Posted on 05/28/2020 9:54:38 AM PDT by Kaslin
Gadsby's work is a testament to how eagerly the arbiters of our culture will devour and elevate work that convincingly purports to be progressive.
Hannah Gadsbys mission to rescue comedy from cruelty ends with Douglas, an act so immensely cruel it rises nearly to the level of torture. Gadsby, of course, is famous only because her first major special, Nanette, rejected the art of stand-up comedy, arguing that punch lines need trauma and are inherently destructive. Having pleased the liberal arbiters of culture, Gadsby followed her powerful and transformative rejection of stand-up with a stand-up special. Nanette, as it turns out, couldnt even transform its own author.
Are there punch lines? Well, she tries. Gadsby is convinced her jokes are both funny and transgressive, when theyre actually just transgressively unfunny. If you happen to have a few NPR tote bags in your Prius, Gadsbys painfully dull swings at Murica and anti-vaxxers and Louis CK might have you laughing like its Ladies Night Out at a Kathy Griffin show and the eco-friendly chardonnay is disappearing faster than the rainforest. The humor is so trite and edgeless, I dont even think its lacking appeal is a partisan issuethe audience for this is seriously limited, and I have a feeling most of it works in media.
Its genuinely painful to watch Gadsby swipe at low-hanging fruit like shes Christian Yelich hitting a Grand Slam. Americans are like the straight white man of cultures, she observes at one point, presumably cribbing the quip from the Tumblr account of a womens studies student. To anti-vaxxers, Gadsby bravely demands, Get a pet rock and delete your f-cking blog!, then brushes imaginary dirt off her shoulder like shes just knocked out Mike Tyson.
Douglas starts with a 15-minute preface in which Gadsby maps out the remainder of the show, which is less of an ingenious concept and more of a lazy way to bring the set full circle, which she does, and with a decent swipe at Louis CK.
Thankfully, though, Gadsby is self-aware. Im part of the problem now! the comedian happily concedes right off the bat. If youre here because of Nanette, why? Gadsby asks, later describing her core demographic as rich, white, entitled women. She claims not to mind critics labeling Nanette a monologue or a Ted Talk or lecture. What the f-ck are you expecting from this show? Because Im sorry, if its more trauma, Im fresh out. Had I known just how wildly popular trauma was going to be in the context of comedy, I might have budgeted my sh-t a bit better, Gadsby jokes.
But shes not quite self-aware enough to actually, meaningfully concede that Douglas is a refutation of the very thesis that made her famous. The most obvious evidence is that she claimed to be quitting stand-up in Nanette, which she obviously understands as a contradiction. But thats less interesting than her rejection of the punch lines are trauma claim, which implicated just about every major comedian and intentionallyeven proudlychallenged the very bedrock of stand-up. Gadsby does not really grapple with that glaring contradiction.
Douglas would never be confused with a lecture. Its just stand-up comedy. And like most stand-up comedy, it even mines personal trauma for punch lines, the practice Gadsby herself famously condemned as destructive in Nanette. From her experiences with autism to an obviously traumatic anecdote about arguing and crying with a doctor, Gadsby draws punchlines out of her own trauma, despite claiming to be fresh out of it.
Take this joke at the end of her anti-vaxxer bit:
Hannah Gadsbys mission to rescue comedy from cruelty ends with Douglas, an act so immensely cruel it rises nearly to the level of torture. Gadsby, of course, is famous only because her first major special, Nanette, rejected the art of stand-up comedy, arguing that punch lines need trauma and are inherently destructive. Having pleased the liberal arbiters of culture, Gadsby followed her powerful and transformative rejection of stand-up with a stand-up special. Nanette, as it turns out, couldnt even transform its own author.Are there punch lines? Well, she tries. Gadsby is convinced her jokes are both funny and transgressive, when theyre actually just transgressively unfunny. If you happen to have a few NPR tote bags in your Prius, Gadsbys painfully dull swings at Murica and anti-vaxxers and Louis CK might have you laughing like its Ladies Night Out at a Kathy Griffin show and the eco-friendly chardonnay is disappearing faster than the rainforest. The humor is so trite and edgeless, I dont even think its lacking appeal is a partisan issuethe audience for this is seriously limited, and I have a feeling most of it works in media.
Its genuinely painful to watch Gadsby swipe at low-hanging fruit like shes Christian Yelich hitting a Grand Slam. Americans are like the straight white man of cultures, she observes at one point, presumably cribbing the quip from the Tumblr account of a womens studies student. To anti-vaxxers, Gadsby bravely demands, Get a pet rock and delete your f-cking blog!, then brushes imaginary dirt off her shoulder like shes just knocked out Mike Tyson.
Douglas starts with a 15-minute preface in which Gadsby maps out the remainder of the show, which is less of an ingenious concept and more of a lazy way to bring the set full circle, which she does, and with a decent swipe at Louis CK.
Thankfully, though, Gadsby is self-aware. Im part of the problem now! the comedian happily concedes right off the bat. If youre here because of Nanette, why? Gadsby asks, later describing her core demographic as rich, white, entitled women. She claims not to mind critics labeling Nanette a monologue or a Ted Talk or lecture. What the f-ck are you expecting from this show? Because Im sorry, if its more trauma, Im fresh out. Had I known just how wildly popular trauma was going to be in the context of comedy, I might have budgeted my sh-t a bit better, Gadsby jokes.
But shes not quite self-aware enough to actually, meaningfully concede that Douglas is a refutation of the very thesis that made her famous. The most obvious evidence is that she claimed to be quitting stand-up in Nanette, which she obviously understands as a contradiction. But thats less interesting than her rejection of the punch lines are trauma claim, which implicated just about every major comedian and intentionallyeven proudlychallenged the very bedrock of stand-up. Gadsby does not really grapple with that glaring contradiction.
Douglas would never be confused with a lecture. Its just stand-up comedy. And like most stand-up comedy, it even mines personal trauma for punch lines, the practice Gadsby herself famously condemned as destructive in Nanette. From her experiences with autism to an obviously traumatic anecdote about arguing and crying with a doctor, Gadsby draws punchlines out of her own trauma, despite claiming to be fresh out of it.
Take this joke at the end of her anti-vaxxer bit:
Why I snack on hate? Youve worked it out? Its how you build up immunity. Its called micro-dosing. Yeah. Your hate is my vaccine. What are you gonna do? Ive already got autism. I have whats called high-functioning autism, which is a terrible name for what I have, because it gives the impression that I function highly. I do not.Cue the laughter and destruction. Gadsby dives into her experience as a woman with autism, explaining the challenges it creates through a story about frustrating an impatient teacher. The punch lines arent great, but theyre certainly not destructive either. That was always the problem with her argument. Comedy can heal, it can foster empathy, it can expose political hypocrisybut it often needs to draw on trauma to do it.
I actually enjoyed Nanette. I thought it was entirely wrong, but found Gadsbys performance compelling. In Douglas, her concluding commentary on various works of art is smoother, more natural and funny. But Gadsbys persona is gratingly smug, which takes exceptionally sharp writing to pull off. Telling Americans its dumb in the face to refer to petroleum as gas doesnt quite hit the mark.
Gadsby herself renders the acclaim critics showered upon Nanette silly. The New York Times recently described Douglas as, formally more complex and denser intellectually than Nanette.
Whereas Nanette needed to stop the comedy to make its most serious points, writes Jason Zinoman, Gadsby works hard to blend the two here, and the result is an intricate, heady show whose cleverness gets in its own way. That, of course, is why the central argument of Nanette failed. Maybe Gadsby knew that all along. Maybe she liked the sound of her argument more than she cared about its legitimacy.
In the end, it was all a rhetorical exercise, a flexing of intellectual muscles that fizzled when the time for real-world application unexpectedly knocked on Gadsbys door. Douglas is a testament to Nanettes failure. Its a testament to how eagerly the arbiters of our culture will devour and elevate work that convincingly purports to be progressiveand a testament to how easy it is to convince them.
Douglas will help you understand why Gadsby made it big only after rejecting stand-up. Perhaps she fought against punch lines because good ones elude her.
“Gadsby, of course, is famous only because...”
Gadsby is not famous.
Never heard of him/her/it.
Gadsby is a 1939 novel by Ernest Vincent Wright written as a lipogram, which does not include words that contain the letter E. The plot revolves around the dying fictional city of Branton Hills, which is revitalized as a result
The new democrat. She reminds me of Melissa Glick
And of course, we can't forget GretaTm?
Comedy is dead.
Typical hate-filled liberal.
The lesbo meter pegged out.
Sure that’s not Carrot Top?
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