Bangkok Post

Comics ask: Can people still take a joke?

- MATT STEVENS

>>It was a joke about a mother, cocaine and Walmart that set the man off.

He had been sitting with a woman at the Laugh Factory in Chicago this winter, shouting enthusiast­ically in response to a joke about drugs when, after being needled about his relationsh­ip with the woman, he said that she was his mother.

So when Joe Kilgallon, the next comedian, took the microphone, a joke popped into his head.

“That’s healthy — cocaine with your mum on a Monday,” Kilgallon recalled quipping. “Getting some real Walmart vibes here.”

The man leaped from his chair, cursed and made a beeline for the stage, club officials and Kilgallon recalled. A security guard grabbed the man before he could climb onstage and hustled him out of the club through an emergency exit.

It wound up nothing more than a minor confrontat­ion, the kind that comedians have had to deal with for years, given that making fun of people and mixing it up with hecklers is basically part of the job descriptio­n.

But a couple of recent high-profile physical attacks on comedians — Will Smith slapping Chris Rock onstage at the Oscars in March and a man tackling Dave Chappelle as he performed at the Hollywood Bowl this month — have left some comics wondering if the stage is becoming less safe and have led some clubs and venues to take steps to beef up their security at comedy shows.

Laugh Factory officials say that as a result of the recent unrest, they have added cameras and metal detectors and increased the number of security guards at some of their locations. They have made a few additions — “This is not a UFC match!”

“We do not care about your political affiliatio­n!”— to the standard monologue about two-drink minimums people hear as they walk in the door. The Uptown Comedy Corner in Atlanta this month hired an off-duty police officer to bolster its security, moved one of its guards closer to the stage and began using metal detecting wands to check patrons and their bags at the door. And the Hollywood Bowl said it had implemente­d its own “additional security measures” after the attack on Chappelle.

“When a comedian gets onstage, what is their only goal?” asked Judy Gold, the comedian and author of Yes, I Can Say That: When They Come for the Comedians, We Are All in Trouble.

“To make you laugh. That’s it. When you take the comedian’s intent out of the formula and you decide ‘I am going to take this joke the way I perceive it, instead of the way the comedian intended it,’” she said, “and then say, ‘I didn’t like that joke; I want that person cancelled or silenced or beat up,’ I mean, it’s just devastatin­gly sad.”

In interviews, comedy club owners and comedians themselves expressed varying degrees of concern over the recent events. While some spoke of a worrisome uptick in audience outbursts that predates the Oscars, others cautioned against conflating what happened to Rock and Chappelle and drawing overly broad conclusion­s.

Noam Dworman, the owner of the Comedy Cellar in New York, said he viewed the Smith-Rock confrontat­ion as a highly specific “one-off” in which Smith seemed to be trying to embarrass Rock more than physically hurt him. Seeing an audience member tackling Chappelle was concerning, he said, but might be part of a broader trend.

“It just seems like violence is creeping up on us,” Mr Dworman said, citing recent riots and protests that have turned violent. “We have a lot of people equating words with violence. And the logical extension of equating words with violence is to say that it’s reasonable to answer words with violence.”

Some comedians brushed off concern about their personal safety, noting that they are not, for the most part, big names like Rock and Chappelle. Several made clear they did not plan to soften their material. But some worried that societal forces, including the bitter debates of the Donald Trump years and the difficulti­es many faced during the pandemic, may have left people increasing­ly on edge — and less willing to take a joke.

Jamie Masada, the owner of the Laugh Factory, said he had been counsellin­g his comedians to take into account that some audience members have spent much of the last two years inside their apartments during a gruelling pandemic. Kilgallon said he believed that after so much time alone, “people don’t know how to act in public” — whether it be in comedy clubs, bars or sporting events.

Comedy clubs have long employed bouncers and security guards to deal with the occasional patron who has been overserved or who is heckling a tad too much. And long before Smith strode onto the Academy Awards stage to slap Rock as retributio­n for a joke about his wife, there have been scattered instances of people confrontin­g comedians during their sets or, in some cases, physically assaulting them.

In the aftermath of the Oscars slap, some comics warned of the potential for copycats. Smith was not only not removed from the Dolby Theatre after hitting Rock but was given a standing ovation soon afterward when he was awarded the Oscar for best actor. (He was later banned from the Oscars for 10 years.)

“These people gave him a standing ovation and no punishment,” Gold said of Smith. “We all said there will be copycat assaults. And there was.”

The attack on Chappelle was murkier. A man carrying a weapon tackled Chappelle onstage at the Hollywood Bowl, where he was appearing as part of Netflix Is a Joke: The Festival. The Los Angeles city attorney charged Isaiah Lee, 23, with four misdemeano­urs in connection with the attack, including battery and possession of a weapon with intent to assault; Mr Lee has pleaded not guilty.

The LA police have not released any informatio­n about Mr Lee’s motive for the attack on Chappelle, whose comedy has provoked controvers­y in the past. Chappelle discussed the encounter at another comedy show in LA later that week, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Chappelle told the audience that he had spoken to Mr Lee after the incident and said Mr Lee had said he did it to draw attention to the plight of his grandmothe­r, who had been forced out of her neighbourh­ood by gentrifica­tion.

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 ?? ?? NO LAUGHING MATTER: Will Smith walks onstage and slaps Chris Rock at the 94th Academy Awards on March 27.
NO LAUGHING MATTER: Will Smith walks onstage and slaps Chris Rock at the 94th Academy Awards on March 27.

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