I don't think Daniel Tosh was losing his shit when he asked if it'd be funny if a woman would be raped during his show, but it was certainly outside his source material.There's a difference between a comedy routine that's on the edge (and funny) and a guy losing his shit onstage outside of his material.
That's what I said--I think he's being over-dramatic. You're saying it's too much of a shift to accept edgy comedy, but he's the one saying no, he won't do it. So, he doesn't have the balls, but it's someone else's fault?Seinfeld's point, if you bothered to listen, is that it does not matter if you are even close to a line when doing comedy on a college campus these days because the students are hyper-sensitive and think everything is offensive. Comedy can be and frequently is offensive and that's perfectly fine. If you are offended, tough shit. There is a funny side to literally everything. That's a part of life. And Seinfeld is basically right. People are so needing to be offended that they throw out SJW terms like hard rock candy without giving a thought to what they mean or represent in the first place. They are so quick to jump on any perceived insult that people are getting fired for using the word "niggardly", or trying to start conversations on race.
Have things gotten better for minorities or LGBT? Yes and no. (No for minorities and I'd say yes for LGBT [if any of our LGBT people want to correct me if I'm wrong please do so]) But we have gone from the extreme where Disney had cartoons with "Indians" in them singing songs like, "What Makes the Red Man Red" to where people are overly sensitive about everything. The pendulum has swung from one extreme to the other.
"But," I hear you say, "what's so bad about that?" Well, it stifles creativity, for one. It takes pretty big balls like Louis CK to be able to weather the kinds of shit that gets flung around when you make a joke that's close to the line. You just can't give a shit, but SJW's are really, really good at briganding and swaying those who do not have said balls. So the brave get shouted down. Look at the current GamerGate bullshit. Legitimate concerns about the ethical implications of a give-n-take between game developers and game reporting has now gotten bogged down in the mire of recrimination and gleeful cries of sexism. It's all bullshit from the top down. The GamerGate people were right initially, but then instead of sticking to the facts, they dragged themselves into the muck right along with the screaming hoards of SJW morons who don't give two shits about ethics as long as their agenda is being pushed forcefully forward. And yes, both sides acted (and in some cases are still acting) abysmally.
So your point completely misses the message that Seinfeld was saying, which is that the line to cross on college campuses has moved so far away from reality that humor is no longer possible without crossing it and enraging a populace that feels so entitled that any affront to their delicate sensibilities is tantamount to all the other real injustices in the world happening to real people who are really and truly oppressed.
Few people tackled it as head-on as this guy:Comedy can be and frequently is offensive and that's perfectly fine. If you are offended, tough shit. There is a funny side to literally everything. That's a part of life.
That's another thing--why does Seinfeld even care? He doesn't do colleges.i won't get in the way of this thread worshiping probably the richest and most powerful comedian in america (the world?) punching down and making fun of the people with the least power
You and I ... we have different opinions on the assertion as to who "gets it."I like that Carlin bit but everything you just said @PatrThom (-patrick) is putrid and proves that you really don't understand anything about the subject
I would assume because it affects people he knows.That's another thing--why does Seinfeld even care? He doesn't do colleges.
I mean, listen to the age he's complaining about. 14. Tumblr group age. That's not college age. I'm sure to old people he sounds wise, but he doesn't sound like he knows what he's talking about. He's acting like this really affects him, but it sounds more like an excuse to rant about something that pisses him off. Maybe instead he should have a talk with his daughter about what words mean. Then she can ignore him because she's 14, and get it later on without making a connection to anything he said ... because she's a teenager. What does he expect? This isn't difficult to comprehend.
Well, that depends, really. Is the comedian merely pandering to an audience, or is he trying to make art?Let's say he was right ... what becomes the issue there?
A comedian's job is to make the audience laugh, not for the audience to form a culture that laughs at the comedian's jokes no matter what.
hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmhumor must be at least a little on the edge or it's just milquetoast and funny to a scant few. The problem is that to be successful you have to be as general as possible while being funny, which is incredibly difficult..
And your experience in comedy is what again? And your comment added what to the conversation?hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
nope
My bad...I forgot about about it being slang for deletable female partsDon't say honeypot.
The tar baby myth/story existed long before Disney, and has literally nothing to do with black people (thus the wiki link)...Ah, the old Disney racism. It's rather amazing the stuff they did back then, isn't it? The whole Song of the South is just one big racist rant in cartoon (and some live action) form. Things our kids will see and go, "What the hell?!?"
4 minutes later:I'll add to y'alls discussion and actually leave the thread instead of just saying I will
hahahhahahahahahahhahahahahahahhahahahahahahahhahahahaha
To quote the Nostalgic Chick, Song of the South propagates the stereotype that black people are boring.Ah, the old Disney racism. It's rather amazing the stuff they did back then, isn't it? The whole Song of the South is just one big racist rant in cartoon (and some live action) form. Things our kids will see and go, "What the hell?!?"
Yeah, but tarbaby has been really, REALLY appropriated. Still I get your point.The tar baby myth/story existed long before Disney, and has literally nothing to do with black people (thus the wiki link)...
Like a honeypot, it means a sticky situation that's difficult to get out of. And, like honeypot, it has a secondary meaning that would get Charlie's panties all up in a twist.
This can be applied all over the place and we already do that, often, with a lot of stuff. It's strange how some people demand we look at other cultures in our time period with a lot of cultural relativism and accept differences in opinion and in view, while not applying the same relativism to a Western culture from a different time period. Of course you can say "now we know better", and it's a good thing we've learned from past mistakes and don't think the same things are acceptable - up to a point. The over-PC-ing as shown by Charlie, for example, is something that we'll either come to accept as the new norm, or it'll be something else people from the future will look back on as a form of mental victorian puritanism. Or, more likely, both, at different points of time.It's rather amazing the stuff they did back then, isn't it?[...] Things our kids will see and go, "What the hell?!?"
So has pussy.Yeah, but tarbaby has been really, REALLY appropriated.
Which is why I said I took his point.So has pussy.
To be fair, though, I thought you were originally using that term ironically, since the moment you mentioned the latin root, I immediately pictured you in a fedora.