Jewish Group
Related: About this forumChappelle Was Right (Yair Rosenberg)
As I watched Dave Chappelles much-discussed Saturday Night Live monologue poking fun at recent anti-Semitic incidents involving Black celebrities, I finally figured out why I no longer felt comfortable cracking jokes about anti-Semitic conspiracy theories.
In his 15-minute appearance, Chappelle, a habitual line-stepper, deliberately mocked the presumptions of both anti-Semites and their critics, with little concern for where the chips fell. He closed his potent performance with a pronouncement: It shouldnt be this scary to talk about anything. Its making my job incredibly difficult, and to be honest with you, Im getting sick of talking to a crowd like this. I love you to death, and I thank you for your support, and I hope they dont take anything away from mewhoever they are. In context, this felt like a cheap but clever attempt to immunize himself against criticismsay nothing, and his comedic choices go unchallenged; say something, and youve proved him right.
That said, Chappelle is correct that its become more difficult to poke fun at anti-Semitism in front of an audience, but not because some censorious Jewish cabal is looking over the shoulder of Netflixs multimillion-dollar man. The problem, I realized, is that as anti-Semitism and related conspiracy theories become more normalized in our discourse, laughing about them becomes harder, because you never know who might not get the joke.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/11/why-its-become-harder-to-joke-about-anti-semitism/672120/
LonePirate
(13,893 posts)The right wing has been fanning these flames of bigotry for a while now and they have caught on with enough people that I fear violence is very likely in the next couple of years. Those are some dark clouds on the horizon.
JohnSJ
(96,551 posts)the Lionel character subtly mocking Bunkers stereotype assumptions went over his head, until one episode Lionel finally said enough is enough
Well, the time is long past due. Racism, antisemitism, sexism, bigotry, etc. isnt funny anymore. It never was
JustAnotherGen
(33,585 posts)I watched on demand. The only "joke I got" was the Ferguson / Hollywood analogy. I didn't laugh out loud - but I got the statement. It just wasn't funny.
This is someone who loved his black white supremacist (Clayton Bixby), music by race, and race lottery skits.
This rise in anti-Semitism is insidious and sneaky. It's not a laughing matter.
Behind the Aegis
(54,860 posts)Dave Chappelle hosted Saturday Night Live last weekend and was unable to escape controversy.
If youve been online in the past few days, you might have read some of the backlash surrounding Chappelles SNL appearance, but if not, heres why people are upset.
First, its important to note that the comedians hosting gig was shrouded in controversy even before he took to the stage, with reports surfacing late last week suggesting that a number of SNL writers were furious that hed been selected to host.
Theyre not going to do the show, an insider told Page Six last week, referring to a number of writers. A representative for Chapelle has since denied this, stating that there was no evidence of a boycott.
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Seems to me, he knew EXACTLY what he was doing and did it because he KNEW he would not be allowed to make those "jokes".