Sunday, December 07, 2014

“That’s Not Funny!”: Chris Rock Complains of How College is Killing Comedy

 

 

Re-posted by Nicholas Stix

About 40 years ago, a couple of feminist “comediennes” appeared on Tom Snyder’s Tomorrow show, which immediately followed Johnny Carson’s Tonight Show. They were very proud of how they had gotten together with other comics playing campus venues, and had come to the following agreement: 1. You can curse all you want, but 2. You’re not allowed to make any jokes that identify groups. (In other words, they banned all observational humor, which lives off of accurately portraying and joking about observable group stereotypes.)

In spite of being a feminist, my big sister, who was then in college, said the feminist duo was terrible. They weren’t at all funny.

Of course, pc types like the aforementioned feminists never really meant to ban all observational humor, and eventually they permitted bad comics, as long as they attacked normal white men, Republicans, Christians, etc.

And nowadays, the pc crowd laughs at comedians not because they’re funny, but out of obligation, because the speaker attacked their enemies.
Rock: “Or just ignoring race to a fault. You can’t say ‘the black kid over there.’ No, it’s ‘the guy with the red shoes.’”

This reminds me of an encounter in the New York Public Library Research Wing, on Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street, during the early-to-mid 1990s.

I had been directed to this huge, high-ceilinged room. When I asked a grey-haired, Amazonian German woman (at least 5’11”) where to find something, she pointed to an area where there about 20 people milling about. “Ask the man in the red shirt.”

“You mean the bald, little black man?” (He was the only black man in the area.)

She ignored my question, and instead repeated, with more oomph, “The man in the red shirt.”
 

Chris Rock Explains Why He Doesn’t Want to Perform on College Campuses
By Susan Kruth
December 1, 2014
The Fire

New York magazine’s Frank Rich interviewed comedian Chris Rock for a piece published yesterday, and Rock took the opportunity to point out another sad result of college students “unlearning liberty”: talented comedians no longer want to perform on campus.

In the interview, Rich and Rock discussed how Rock, like many comedians, has been criticized by audience members who were offended by his jokes. When asked what he thought about the recent controversy over Bill Maher’s invitation to speak at the University of California, Berkeley’s December commencement ceremony, Rock said, “Well, I love Bill, but I stopped playing colleges, and the reason is because they’re way too conservative.” He elaborated:

Not in their political views — not like they’re voting Republican — but in their social views and their willingness not to offend anybody. Kids raised on a culture of “We’re not going to keep score in the game because we don’t want anybody to lose.” Or just ignoring race to a fault. You can’t say “the black kid over there.” No, it’s “the guy with the red shoes.” You can’t even be offensive on your way to being inoffensive.

Rock said he started to notice the trend about eight years ago, and that he wasn’t the only one—as he recalled, “I remember talking to George Carlin before he died and him saying the exact same thing.”

Facing objections on the basis of “offensiveness” on campus and in other venues, Rock describes how comedians are put in a tough spot. They have to practice in front of an audience in order to figure out what jokes are funny, but these days, the backlash from offended audience members is much longer-lasting than in the past, thanks to the Internet. He worries that comedians feel less safe to experiment, and that this is “going to lead to safer, gooier stand-up.”

Just as college campuses are meant to be “marketplaces of ideas” generally, they should be places where comedians and other performers are especially able to play with new acts. It’s disappointing to see that this is not so, and that the atmosphere for freedom of speech and comedy in particular on campuses has gotten bad enough that noted comedians are avoiding student audiences altogether. That is a real loss for them—after all, everybody could use a laugh.
 

Schools:

University of California, Berkeley

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