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Next entry: The Audacity Of Vitriol Previous entry: Don’t Punch The Unicorn

Humor: Not funny

Picture an example of the deadly serious nature of dead white guys. 

Michael Gerson decides to explain this humor thing to conservatives, which is similar to watching a dachsund try to explain quantum mechanics.  Or a Southern Baptist minister explain why he knows more about biology than one of those scientists with their literacy.  To be fair, he’s not explaining what makes something funny so much as what makes something not funny, and in the latter category, we can assume that if you’re too stupid to get why it’s funny, you can safely snit that it’s not funny without feeling even remotely humiliated. 

The first rule of humor is that it is very serious.  You can tell, because dead white guys engaged in humor and satire, and everything white guys, especially dead ones, do should be treated with the utmost respect and gravity.

Satire has been called “punishment for those who deserve it.” Writers from Erasmus to Jonathan Swift to George Orwell have used humor, irony and ridicule to expose the follies of the powerful, the failures of blind ideology and the comic weakness of human nature itself.

Sure, you haven’t read Erasmus, Swift, or Orwell, but rest assured, as they were very serious dead white men, they didn’t befoul their elegant humor by trying to get the audience to do coarse things like laugh.  That’s for the hoi polloi.  Occasionally they might try to get a wry smile out of the audience, but that’s pushing the envelope.  The last thing you want is people to actually pull the leather-bound volumes off the shelf and read them out of the belief that they will get pleasure from the occasion.  Books are for dusting; reading leads to getting ideas which leads directly towards liberalism.  Next thing you know, you’re Al Franken, who this piece is about and who is officially Not Funny.  Even though he’s a white guy. 

So what is Franken’s “provocative, touching and funny” contribution to the genre? Consider his article in Playboy magazine titled “Porn-O-Rama!” in which he enthuses that it is an “exciting time for pornographers and for us, the consumers of pornography.” The Internet, he explains, is a “terrific learning tool. For example, a couple of years ago, when he was 12, my son used the Internet for a sixth-grade report on bestiality. Joe was able to download some effective visual aids, which the other students in his class just loved.” Franken goes on to relate a soft-core fantasy about women providing him with sex who were trained at the “Minnesota Institute of Titology.”

Male use of pornography is Not Funny.  Sure, I can hear the yappity-yap liberals point to “comic weakness of human nature itself” part of the definition I offer, but that’s because liberals have no idea what the word “weakness” means in the context of invoking dead white guys you haven’t read.  Obviously, we are supposed to mock the downtrodden and the oppressed.  So while mocking a man surfing for porn is against the rules, perhaps you can mock rape victimsCalling your wife a “cunt” is hilarious, because it is a hilarious reminder to women that they’ll never be fully human, no matter what kind of airs they put on.  And of course, gloating about hundreds of years of racism never stops being funny, even if the joke itself is such a bad pun it’s not really a pun at all. 

Many soft-headed liberals suggest, after committing the near-criminal act of actually reading something like “A Modest Proposal” by Swift, that perhaps he wasn’t mocking the downtrodden Irish so much as mocking the brutality of their English oppressors.  There is no reason to think this.  There is nothing funny about oppressing people, which is hard and serious work.  Clearly, he was mocking the Irish for producing such delicious babies. It’s part of the grand tradition of dehumanizing members of a stigmatized group by calling them animals, which never stops being funny.  Swift was merely suggesting that the Irish tasted like chicken, which shows that they deserved what they got.

But!  Say the yapping liberals, didn’t your own definition of satire include a part about “exposing the follies of the powerful”?

Stupid liberals.  But again, conservatives have the more mature, deep understanding of these things. Because when someone is a victim they are actually very powerful, because they have the most important power of them all, far greater than wealth or the ability to command a military.  They can claim “victim status” and have people feel sorry for them.  In another one of those books you haven’t and shouldn’t read, Richard III solemnly declares that he’d give his kingdom for a horse.  Nowadays, the cry is your kingdom for someone to smack you so that you can get liberals to rally around your cause.  Modern satire must address this reality by doubling up the bigotry.  Kick a bum on the street and hee-haw about it.  Anything less would do dishonor to the memory of Jonathan Swift.

 

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Posted by Amanda Marcotte on 10:51 AM • (18) Comments

I wish I could remember the exact quote from Molly Ivins, but she said something along the lines about how she tried to use her wit on those in power, because there was no honor in ridiculing the powerless. (She said it much better, but I haven’t been able to locate the quote.)

Comment #1: PixelFish  on  06/18  at  12:07 PM

Of course Franken is Jewish which is only white under certain types of light.  Now Carlos Mencia, he’s so funny he overcomes not being white!

Comment #2: Rob  on  06/18  at  04:31 PM

I adore Orwell, but he was a writer without a laugh in him.  (Unless you count his description of Stanley Baldwin as a “hole in the air”.  That was very funny.)

Comment #3: seeker6079  on  06/18  at  04:44 PM

why do so many people think that if they lable something “satire”, its okay?

Comment #4: denelian  on  06/18  at  04:48 PM

Writers from Erasmus to Jonathan Swift to George Orwell have used humor, irony and ridicule to expose the follies of the powerful, the failures of blind ideology and the comic weakness of human nature itself.

Wow. “From Erasmus” huh? All the way from the 15th century? Apparently even those olive complected (and way more dead) mofuckas like Juvenal or Aristophanes don’t count.

Earliest known satire was written by an Egyptian scribe ca. 2000 BCE. He probably was not what we’d call white.

Comment #5: Sarcastro  on  06/18  at  04:54 PM

I adore Orwell, but he was a writer without a laugh in him.

I dunno.  Animal farm had some funny stuff in it.  Black humor to be sure, but I chuckled.
Pigs climbing ladders in the night to secretly change the rules, comedy gold!
“All Animals are equal but some are more equal than others” also made me laugh first time around.

Comment #6: CWD  on  06/18  at  04:57 PM

I actually laughed out loud at a couple of the Franken quotes (or allusions to quotes) in the Gerson article.  I suppose if you are a good conservative and therefore unable to understand or appreciate irony, I could see how you’d think Franken is vulgar and not funny.  Putting aside the fact that simply calling someone vulgar is funny in and of itself.

I can’t wait to watch the Minnesota Senate debates. I hope they’re televised nationally.

Comment #7: Pansy P  on  06/18  at  05:04 PM

How’s this gem of a comment on the Gerson piece?

Republicans do not have the heart to fight dirty and it is killing them. You cannot always take the high road with a bunch of backstabbers. It is like going to a gunfight with a slingshot.

Comment #8: chingona  on  06/18  at  05:11 PM

Anyone who doesn’t laugh at a Leprechaun afflicted with a weeeeeee bit o’ the diarrhea has a problem.

Comment #9: Sirkowski  on  06/18  at  05:33 PM

PixelFish,

I always say, “I never engage in a battle of wits with an unarmed opponent.”

Comment #10: Faye  on  06/18  at  05:52 PM

“Republicans do not have the heart to fight dirty and it is killing them. ”

WOW. Someone is going to Hell for lying FAR beyond the call of duty.

Comment #11: Eric, Rejector of Memes  on  06/18  at  06:35 PM

Swift was merely suggesting that the Irish tasted like chicken, which shows that they deserved what they got.

Dear, dear me.  Veal, you ignoramus, Irish babies taste like veal.

I’ve already made a comment on conservatives and humour.

Comment #12: Phoenician in a time of Romans  on  06/18  at  07:30 PM

Well, according to no less an authority than Roald Dahl in the B(ig) F(riendly) G(iant), babies and small children taste like their towns of origin. So, irish babies would taste like, you know, Cork. Or for particularly succulent / intoxicating wee ones, Derry or Laophroag.

Comment #13: Indy  on  06/18  at  08:22 PM

Is this so much about funny as it is about the extended pearl-clutching that someone who writes about pornography might be a candidate for Senate? Republican senators, after all, only wax erotic about crazed rodents.

Comment #14: paul  on  06/18  at  09:44 PM

My dachshunds are actually quite well-versed in quantum mechanics.

Comment #15: hbsweet, empress of ice cream  on  06/19  at  12:02 AM

Another example of Orwellian humor: the hilariously savage descriptions of advertising and commerce in Keep the Aspidistra Flying. That is one weird book, but I love it just because Orwell’s humor is so nasty.

This Gershon article reminds me of the endless right-wing screeds on acceptable styles of art, music, clothing, etc., that these idiots crank out. Even in rebellion, you must use the acceptable format with no deviations whatsoever!

Comment #16: sophronia  on  06/19  at  04:08 AM

I concede that Orwell may have had a joke or two in him.  That’s what I get for letting a decade go by without reading any of his novels; my relaxation reading is usually his essays, journalism, letters, (etc.).

Comment #17: seeker6079  on  06/19  at  09:04 AM

If I could rate this one, I’d give it a 1/5.i don’t get it, or as James Allen would say, “The greatest achievements were at first and for a time dreams. The oak sleeps in the acorn.”

Comment #18: 705341612985  on  06/19  at  10:02 PM
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