Consider This from NPR - When Does Comedy Cross the Line?
Episode Date: November 26, 2022Every time stand-up comic Dave Chappelle gets in front of a mic, he seems to reignite a debate over when, or whether, a comedian can go too far. Chappelle has been heavily criticized for jokes about g...ay people and the trans community. Most recently the comedian came under fire while hosting SNL. During his monologue, he made comments that critics say elevated longstanding, prejudiced tropes against Jewish people. Can a joke become harmful, can comedy cross the line? Who decides what happens when that line is crossed? NPR's Eric Deggans speaks with Roy Wood Jr, a comedian and correspondent for Comedy Central's The Daily Show, and Jenny Hagel, a writer and performer for Late Night with Seth Meyers and head writer for the Amber Ruffin Show on Peacock.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Should comedians ever have to apologize for a joke?
I believe you should only apologize if you feel remorse. I think anything else is disingenuous and bullshit.
Comedians are the ones testing where the line is. We can't always be perfect.
Comedy is, I do think, is supposed to push the line, push towards the lines of the medium. There
are more people now who will let you know if they think you went over the line than ever before.
Don't I know it. When does comedy go too far? The question has probably
been around since the first person decided to step on a stage and tell a joke. And in any discussion
about where that line is and who gets to decide whether it's been crossed, one name is bound to
come up. Superstar stand-up comic Dave Chappelle. Chappelle has been heavily criticized for jokes
about gay people and the trans community
and recently he hosted Saturday Night
Live with an opening monologue
that addressed anti-Semitic remarks
made by rapper Ye.
Formerly known as Kanye West.
Early in my career, I learned
that there are two words in the
English language that you should never say together
in sequence. And those words are the English language that you should never say together in sequence,
and those words are the and Jews. I've never heard someone do good after they said that.
Chappelle's comments about Ye's remarks landed Chappelle in hot water with some critics, including me, who felt his monologue elevated longstanding prejudice tropes against Jewish
people and minimize Ye's anti-Semitism. Comedians Jon Stewart and Judy Gold, who are both Jewish,
weighed in on Chappelle's behalf. I don't believe that censorship and penalties are the way to end
anti-Semitism or to not gain understanding. I don't believe in that.
People go to Dave to get his perspective, and that's his perspective.
Successful comedians are often put on a pedestal.
They're praised for their abilities to tell uncomfortable truths, expose hypocrisy through satire,
and offer crucial social commentary that breaks down stereotypes and prejudice.
Consider this.
At a time when hate crimes have increased in the U.S.
and social media platforms seem to be awash in hateful speech,
has the comedic line between what's funny and what's unacceptable shifted?
I don't think that comedians should be exempt from any degree of accountability for what they say.
That's coming up.
From NPR, I'm Eric Deggans.
It's Saturday, November 26th.
It shouldn't be this scary to talk about anything.
It's making my job incredibly difficult.
To be honest with you, I'm getting sick of talking to a crowd like this.
That's Dave Chappelle again from his Saturday Night Live monologue
on how the threat of being canceled has made the job of the comic much harder.
My first Netflix special, what did I say?
I said, I don't want a sneaker deal,
because the minute I say something that makes those people mad,
they're going to take my sneakers away.
And the whole crowd was like, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
But now you see Kanye walking around L.A. barefoot with his chain out.
I thought the best people to talk about controversial comedy were, well, comedians.
I spoke with Roy Wood Jr. and Jenny Hagel.
Roy is a stand-up comic who's best known as a correspondent on Comedy Central's The Daily Show, and Jenny is a writer and performer on Late Night with Seth Meyers on NBC,
and the head writer and executive producer for The Amber Ruffin Show on Peacock.
I started out by asking them about the boundary between an edgy joke and a harmful one.
I believe that there are a lot of people, and it's not just comedians,
it's content creators, it's people who make sketches,
it's people who do funny stuff online who I believe want freedom of expression and freedom from criticism.
And you cannot separate the two, in my opinion.
Where the boundaries lie, I think that's dictated by the public who is receiving the joke.
And I think America as a whole is a spot now where the entire country is changing and evolving.
So some people are going, hey, that's not cool. I don't like that. Now you're a performer.
You want to keep saying that. Cool. But just know that some people are going to have you on. Some people are going to rebook you.
There's going to be certain venues that aren't going to want to work with you.
And if you're rich enough and you're emboldened enough to stick with that, you know, more power to you. But
I don't think that this demand to exist in a space where there is no criticism or accountability,
I don't think that's realistic. What Roy said really resonates to me is like,
you have to be honest about the thing you say has an effect on people and you have to be honest
about what that effect is and willing to hear it. And I think that sometimes the discussion around what comics can and can't say sometimes has this
kind of false cover over it that like people will talk about, well, comics should be allowed to push
boundaries. Because I think if you are saying something anti-Semitic or homophobic or racist,
I don't know that that's pushing boundaries because that's
old. We have all heard that a lot. Like, that's nothing edgy. You're not edgy if you're doing
something that someone on a playground in fourth grade is doing. To me, stuff that pushes boundaries
is stuff that introduces a new thought, a new point of view, a new analysis of something that
we've all been talking about, but maybe they're making me look at it a different way. To me,
that's what is pushing boundaries. And I think good comedy does what, you know, there's that phrase,
punching up, that a lot of people have heard, right? That like good comedy punches up. Like
you, the butt of your jokes are people above you with more social status, more power, more money,
more access than you. And I think when you are punching down, to me, at least that's not comedy.
That's just bullying. And you know, what interesting to me, too, is I get the sense that there's a coterie of people
out there that are getting tired of the discussion of being aware of how other people are affected
by what they do.
And they're looking for an excuse.
I see some of these comics, and they're like, oh, I could get canceled for telling this joke.
And it's like, you know, you're doing stand up for thousands of people.
You're hosting a national TV show.
You have albums out.
What do you mean you're going to get canceled?
It's more, you know, particularly, you know, the wake of George Floyd.
We saw a lot of people look at trying to be better about how they talk about issues. And now I feel like we're seeing a little bit of a backlash. And I'm wondering, do any of you see that in your comedy? Do you see people pushing back because they're tired of some of the things that people have been asking them to do in terms of what you talked about, punching down instead of punching up? Most of the people that are criticizing, they're not performers. So you
don't necessarily understand the limitations of television, but you are a consumer of comedy.
And I think to some degree, everyone who has an opinion, every opinion isn't necessarily
worth listening to, but some of them, if enough people are saying it, let's see if there's a way
on this next segment to add a little more, another layer of information on this. Because
you know when you
get it right, because then the people say, thank you. What I've also tried to do to a degree is to
give grace to the people that are annoyed or upset, because, you know, the thing about jokes,
you know, they are definitely an attempt. Like you're always trying and you're not always going
to land the joke, giving
grace to the fact that some people that may be offended by something, they may not take
your intention into account.
And you kind of have to grade that on the curve as well, because they've dealt with
whatever trauma they've been dealing with for so long that everybody looks the same
to them.
And you could get something right four days in a week,
and on the fifth day, accidentally misgender someone
or accidentally come at a joke from an entry point
that suggests that you have a blind spot to the totality of the issue.
I think Roy's right.
I'm always interested to hear how people react to stuff,
and I think you just have to consider the source.
But I think that, again, I don't see any of that as limiting me,
because there are some times where somebody will educate me and say, hey, you worded this this way using
these pronouns, but a more inclusive way to say that would be this.
And I am happy to learn that.
That costs me nothing to word things correctly the next time or in a way that's more inclusive.
I'm happy when someone is willing to help me get further along, get to a different place.
I think, though, I think you used a really important word, though, Roy, which is, like,
intent.
Like, I think it's important to think when you're watching comedy or when you're writing
comedy, like, what's the person's intention, right?
And I think that as long as you are at least trying to, like, right, like you said, like,
be honest or be smart about something or offer a point of view.
But I think, like, the place where you get into you get into where it doesn't feel good to people,
and maybe different people use different kinds of language
to describe it, but it feels wonky when someone's...
You can intellectualize a negative joke,
but we all know when the intent is wrong or mean or off,
you can feel it.
Coming up, high-profile stars are leaving late-night comedy.
Two veterans of the genre tell me where they think it's headed.
There's space for me, and I hope there continues to be more space for all kinds of people.
I really, really do.
When we return.
I've loved hosting this show.
It's been one of my greatest challenges.
It's been one of my greatest challenges. It's been one of my greatest joys. I've loved trying to figure out how to make people laugh, even when the stories are particularly shitty on the worst days. We've laughed together, we've cried together. But after seven years, I feel like it's time. Trevor Noah's departure from The Daily Show was one of several recent bombshells to hit the late-night comedy world.
Desus and Mero, Samantha Bee and James Corden have also recently left the space,
or in the case of Corden, host of CBS's The Late Late Show, announced they're leaving next year.
I asked Roy Wood Jr. and Jenny Hagel whether these shifts could signal an end to more
diverse and inventive late-night comedy. I think that the economics of television
is what has to be solved first. You know, it's probably something that's not discussed
in broader strokes, but, and it's not just in a late-night or unscripted capacity,
it's scripted capacity too. Like budgets have gotten a lot tighter post-COVID on what people are willing to shoot, what people are willing to make.
And I think that late night remains one of the most affordable things to produce.
But I think that you have degree, a lot of the people that are out there that are on TikTok and that are on Instagram that are doing a lot of stuff, they have caught up to the genre.
And so I think that you're just going to see a continual creative evolution of everything.
Deezus and Mero, like they were in podcasts, they were just two dudes with good ass chemistry and just given space to be themselves.
That's what you need. It's got to be weird. just giving space to be themselves. That's what you need.
It's got to be weird. It's got to be different. It cannot be the same thing that your parents,
nobody wants to watch the late night show that their parents grew up watching. I didn't want to watch Johnny Carson. I had Conan O'Brien. So it has to just continue to evolve in some degree.
The concern that I had as a fan is just when it seems like women and people of color are starting to get these hosting jobs and really step up, we're starting to see the genre contract.
And that's really worrisome.
That's what I told Trevor.
I said, man, you black, you got to stay.
And he was like, no.
No, there's too many underserved jimmies out there.
No, I think that culturally, you know, we go through swings.
And I think right now we're in a swing where people want to hear different points of view.
Like, I know I can say that.
Like, I want to hear points of view of people from ethnic groups that I am not part of, from socioeconomic groups that I am not part of, from regions of the country where I do not live.
I think we are living in an era in America and have for the last couple years a realization on the part of some Americans that like, oh, I don't have the whole picture. I just have the picture from where I am sitting.
I would like to know what your picture is. It's like what Roy said, like, I don't want to watch
a bunch of people who look identical on every channel saying the same thing. Because we're
all reading, I mean, late night at the end of the day is jokes written off of all the same setups.
And that is whatever the news of the day is. But if you have a bunch of different hosts coming from different walks of life
writing jokes off of those same setups,
then you're going to get a bunch of different jokes
and different responses to that news.
And I think that's what makes it fun and an exciting art form.
I think that what has to happen for Late Night to remain viable
as a place to come and see that person's take about the thing is that it has
to be a format that leans into what people want to see and what people are already responding to
and not something that is created in the eyes of what a television executive thinks late night
should be. Specificity is the new broad. It's not enough to just be all things. You're better off drilling in for eight
minutes in the way that Amber does in her style on the thing to make something that's interesting
and specific. And I also think that late night still has a place because when you look at
everyone you've named who has stepped away or is stepping away, there was chaos when those announcements came out.
When Desus and Mero, when that news broke that that wasn't happening no more, Twitter was in
shambles that night. So every one of these people is somebody's person. That's your champion. That's
my one. That's the one I love. That's the one I root for. And I don't think you can get that through streaming.
I don't think you can get that through whomever your favorite internet personality is.
The internet is the internet.
Social media is social media.
But I think late night and someone having a voice and sitting in that captain's chair,
I think it'll always be important.
It's just a matter of making sure that what they're doing is specific and that there's a
continual creative evolution and not a fight to remain in what has been.
I think that's right.
If you're looking at someone's authentic point of view, you're going to have a good time, even if their authentic point of view isn't yours, because you're going to be responding to how passionate they are about it.
That was Roy Wood Jr. and Jenny Hagel.
Roy is a Daily Show correspondent, stand-up comic,
and executive producer of the award-winning documentary The Neutral Ground.
Jenny is a writer and performer at Late Night with Seth Meyers
and head writer and executive producer of The Amber Ruffin Show.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Eric Deggans. Thank you.