Sweet n Condensed Keaton

5 Aug 2012

The best response we’ve heard to Daniel Tosh’s ‘misquoted’ rape jokes by Curtis Luciani

(Trigger warning; rape, rape jokes)

Let’s imagine a world in which women cut men’s dicks off. Like, frequently. To the extent that one in five men has had his dick cut off by a woman or had a woman attempt to cut his dick off.

(I apologize immediately if it sounds like I’m being flip. I am not being flip. Imagine the pain and shame and humiliation of someone cutting your dick off. Imagine it in earnest.)

Sometimes it’s a clear-cut case where a woman attacks you in the street, out of nowhere, and cuts your dick off. But more often it’s a situation where you actually know the woman, maybe you trust her, maybe you think everything’s okay, and then one day she cuts your dick off.

Still with me? This is going to take a while. I’ll tell you when I’m done. (And if you think I’m being insufferably self-righteous: Good news, you don’t have to read this!)

Okay, now let’s also say that the shame and guilt around having your dick cut off is so strong that many dick-cuttings go completely unreported. After all, someone is likely to raise the question of whether or not you were “asking for it” in one way or another. And if you do accuse a woman of cutting your dick off, you can expect to see people (quite naturally) rally to her defense and slander your character in response.

You can expect to see her friends… who are maybe also friends or yours… shrug their shoulders and say “Well, I don’t know, it’s complicated… it sounds like something was just happening between the two of them and maybe it got out of hand. I dunno. But I know that Sarah’s not a bad gal. I know she would never, like, MALICIOUSLY cut a dude’s dick off.”

So, a shitty state of affairs for the men-folk of our imaginary world, yes?

Now imagine that in this world, something like 90 percent of professional performing comedians are women. And they’ve accepted that there are certain codes of behavior when it comes to comedy. Most people who “like comedy” generally accept the premise that there are no subject areas that cannot be somehow given a comic treatment, but it is also accepted, as a practical rule, that as the subject gets more troubling, more intense, more painful, a more skilled approach is necessary to find the humor in it.

However, it is also accepted that people are people and they are going to have authentic responses to things. It is accepted, for example, that you probably should not go in front of an audience that contains several black people and start tossing around the n-word unless you have an EXCEPTIONALLY sophisticated and road-tested routine built around it, one that you are confident will overcome the very significant risk you are incurring. If a comedian did this and did NOT overcome the risk, no one would be shocked if the audience shouted her down and stormed her out of the club, nor would anyone be particularly eager to defend her.

HOWEVER, there’s this ONE thing. Many of the comediennes of this world have this ONE little sticking point. One little thing. It just IRKS the hell out of them that they can’t seem to make jokes about cutting dicks off without some whiny pussy male in the audience throwing a shit fit about it!

Now, sure, there’s a few comediennes at the top of their game who can pull it off. Their approach is skillful, and they somehow make the joke without minimalizing or trivializing the actual pain involved. But then the rest of them think, “Well, geez, if they can do it, why can’t I? It’s not fair, darn it! I should be able to work with the same material as someone much better than me and get the same result and not make anyone hate me or say mean things about me on the Internet! Waaaaahhh!

“I mean, after all, do that many men REALLY get their dicks cut off? I’ve heard the statistic, but that’s probably overblown. And I bet a lot of them were asking for it. I mean, in any case, there’s a lot of grey area. I know one thing for sure: none of the men I KNOW has ever had his dick cut off. If they had, they would tell me, right? I mean, right? And besides, there’s a principle at stake here. I AM AN ARTIST. I should be able to say whatever shitty thing I want, and people should be able to suppress their authentic response to it!

“And if they DON’T suppress their authentic response to it: why, that’s censorship or something! Besides, I know this and that example of a time where a comedienne I know made a joke that wasn’t even ABOUT dick-cutting, and some whiny pussy dude got upset about it anyway! It’s just these humorless masculinists! They can’t take a joke about anything anyway. So, since I can think of examples where a comedienne was unfairly criticized by someone without a sense of humor, this must be what happens in all cases.”

Okay, I think we see what I’m getting at here.

Fine, yes, WHAT-THE-FUCK-EVER. I will concede the following points that every comedian wants us all so badly to concede:

1) Theoretically, there is no subject that should be considered off-limits for humor.

2) There will always be some example where a performer of extremely high skill can take something very painful and make it work.

But…

Here’s what YOU need to understand:

1) Rape is way, WAY more prevalent than you seem to think it is. Are there more than five women in your audience? You do the math, and then you run the little fantasy scenario that I just put together in your head, and you tell me how it feels.

2) I ain’t buying any of that “If I can make jokes about genocide, why can’t I make jokes about rape?” Horseshit, unless you made those genocide jokes during a gig at the Srebrenica Funny Bone. You got away with making a joke about genocide because your odds of having a holocaust survivor’s kid in the audience were pretty fucking low.

And if you did happen to have one in the audience, and he heckled you, walked out, and wrote something nasty on the internet… would you be more likely to be a human being and say “Wow. I can understand why that person’s authentic response to what I was doing was so emotional and negative. Maybe my genocide material just isn’t good enough to justify the pain that it inflicts. Maybe I need more skill in order to pull this off.” Or are you gonna be a lousy piece of shit and say, “Yeah, I apologize, I guess, IF YOU WERE OFFENDED.”

Offended hasn’t got anything to do with it, moron.

People have wounds, and those wounds are painful. That doesn’t have shit to do with the weak concept of “taking offense.” If someone talks about Texas being a shitty state, I might “take offense” at that. Fine, whatever. All of us who like comedy are generally in agreement with the idea that “taking offense” is lame, and a comedian should be willing to “offend” whenever he or she wants to.

But causing pain is quite a different fucking matter. Your job as a comedian is to take us through pain, transcend pain, transform pain. And if you don’t get that, you are a fucking bully, and I’ve got zero time for bullies.

-Curtis Luciani 

13 Jun 2012

Worst* analogy of why women are looked down upon for sleeping around: (*originally titled Best)

lovelytetris:

“If a key opened many doors, it would be considered an awesome key.

Now… If a door was opened by many keys, it would be a shitty door wouldn’t it?”

THANKS CURRAN.

The function of a woman is not a doorway to something else. Women are not merely obstacles between a human (who uses a key) and the prize that is within it. This analogy dehumanizes women by making them the door in and of itself while making men the capable human holders of some awesome “key” used only to unlock those doors. At first glance this seems like a funny little analogy, which in and of itself is scary, but on closer inspection it is a revealing example of male patriarchy and dominance in the USA (and the world) today. 

(p.s.) original poster was quoting someone else, and was offended. 

8 May 2012

I think a satirical look at this issue is just what we needed, because clearly common sense and logic just aren’t going to work.

16 Apr 2012

Another Myth about Rape

“Then, as Marie would tell the court, Marsalis steered her to her bed, pinned her down and raped her again. This time, there was no blackout to cloud her perception; Marsalis offered no smooth talk as he pulled up his scrubs and left. Marie made her way to the shower, curled up under the water and cried. Yet she didn’t even consider calling the police.

Think most women would behave differently - that in the same situation, they would jump up and call 911? Think again. According to government estimates, a mere 19 percent of rapes , including stranger rapes (which account for less than 20 percent, btw) are ever reported in the first place.”

I’m posting this not because this piece of the story is shocking, but because Marsalis had been accused of date rape by twenty-one women, seven of which testified against him in one court, seven educated professional women, and they were unable to get a single rape conviction against the man. Not one single conviction against a man who had pretended to be a doctor, a CIA employee, and even an astronaut, whom a court-appointed psychologist had decided met the legal definition of a “sexually violent predator.” And this was the second time he’d been on trial! He was immediately arrested for this trial after his first trial, in which three women came forward saying they had been raped. The jury (as it always seems to be) was cherry picked, and many of those with real-life experience with sexual assault were weeded out.

This is a personal plea to anyone reading this, to get educated on rape, especially acquaintance rape. Learn what to say if a friend comes to you, and learn what constitutes it. And remember, people are as likely to lie about a rape as they are about a murder, and 1 in 5 women has been either the victim of sexual assault, or attempted sexual assault. We need to work together to change rape culture in America, because so far it hasn’t been stopped, and it is far too common to be ignored.

(P.S. Jeffrey Marsalis was convicted of 2 accounts of sexual assault at the end of the last trial. Though the minimum sentence could have been as little as community service, the judge delivered 10.5-21 years behind bars saying “What you were was a wolf in sheep’s clothing. Your lifestyle was a fantasy. What’s happened to your victims is reality.” Thank you Judge Geroff.)

(P.P.S. Jeffrey Marsalis was put on trial again, two years after the last two trials. This time he was finally convicted of rape. Why? The story was almost the same, however he had raped a lesbian who had immediately called the police and procured a rape kit the next day. He was sentenced to life in prison in the Idaho State Penitentiary.)