The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ROY WOOD JR.’S SPECIAL TAPED IN ATLANTA

- By Rodney Ho rho@ajc.com

Stand-up comic, radio host and “Daily Show” correspond­ent Roy Wood Jr., at Center Stage in Midtown two weeks before Election Day, taped a Comedy Central special airing Sunday.

He didn’t mention Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump by name. He wanted to ensure the jokes would not feel dated four months later.

But this didn’t mean he was going to skirt political issues. Before even saying hi to the crowd, he jumped right into topics such as the Confederat­e flag, gang colors and Black Lives Matter protests. Race issues were very much top of mind.

“These issues tend to live on a lot longer than the people trying to solve them,” Wood said in a recent phone interview from New York, where he shoots “The Daily Show With Trevor Noah.” “No single president is going to solve race relations in one term.”

Then again, he would love a calmer, more equitable world even at the cost of comedic subject matter. “Then I could complain about McDonald’s charging extra for more sauce with their nuggets!” he said. “I would welcome any opportunit­y for my special to become topically irrelevant.”

About halfway through, he does an amusing bit comparing happier African music to African-American blues. “Our music tells you everything about the black psyche. Nowhere in black music is there a hit patriotic song,” he said. “We have a conflicted relationsh­ip with America. … Whites had a good time in America.” Then he sang a bit of Lee Greenwood’s “God Bless the U.S.A.” to prove his point.

“Closest is ‘Georgia on My Mind,’ ” Wood said. “Maybe that. … Good song. But the key words are ‘on my mind.’ Ray Charles was just thinking about Georgia. He didn’t tell you to go there!” He then added, “If you asked Ray Charles to be more specific, he would have said, ‘You go to Atlanta where the playas play. And we ride on them things like every day.” (He was quoting Jermaine Dupri’s 2002 song “Welcome to Atlanta.”)

How about the seemingly upbeat patriotic 1985 hit “Living in America”? Wood said that doesn’t work: “James Brown wrote that song for ‘Rocky 4,’ and after he finished singing it, Apollo Creed died in the ring. It’s a sad song!”

Wood chose Atlanta for his first Comedy Central special because it’s a major Southern city with a similar sensibilit­y to his hometown of Birmingham, Ala.

“I was very happy with the taping in Atlanta,” said Wood, who can be heard early afternoons on Kiss 104.1 with Art Terrell. “I was among friends and people who understand where I’m coming from, where a lot of my thoughts originate.”

His mom, his girlfriend and his infant son were all in the audience.

He said tracking the Trump administra­tion’s first month for “The Daily Show” has been “insane. Every day there’s something new to be in awe at. It’s shock and awe. He’s the king of that. It can be mentally draining. It’s women’s rights! It’s funding the wall! It’s the Muslim ban! It’s never a dull moment.”

To him, Trump is a problem, but what’s worse are the people he’s surroundin­g himself with such as Steve Bannon, Sean Spicer and Kellyanne Conway. He had no problems with Steve Harvey meeting with Trump before Inaugurati­on Day. “Maybe Steve should hang around and talk some sense into Trump. The people around him aren’t doing it!”

For now, Wood said Trump’s world is something he and every other American has to get through. “The Trump administra­tion is this huge alien ship that just arrived on the world. We have to come together to survive this. Then we can go back to arguing about celebritie­s!”

And he’s an optimist: “You gotta take your hits. We’ll wobble as a society. I don’t think we’ll fall.”

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Roy Wood Jr.

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