Posted on 02/17/2015 7:00:40 PM PST by Daniel Clark
Who Killed Comedy?: Liberals, and not by accident
by Daniel Clark
Since Jon Stewart announced that he will be ending The Daily Show, which has run on Comedy Central for 16 years, even non-liberals have expressed a certain amount of admiration for him, and not completely without reason. Unlike the mainstream late-night hosts, Stewart is forthright about the fact that hes pitching his liberal ideology, and when he interviews conservatives, hes a lot more polite to them than David Letterman has ever been. But is he funny?
No. Not even close. Just try watching and reading the highlights in some of the posterior-puckering retrospectives being done about his show. Youll find no jokes, and very few witty remarks. Even with a team of writers for his scripted news update segments, the best response he can usually come up with is an unfunny expression of incredulity, followed by an F-bomb or some other outburst of mindless invective.
Thats what now passes for comedy, in this humorless, post-comedic world we live in. The liberal pop media have created a new paradigm, by which comedy is defined as whatever makes liberals feel satisfied with themselves and their beliefs, whether its actually funny or not. Thats why the most common reaction to left-wing comedians is applause, and not laughter.
This is not a new phenomenon, as anyone knows whos ever had the misfortune of seeing a video of Lenny Bruce doing stand-up. Bruce was lionized by Sixties liberals for his defiance of obscenity laws, and for his role in transforming comedy clubs into yet another forum for left-wing political expression. His jokes, and his delivery of them, were about as funny as a case of prickly heat. The smattering of people who actually paid to see him would seldom laugh, but would occasionally voice their approval of his point of view.
After decades of liberal dominance of the entertainment industry, the unfunny-fication of comedy is almost complete. Next time you peruse the comedy section of a video store, see how many funny movies you can find, without going at least as far back in time as the Eighties. Not only are very few of them made anymore, but there are now whole categories of comedies that dont even feign much of an attempt at humor.
There was a time when movies that called themselves romantic comedies were actually funny, or at least tried to be. Now, theyre little more than celebrations of the feminization of men. Dark comedies, being depraved exercises in morbidity, often characterized by graphic violence, are anti-humorous by definition.
Last summer, critics hailed a movie called Obvious Child as the first-ever abortion comedy a term they coined in apparent hope of creating a new genre. The story was about a woman who had become pregnant through a casual encounter, and was so unashamed of her decision to abort that she freely discussed it with everyone except the childs father. The films release was greeted by little more than a few chirping crickets, and even they are still waiting for the punch line.
Of course, politics and humor are not mutually exclusive categories. Liberal entertainers ought to be able to promote their political beliefs within a comedic context, but by now theyve rendered themselves incapable of it, and not just because theyre naturally unfunny people, which they are.
Another reason is that successful comedy is supposed to contain an element of truth, whereas liberals reject the very concept of truth in favor of competing narratives. For example, the left-wing narrative about Hurricane Katrina is that George W. Bush is a racist. When a liberal makes a joke to that effect, you dont have to be a supporter of Bushs in order to not find it funny. The total absence of factual support for its conclusion will be enough to mute your reaction. Other liberals wont actually laugh either, but will instead react with hoots and whistles, in order to make it known that they approve of the narrative.
The other major impediment to liberal political humor is that liberals are the inventors of political correctness. When they hear that people are amused by something, their immediate reaction is to put a stop to it. Once theyve screened their own material to make sure theyre not offending feminists, ethnic grievance groups, homosexuals, transvestites, Muslims, atheists, Satanists, people with webbed toes, people with peanut allergies, and people who take offense on behalf of animals and plants, that doesnt leave a lot of opportunities for humor.
Liberals have seen to it that vulgarity runs rampant on television, and yet movies from the pre-PC era are more heavily edited than ever. When the NBC Sports Network shows the original version of The Longest Yard, it omits all scenes featuring an inmate named Indian, just to avoid any mention of the word. That stations edited version of Slap Shot leaves most of its raunchiness intact, but cuts out all of Killer Carlsons references to the Swami Baha. If you want to see Blazing Saddles in anywhere near its entirety, you have to buy it on disc, because AMC and most other cable networks blank out every potentially offensive utterance from the entire script. Were not far from the point where words like Oriental, midget and crazy are placed on the forbidden list as well. Heck, you cant even say comedienne anymore.
In a way, its a brilliant strategy. Liberal comedy no longer has to compete in an open marketplace, just as long as liberals have the power to suppress the competition by inhibiting funniness altogether. That way, nobodys around to impede them from lowering the bar.
Johnny Carson used to be paid the dubious compliment that he was better than his material. Thats not possible in Stewarts case, because now, material is everything, and yet it is nothing. Tell a joke that defies the laws of political correctness, and youre just a hater. Shout F-off into the camera at the enemies of the Left, like Stewart does, and youre the preeminent comic genius of the 21st Century. And youve got the liberal applause to prove it.
-- Daniel Clark is a writer from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He is the author and editor of a web publication called The Shinbone: The Frontier of the Free Press, where he also publishes a seasonal sports digest as The College Football Czar.
I stand in awe of some of the intellects on this forum. I used to think I was up on history but compared to some of the people here, I’m like a 4th grader.
Did you write all the things at Shinbone?
I thought the things iread were very good.
I think there’s more going on there than sophomoric mockery.
Ain’t that the truth? The other day, cracked up because someone had posted this Salon.com piece by this guy named Elias Isquith, and the article was really stupid and juvenile. One freeper replied “Elias, your mother called. Your Spaghetti-os are ready.” Somehow, it was the best comment on the article.
One other time I laughed out loud was when someone posted “It’s Hilary’s birthday. And I didn’t send her a card.” Someone replied “You can still send a card to her butt. It didn’t finish being born until the next day.” Totally immature humor—but hilarious.
"...flippancy is the best of all [forms of humor]. In the first place it is very economical. Only a clever Human can make a real Joke about virtue, or indeed about anything else; any of them can be trained to talk as if virtue were funny. Among flippant people the Joke is always assumed to have been made. No one actually makes it; but every serious subject is discussed in a manner which implies that they have already found a ridiculous side to it. If prolonged, the habit of Flippancy builds up around a man the finest armour plating against the Enemy [God] that I know, and it is quite free from the dangers inherent in the other sources of laughter. It is a thousand miles away from joy; it deadens, instead of sharpening, the intellect; and it excites no affection between those who practice it."
I agree—there are some brilliant people who know a lot about things most people don’t, or aren’t allowed to.
I agree, some of the comments on FR are some of the funniest things I have ever read in my life. My wife thinks I’m nuts sometimes as I sit in front of computer and laugh my head off. Some Freepers could have been writers for Johnny Carson.
So much “Americana” that was the envy of the world (it even offered a dream of ‘escape’ to those behind the iron curtain; get your contraband recordings or clothing).
The ‘fun’ has been taken out of it all.
Sex is widely promoted but it's the perverted kind, men are to ‘blame’ and shouldn't be permitted to ‘enjoy’ it, and the hookup culture seems strangely unfulfilling to the public at large. Free love isn't free. rdquo; that was the envy of the world (it even offered a dream of
Take a look at this clip from when comedy was good and ask yourself if it would air today.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Et19d8mEwnI
In my area there are no less than four tv channels that show nothing but old shows from the 70’s and 80’s. I think because that was the time before PC killed the laughter.
Unfunny at any speed. - Darth Nader.
I hear this reaction at the movies at festivals and museum screenings. Especially if they know someone from the production is in the audience.
It's not a traditional bellylaugh. The pregnant pause before they begin to chortle almost sounds as if they are gonna puke.
Most these clowns now are more obnoxious and classless than funny.
How many of these comedians would be considered funny now days without being so vulgar? Very few.
Its Hillarys birthday...you can still send a card to her butt. It didnt finish being born until the next day.
I have named Hillary “The Flying Buttress”. Uncopyrighted and so feel free.
;^)
Stewart is dishonest, arrogant, mean-spirited, and not funny.
Comedy today is made of snide remarks.
You couldn’t make Blazing Saddles today, and not 15 years ago, either.
Chris Rock announced he no longer performs at universities.
I lurk over at DU and those people have no sense of humor at all. And the Dims that I know in my life are the same way - dour, depressed, and have a horrible outlook on life.
Give me the old timers like Red Skelton and Jack Benny any day
Yes
You’re an outlier here
Stewart is quick
Colbert smarmy
Gutfeld is quick but more odd
Dennis Miller is sharp
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