User 73706
Banned
Still funny to me. You can put a puppy in clothes and a stroller but it doesnt make it a baby, so I dont see whats wrong with calling a trans man a man, thats how they were born and how I would always see them.

Still funny to me. You can put a puppy in clothes and a stroller but it doesnt make it a baby, so I dont see whats wrong with calling a trans man a man, thats how they were born and how I would always see them.
Jesus fuck dude, what's wrong with you?Still funny to me. You can put a puppy in clothes and a stroller but it doesnt make it a baby, so I dont see whats wrong with calling a trans man a man, thats how they were born and how I would always see them.
Still funny to me. You can put a puppy in clothes and a stroller but it doesnt make it a baby, so I dont see whats wrong with calling a trans man a man, thats how they were born and how I would always see them.
. . . What you said is technically correct for reasons you probably don't even understand you're saying. Like, if you gave a puppy medicine where they'd eventually turn human it'd be the same thing, and a trans man actively IS born with a more male brain and taking testosterone makes most of them grow beards and be hairy like the rest of us who were born male in body.Still funny to me. You can put a puppy in clothes and a stroller but it doesnt make it a baby, so I dont see whats wrong with calling a trans man a man, thats how they were born and how I would always see them.
You're an asshole.
Still funny to me. You can put a puppy in clothes and a stroller but it doesnt make it a baby, so I dont see whats wrong with calling a trans man a man, thats how they were born and how I would always see them.
Still funny to me. You can put a puppy in clothes and a stroller but it doesnt make it a baby, so I dont see whats wrong with calling a trans man a man, thats how they were born and how I would always see them.
Still funny to me. You can put a puppy in clothes and a stroller but it doesnt make it a baby, so I dont see whats wrong with calling a trans man a man, thats how they were born and how I would always see them.
It's always had this sort of issue, but that was probably the most blatant piece of shit.This thread took a nasty turn.
Still funny to me. You can put a puppy in clothes and a stroller but it doesnt make it a baby, so I dont see whats wrong with calling a trans man a man, thats how they were born and how I would always see them.
But it was apparently a good joke.
""The bit was apparently a big hit during Dave's set at the Palladium"
"People get too easily offendered these days acause of the outrage culture." - Diotheles or Chartreucius or one of those quote guys, idk, probably
I'm kinda scared to say anything about this frankly but those of you comparing this racism, isn't quite one to one man...at all. Of the all the stand ups I've watched on my time on this earth, never once have I heard a joke along the lines of "black people have smaller brains" or even close to that, because racist jokes from real comedians are funnier then that and not so deeply offensive. I can't believe people on here got away with saying this shit.
Or at least why criticizing is vital. Contrasting views need to be out there so people know this isn't something to just take as "speaking the truth" and that there is real harm in continuing to perpetuate those views. And puppy analogies are on the kinder end of the spectrum given how some just snap and beat them up.SlaughterX comments are exactly why dave's "jokes" shouldn't be condoned. It allows people the security ti continue being bigoted assholes.
SlaughterX comments are exactly why dave's "jokes" shouldn't be condoned. It allows people the security ti continue being bigoted assholes.
The whole crux of the "debate" seems like people conflating criticism with censorship.
The whole crux of the "debate" seems like people conflating criticism with censorship.
Shitty as it is, I figure it'll just be another bit that fades before the comedy special/end of the tour or just reworked. W/e
Still funny to me. You can put a puppy in clothes and a stroller but it doesnt make it a baby, so I dont see whats wrong with calling a trans man a man, thats how they were born and how I would always see them.
Anyone still wondering how bad transphobic jokes can be harmful?
I'm kinda scared to say anything about this frankly but those of you comparing this racism, isn't quite one to one man...at all. Of the all the stand ups I've watched on my time on this earth, never once have I heard a joke along the lines of "black people have smaller brains" or even close to that, because racist jokes from real comedians are funnier then that and not so deeply offensive. I can't believe people on here got away with saying this shit.
Yep. Subjects should be open to comedy but there is a difference between shock comedy that has a purpose or wants to highlight some issue and just plain bigotry and ignorance. I think louis ck does a great job of the former. I'd say most of Dave Chappelle is usually the same
Honestly I might bear a little responsibility for Gekko's offense because my question was "what if a comedian was saying he shouldn't be forced to consider black people more than 3/5ths of a person?" And that is demonstrably worse than Dave's joke; Dave isn't calling trans people sub-human animals. Which is why I apologized. In my head the greater point was that it shouldn't be an imposition when someone asks to have their identity respected. But I probably went overboard.Really though, I'm actually super confused by Gekko's comments. It almost sounds like they are claiming that it's offensive because transphobic jokes are way more blatant than racist jokes are. It kind of makes the points people are trying to make - that comedians would say much more horrible, bigoted things about trans people than they would about black people.
I think there's a little bigotry there. He threw the "tranny" slur out there, and he rejects that a transgender identity is real. I love everything Dave did about race and I have faith that he can learn some lessons from the backlash because he is truly a sensitive and thinking person. His "Inside the Actor's Studio" hour is literally one of my favorite interviews of any person, ever. That's why this is all so sucky, as a huge fan of his.Agreed. That's why I want to give Dave the benefit of the doubt until I hear his set for myself. I'm not for censoring comedy, but as many, many people in this thread have rightly pointed out very few are even hinting at actual censorship. What people are doing is criticizing (i.e., critically analyzing the intent, meaning, and impact of the joke). I just respect Dave's craft and intellect too much to assume that he's a bigot without hearing his words for myself.
Maybe he's still behind the curve on trans issues, as a lot of people are -- as I surely am -- but I don't doubt that he'll catch up after hashing things out, both in private and on the stage. I don't think he's SlaughterX...
Look I'm just saying bringing race to this just doesn't feel right especially after what black people have been through. For the record I completely understand why this whole thing is offense. I would love to elaborate but I need to go back to work lol.
I think there's a little bigotry there. He threw the "tranny" slur out there, and he rejects that a transgender identity is real. I love everything Dave did about race and I have faith that he can learn some lessons from the backlash because he is truly a sensitive and thinking person. His "Inside the Actor's Studio" hour is literally one of my favorite interviews of any person, ever. That's why this is all so sucky, as a huge fan of his.He's behind the times on this and needs to catch up.
Look I'm just saying bringing race to this just doesn't feel right especially after what black people have been through. For the record I completely understand why this whole thing is offense. I would love to elaborate but I need to go back to work lol.
I think the problem with everyone in this thread saying (and persisting) that this joke is offensive to the transsexual community is that they are completely blowing it out of proportion. They are putting words like "delusional" into Chappelle's bit (without, by the way, fully understanding the context of the joke) and are going on about the challenges the transsexual community faces.
It is unnecessary to associate a comedy bit to how an individual (the comedian) or a community (the audience) feels about transsexuals. Just like when people laugh at terrorism, cheating, marriage, pedophilia, etc. this laughter does not represent a derogatory viewpoint of these subjects or the people that suffer from them.
When people (like me) on the side of "comedy has no limits" defend Chappelle and others, it's because essentially, the people voicing the offense they take are taking things the wrong way. They are associating a joke with something far more hurtful that may not even apply to the comedian or audience's intentions in their laughter.
For example, that thread on the teacher pushing down a special needs 4 year old? That's awful, and there's nothing funny about it. Now if a comedian jokes about wanting to "slap the shit out of" a special needs kid (I could see Louis CK saying this, for example), the room will erupt into laughter. It's all about context.
Honestly I might bear a little responsibility for Gekko's offense because my question was "what if a comedian was saying he shouldn't be forced to consider black people more than 3/5ths of a person?" And that is demonstrably worse than Dave's joke; Dave isn't calling trans people sub-human animals. Which is why I apologized. In my head the greater point was that it shouldn't be an imposition when someone asks to have their identity respected. But I probably went overboard.
What are you talking about? TC has full context, he saw it live.
But many who are forming a strong opinion have not. Even so, do you disagree with what I've said?
But many who are forming a strong opinion have not. Even so, do you disagree with what I've said?
I do. I think that you're painting comedy with too broad of a brush. I mean, let's look at the things you used as examples:
1. Jokes about terrorism - Not the same as jokes about trans people, because jokes about terrorism are meant to lighten the moods of people affected by terrorism as well as to diminish the terrorists and thus our fears of them.
2. Jokes about cheating - Not the same, because the subject is presumed to be dishonest and being the butt of a joke brings it upon themselves.
3. Jokes about marriage - Marriage is entirely an equal-opportunity thing, and married couples are not an oppressed class of people, thus it can't be said to be equivalent.
A lot of these things don't have the gravity that jokes about trans people have. You may not like the phrase, but a lot of it is absolutely "punching up" (or at the very least, not punching down). Jokes made at the expense of people who are either equipped to handle them, or people who we don't care if they cannot. Thus, it becomes important to consider whether being socially responsible is necessary with one joke and not the next - and given that Dave Chappelle very much so acted on social responsibility with a lot of his bits on The Chappelle Show, I do think that he is in a position to make the same level of consideration for jokes aimed at people who are not him. The best-case scenario for Chappelle is that these jokes were in fact made in "good fun", and that he has no problem with trans people whatsoever - but even then, who is to say that these jokes are not being received in the same way that his jokes about race were?
Satire is not meant to be a critical analysis of reality. That's why.
Satire overindulges , makes fun of social archetypes and rules , mocks civilized society.
that's how it works , and it's an achievement of our culture.
I promise i'll elaborate this tomorrow , now it's too late and i have to wake up early. I wasn't expecting this reaction.
Regarding your explanation on jokes about terrorism, it can be argued, from those sensitive to the issue, that it takes light of human lives that were taken prematurely and violently. I personally think it's not a commendable standpoint to take, to say "my issue is more important than yours" but to each his own.
The transsexual community is not alone in being made fun of during a comedy sketch. You're placing too much weight on a joke (which, again, you personally have not heard in it's entirety) and associating to all the troubles that a community faces. As long as a comedian isn't spouting off in interviews or radio shows, that transsexuals are not human, and laughing all the while they smugly sip their coffee, I think a lot of the offense is misplaced, and does not apply to this case.
Firstly, yes, there's a wrong way to make light of something. When South Park made light of Al Qaeda, they did so by making them look like Loony Tune characters. This works because it helps to relieve the tensions that Al Qaeda was trying to create. When Gilbert Gottfried made nearly a dozen tweets joking about a tremendous loss of life, it was awful because it was making fun of >10,000 people dying, not making fun of something people can get behind. In our history, there have been and indeed are jokes that run afoul, I don't know why there is such a broad "one-size-fits-all" defense for all jokes.
Secondly, again, the argument of "everyone gets made fun of" falls flat because not everyone is met with the same level of discrimination, and thus this broad strokes approach makes no sense. Making fun of a white guy isn't the same as making fun of a black guy, even if both are acceptable - even Louis C.K. thinks as such.
Well, tweets that make insensitive remarks over the death of innocent people is clearly a means to get mad (more than offended, really) especially when they're as unfunny and tasteless as making puns. I'm not necessarily painting comedy in a broad stroke, I'm not even saying people shouldn't get offended over certain jokes. I simply think that many people are overreacting here and unfairly holding Chappelle as something he very well may not be over an unheard joke.
Anyways, agree to disagree.
This is probably off topic but it kind of surprised Chappelle is getting heat for a joke on Trans people when it seems like Daniel Tosh spouts far more horrorific jokes about just about every group of people each time I see him. That's basically the entire point of Tosh.O. Not saying Chappelle shouldn't get some heat for a bad joke but is he an easier target than a white guy on Comedy Central?
Daniel Tosh is trash-tier, and frankly, he elicits plenty of controversy. I've had a debate with a co-worker about how much of a shit he is, and I won that debate. If Dave Chappelle generates controversy, it's because he's talented and a much bigger name. Conversely, the white creators of South Park get even more heat than Chappelle does.
Maybe I'm just out of the loop then. The last bit of controversy I heard about Trey and Mat was over the Book of Mormon.