrum, a rare dissenting voice was that of another winner, Martin Matte. “Artists or communications people who drape themselves in freedom of expression to get away with low nastiness or words that incite hatred make me uncomfortable,” he said in accepting his award. “I don’t support that.”

Adults know that freedom of expression isn’t absolute. And there is no fundamental right to a television audience or, for that matter, a newspaper column (I know, I’ve checked all the charters).

In my business, we have an expression: “lawyering.” It means to have a lawyer for the people who pay the bills go over an article before it’s published to suggest how to avoid legal action afterward.

Anyway, the advent of the Internet has made censorship futile in societies that don’t block their citizens’ Internet access, as Ward and Nantel themselves proceeded to demonstrate.

Source: Don Macpherson: Quebec’s unfunny comics have no right to an audience | National Post