Political Correctness in Comedy: Is It Making Comedians Too Afraid to Be Funny? | Chris Gethard
People do actively say, like 'political correctness is killing comedy,' especially on college campuses. And it’s very, very interesting because I think a part of it is true. I think I’m a very notoriously positive comic. I think especially with the show I do, it’s like very, very inclusive. We just did an episode called 'The Gender Fluid Polyamorous Prom' that was all about just including every lifestyle.
And I think I'm notoriously on the PC end of things, and I still get feedback from people that’s like really in attack mode about issues. And I’m like wow, I live on the fringe of – I live on the liberal progressive fringe of comedy, kind of notoriously, and I get attacked sometimes. So I can imagine people who are a little bit more conservative. I think less – I think maybe some of the more blue-collar comics take it on the chin.
But it’s a very, very interesting thing because comics tend to have this knee-jerk reaction of 'Well we’re creative people and our work builds by doing it on stage again and again. We should be allowed to say and do whatever we want.' And I think there’s a lot of truth to that. I think comics do need permission to fail. I think comics do need permission to go up and try stuff.
I’ve said some things on stage where the crowd was like, 'Whoa, that’s bad' – and I never say it again because that’s the feedback I get. And there’s a part of me that knows so much of it’s Internet-driven. If somebody had a camera on and put that joke on the Internet and it went wide, I’d be like, 'No, that’s why I tried it. That’s why I went and tried it because - to know that it wouldn't work and that it would bug everybody out.'
That’s why I wouldn’t want to do it again or at least fix the parts that turned everybody off. So it is tough. But I think the other side of the coin that I think we as comics need to maybe cop to a little bit more is like we are allowed to say whatever we want. But also, people are allowed to get as offended as they’re going to get. They’re allowed to and we don’t have to like it. They don’t have to like us and that’s totally fine.
I think the troublesome point – like I have a friend Sam Morril. A great comic. Friend of mine, I know him through the comedy scene. We’re not the best friends in the world but I think he’s great and he’s such a sweet guy. And he made a joke once at a show that was really late at night that was billed as a really aggressively sort of like dirty risqué show. And he made a joke that involved the topic of rape and I don’t think he’d say it was the most well-thought-out, polished material.
And someone wrote about it on a blog and it really blew up – and it really blew up. And it’s tough because it’s like there are certain topics that shouldn’t be joked about. At the same time, if a joke about a topic can hit, it can actually be one of the most powerful tools to fight back against things we don’t like. So I really felt like, man, this guy Sam is a sweet dude. I know him. He’s a sweet dude.
And he tried a joke at a show that was meant to be awful material and he’s getting slammed for being awful. And he never wanted to put – he was never going to record that for an album or put it on a special. So I remember thinking that was like – that’s like the nightmare scenario for a comedian and it’s not totally fair. But too many comedians use that as an excuse to just say whatever they want with no consequence, and I don’t think that’s cool either.
People want to get up and just say crazy things. People want to say stuff that’s like racist, homophobic, sexist. Just say like, 'Well I’m a comic, man, we’re the truth tellers in society! We just say whatever we want. You can’t judge us for it.' It’s like, well you can. You can say whatever you want, but if a crowd turns on you and if a think piece gets written that you've got bad intentions, you might have to just own that.
If you want to put that stuff out there, you might just have to own it. It’s all valid. People’s reactions are as valid as...