(inquisitive music)
- Breaking news, that
this is some more of.
Professional
guy-you-only-just-heard-about,
Shane Gillis,
was recently canceled
from "Saturday Night Live"
over telling a few jokes.
And what kind of liberal fascist
1984 dystopian future are we living in
where a good, honest American is denied
such a basic human right as being hired
by a lukewarm late night television show
just because he pushed a few
boundaries with his humor?
Isn't that what humor is all about?
Pushing boundaries with edgy
side-splitting jabs like...
- Damn, Chinatown's (bleep) nuts.
- [Host] It's crazy.
- It is full (bleep) China.
Dude, it's (bleep) Chine-ee down there.
- I wonder how that started?
They just built one
(bleep) up looking building
and people were like, all right?
No one said anything--
- That's (bleep) Chinks live there, huh?
- This just in, ha ha ha ha,
what a joke he just told.
What with the whole set up of the joke
and punchline of that joke
clearly formatted like a joke,
as opposed to a guy just
saying off-hand racial slurs.
This is what jokes are.
Let's hear another joke.
- It's funny, too, 'cause
that's more annoying
than any other minority
playing music at a restaurant
loud on their phone.
- You think an Asian--
- An Asian trying to learn English
bothers me more than
someone listening to, like,
Lil Uzi Vert while I'm
trying to eat (bleep) dinner.
- That's hilarious.
Yes, that's hilarious.
What a hilarious joke
where you are bothered
by Asian people trying to learn English,
and other hilarious jokes
like calling people (bleep) and stuff.
Now in Shane's defense,
his offer to apologize
if anyone wants him to
does mention that he's been mostly bad
at comedy for the last 10 years.
But honestly we're not here to (bleep)
on this specific guy.
You know, he got SNL and he lost it.
And aside from the casual racism
and homophobia and racial slurs,
he's not unfunny.
He was in a sketch a year ago
about a fireman who saves a family
and during the interview
the reporter brings up this.
- The family of four was saved
thanks to the efforts of one
firefighter, Shane McGillis.
Shane, you fought this
fire for three hours.
- Yeah, yeah, yeah, it was
pretty brutal up there.
- Can you confirm this is you?
- And like that's funny.
The sketch devolves into the reporter
digging up Trump stuff and
blowing some out of proportion
and actively trying to
get the fireman fired
and then he does and it's a funny.
It's a good, not untrue point
and Shane is funny in it.
And I think it actually
would have been interesting
to introduce his point of
view to a some might say,
lukewarm and annoyingly
liberal comedy show
that ultimately challenges
nothing about the status quo,
if that's why they wanted to hire him.
But actually, apparently,
they just wanted to appeal to more people
and make more money by hiring
like a token Trumpy kinda guy
and then they were surprised
when that manifested
in some homophobia and racial slurs,
and that's hilarious.
Funniest thing SNL's done in years.
If Shane did it on purpose, as a bit,
(bleep) man, you're brilliant, good joke.
But, of course, whether or not you think
the casual racial slurs
and complaining about Asian
people trying to learn English
are jokes or even funny jokes,
like pushing aside the humor aspect,
it totally seems indicative
that this brand new outrage culture,
it's new and real,
is digging through everyone's
past like this, huh, you know?
Jim Jefferies and Bill Burr, am I right?
- Well, this is just Cancel-culture.
The guy shouldn't have been fired.
It's just a couple of
things back in his history.
We're gonna go through everyone's history?
- You just scroll through,
help cat out of a tree, that's not it.
(laughing)
Help grandmother walk across
the street, that's not it.
You know?
Said something on a podcast, there it is!
(laughing)
I mean, you could do that,
you could honestly do that to anybody.
- Yeah, who the heck are these PC warriors
tireless digging through
this guy's history
to find one little a bunch of mistakes
from his youth back in September of 2018?
Fun aside, that is also a perfect summary
of what's actually happening here,
in that clip Bill Burr later
makes a really awkward joke
about Asian people at lumber yards
and no one really laughs that hard
because it just didn't
quite work as a joke.
And then he gets mad that
no one laughed that hard
and accuses the audience of being too PC.
- If you say something like that
you can't work on a sketch show
but it's okay for what?
He can work at a lumber yard?
(laughing)
Yeah?
He's certainly gonna meet
more Asians there, right?
(laughing)
Than on SNL!
It's a joke about how
SNL's not hiring Asians.
Jesus Christ, now I'm in trouble?
- It's almost like if you're
famous enough as a comedian
you feel entitled to immediate praise
and blame the audience
when a joke doesn't work
despite it being a funny
observation about SNL
not hiring Asians until this year.
But whatever, we're gonna move on.
I'm sure that has nothing to do with
any of the rest of what
we're gonna talk about.
So let's actually back up for a second
before we dive into the
idea of Cancel-culture.
First, by defining what it is
for the sake of this conversation.
But also because it seems
that a lot of the time
Cancel-culture is just,
it's people being mad
at your (bleep) opinion.
Like if you write a bad
column in a newspaper
or tweet about how much harmless fun it is
getting your face dicked-in
and everyone tells you it's (bleep),
you're not being canceled,
you just did a bad job.
That racist kid getting
booted from Harvard
wasn't canceled,
but he was kicked from an institution
for apparently violating their standards.
Now, I'm not saying you
have to agree with that,
or that mob justice is good
because a lot of the times it's very bad,
and public shaming can
really get out of hand.
Social media, digital photos,
better record keeping,
and the internet in general has created
a situation where everyone's past
is going to be painfully available.
And as Millennials grow older,
we'll have to figure out
how to deal with that
and what the forgiveness process will be.
It's extremely complicated and
distressing to think about.
But it often seems like the large canopy
of the Cancel-culture phrase
often makes it hard to address,
which is why I'm really
going to hone it in.
I'm not talking about a bunch of people
dog-piling some rando for
saying dumb (bleep) on Twitter
that never would have gotten attention
had someone pointed it out.
I'm talking about famous
people, comedians, entertainers
being canceled or fired from jobs or gigs
because someone dug up
an offensive statement
or tweet or photo from their past.
That is, after all, why
we're using the word canceled
and why any recent
article about the subject
is specifically talking about
people like Shane Gillis
or that Justin Trudeau
fellow from Up America
with all the trees.
Also to be clear,
the idea that a person's
entire career could be ruined,
like ended over a couple
of offensive tweets
is terrible and I'm not a fan of that.
Unsubscribe.
Luckily, that's literally
never really happened really.
Like it's not a thing, at all.
You don't believe me?
Just ask my good friend Bill Burr again.
This time saying that
Cancel-culture isn't a problem.
- But I mean, I don't go on stage
and worry about what people are thinking.
It's a really weird time where people
are just bringing this all the time
like this is a major problem.
I'm not experiencing it.
I think it's like a half-a-dozen
stories and like usual,
they're tryna act like you
know, the sky is falling.
It isn't.
- This version of him is right.
The answer to the question,
"Has Cancel-culture
and SJWs gone too far?"
is a resounding, not really.
Most audiences love offensive (bleep)
and the few who don't usually walk out,
Twitter hasn't changed that.
In fact, name a comedian or entertainer
who has their career canceled
over a few statements or jokes they made,
like truly canceled.
Rosanne Barr, she's
probably the closest one,
although she's currently
planning a comeback as we speak.
James Gunn, not exactly like it
actually affected his career.
And he is, in fact, back at
the job he was fired from,
plus a Suicide Squad do-over film
featuring only some of the original cast
that we're apparently going
to just allow DC to do.
But anyway, not related.
Gilbert Gottfried is no longer a duck
because he made fun of dead people,
but his career isn't over.
Paula Deen, you know,
that real racist lady
is currently hosting cooking
shows like nothing happened.
Alec Baldwin just got
his own Celebrity Roast.
Heck, even Mel
"The-Jews-Start-All-The-Wars
"Sugar-Tits" Gibson has received
multiple Oscar nominations
in the last few years.
Then Gary Oldman defended him,
said that Hollywood was "run by Jews"
and went on to win an
Oscar for Best Actor.
So thanks, all the Jews
that run Hollywood,
for that award you gave him,
or so I've heard from Gary Oldman.
Scarlet Johansson is a torrent
of hilariously bad comments
and we (bleep) love her.
SNL fired Jenny Slate for
saying not racial slurs,
but the word (bleep) at
midnight on a Saturday.
She, too, is doing great.
Another person who got literally canceled
was Bill Maher's Politically Incorrect,
and it wasn't because he
offended the snowflakes
by being racist or homophobic
or when he compared mentally
disabled people to dogs
or the numerous times he's
said it's totally cool
for a female teacher to (bleep)
their 14-year-old male students,
or any number of his other terrible,
lazy, scumbag opinions he espouses
on his long-running not-canceled
show currently on HBO.
No, Politically Incorrect got canceled
because Maher implied the
United States was cowardly
for launching missiles
from 1000 miles away
and then the White House Press Secretary
used his government position
to condemn private citizen Maher
and sponsors pulled because
he insulted the troops
and then he got canceled.
So maybe the real snowflakes
are our government and military.
(inquisitive music)
But again, this isn't a
judgment on these people
or whether or not they should have faced
harsher consequences,
or whether or not the actual
(bleep) up free speech issue
is when a comedian gets canceled
for insulting the government and military.
Those opinions are up to you, the viewer.
Rather, I'm just asking
the simple question,
who exactly has been canceled?
Sinead O'Connor for criticizing the pope?
Yeah.
But where's the Cancel-culture epidemic
that's going around and
hurting these poor celebrities?
I'll go even further and
mention some celebrities
who not only said (bleep)
things, but did (bleep) things.
Roman Polanski is a rapist
and yet also has won all the awards
and even got to be in a Rush Hour film
where he played a rapist as a comedy bit.
- So we can go now?
- This will just take a moment.
Welcome to Paris.
- Oh (bleep).
Casey Affleck drunkenly and nakedly
got into the bed of the cinematographer
of the film he was working on,
and is still directing
and starring in movies
putting him very much in a power position.
TJ Miller has been accused of rape
and definitely called-in
a fake bomb threat
within the same year he was
in a (bleep) Spielberg film.
I could go on for a solid hour.
Like, once you actually go down the list,
you realize that the pearl-clutching panic
has nothing to do with
offended Millennials
so much as entitled rich
people who are upset
that there are now
slightly more consequences
to their actions.
And that, incredibly, it turns
out that big corporate giants
like Marvel and Saturday Night Live
sometimes, but not always,
play it safe when it comes to
not hiring absolute ghouls or mild ghouls.
That's it, the big outrage is that
potentially racist or abusive people
aren't getting all the power
they think they deserve
while still probably
getting too much power.
While it has a lot of funny moments,
this is painfully evident
in Dave Chappelle's new standup special...
- Against all the odds, Kevin became
the most famous comedian
this world has ever seen
and he got the job that only on black man
before him had had.
He was gonna host the 80th Oscars.
And I don't know what
you know about Kevin,
but I know Kevin Hart
is damn near perfect,
as close to perfect as
anybody I've ever seen.
In fact, Kevin is precisely
four tweets shy of being perfect.
(laughing)
- Just to be clear,
which is a phrase I feel
like I'll have to use a lot,
that new special has a lot of great jokes.
But it's also peppered with moments
that feel suspiciously like
one rich guy complaining
that his other rich friends aren't getting
exactly what they want.
Kevin Hart isn't entitled
to host the (bleep) Oscars,
a position designed for wide audiences
that should be vetted.
Like, how much do we need to feel bad
that the guy who just had a major role
in the 7th highest
grossing film of the year
didn't have everything perfectly
laid out for his career
because he made garbage
homophobic comments
as a joke in 2010, about
hurting his son if he was gay?
A bit I hope his son never
sees, especially if he's gay.
Now, to be clearer than clearest,
Chappelle even acknowledges
during his special
that he isn't exactly impartial
in defending his friends.
And even clear-iest,
the only reason I'm talking
about Sticks and Stones
is because it's oddly the
subject of a weird internet war
concerning Cancel-culture.
But what is kind of frustrating
is to see so many comedians like him
complain that PC culture is out of control
and that they aren't allowed
to say anything they want
while literally saying anything they want
on a $60 million dollar platform
on the biggest streaming service around.
Like, you just can't be the underdog
when you're standing
on a pile of dead dogs.
You can't complain that
audiences are too sensitive
to an audience that's clearly
loving your offensive material
on a special that's
breaking ratings records.
So, no, Cancel-culture as in
seeing harsh mob consequences
for famous people who've done or said
racist or sexist or offensive things,
doesn't actually exist.
And, in fact, maybe should exist more?
Like, really.
Like, again, I'm not for someone losing
their entire career or
livelihood over a (bleep) joke,
a thing that, again, isn't happening,
and it would be great if our society
had a strong social safety net
to help the few canceled
racists out there to survive.
But here's another part
from that Chappelle special
that better explains
what I'm talking about.
- They ruined this nigga's life
and now he's coming back
playing comedy clubs.
- That's Dave describing Louis CK,
a comedian who was called
out by the snowflakes
for masturbating in front
of female colleagues
at his place of work,
after a comedy festival,
on the pilot of a TV show,
on the phone with another comedian
trying to network with him.
Like this isn't a few offensive jokes,
but a literal workplace harassment issue.
And according to Chappelle,
they "ruined his life" for it.
But also according to Chappelle,
in literally the same sentence,
he's coming back playing comedy clubs.
You know, because they
didn't actually ruin his life
and he's, in fact, still got a career
despite being a literal sex offender.
- [Announcer] Ladies
and gentlemen, Louis CK.
(cheering and applauding)
- Look at him, getting
that standing ovation.
His life is ruined!
Jeez, when will we stop
destroying the lives of men
by denying them everything
they ever wanted
because they whipped their
dicks out in front of women
who didn't want them to?
Oh yeah, that poor, poor Bret.
Must have been hard to almost not,
but ultimately get a lifetime appointment
on the supreme court.
Gosh darn, Cancel-culture almost holding
powerful people accountable for things
but not actually doing that.
It's almost as if, and
I'm just spitballin' here,
a word that probably means something
wildly different to Kavanaugh
but it's almost as if this idea
of outrage and Cancel-culture
is creating a backlash
to completely normal consequences
and powerful rich people who've
done objectively bad things
are being hailed as a hero
underdog in certain corners.
It's the equivalent of Trump's
"Presidential Harassment" tweets,
a person who has all the power,
complaining about critique
from marginalized groups,
pretending to be the bullied
while having all of the actual authority.
The reality is that nothing has changed
except a new way for people
to communicate their critiques
and a new way for powerful
people to deflect accountability.
PC culture isn't killing comedy.
Millennials aren't overly sensitive.
The people who whine that you can't make
a film like Blazing Saddles anymore
also like to conveniently forget that time
Robert Downey Jr. got an Oscar nomination
for literally doing blackface in a comedy
from only 10 years ago.
He, of course, lost to
a man dressed as a clown
because movies are weird and dumb.
But to be fair and balanced
and a real cool news daddy,
it's technically true that you
can't make Blazing Saddles,
a comedy from the 70s, today.
Just like how you can't
make a horror movie
from the 70s today,
or do or say a lot of
things from the 70s today.
You can't because you wouldn't.
Things that were said and done then
don't need to necessarily
be said and done now,
because that's how time works, you know?
Like take this specific moment
that's happening right now.
Like right now, not now,
but right before now.
It's already moving away
but the moment from a few
seconds ago I was talking about,
in that moment our
society had specific rules
for what's considered taboo and offensive,
and those things tend to
change as time progresses.
It's just how that works.
So when people say (bleep) like,
"Dave Chappelle didn't change, you did,"
Yup, that's true.
Good work identifying time.
Like, things have changed.
Our president is a ghoul
trying to roll back
protections for transgender people
and bullying women and being openly racist
and doing just generally (bleep) all
for marginalized groups in this country.
So maybe jokes about that subject
aren't going to be as accepted
by mainstream society.
Seinfeld, the show, could be irreverent,
but there's a reason it
didn't have a running joke
about a man threatening to beat
the (bleep) out of his wife.
Also, some jokes get old, like people.
If the one trans joke all
of these people are saying
is I identify as a
something-that-isn't-a-gender,
every one of them say this,
then maybe people are just
bored with your one joke
you saw on Reddit 10 years ago.
Like by all means, make whatever
jokes you want, I guess,
but also don't be surprised if
people don't want to hear it.
Or if you lose large
corporate gigs for it,
or if your audience slowly
becomes a bunch of racists,
or I guess you run an extremely
successful YouTube channel
despite being kind of
a (bleep) Nazi clown,
Things change, kind of?
But actually not enough?
Thanks, internet!
No seriously, thanks,
I really need this job,
if one can even call it that.
But you know what didn't change?
The process in which famous people
see consequences from big companies
for saying or doing
things deemed offensive
by mainstream society.
Like here's a CBS sports
commentator named Jimmy The Greek,
who got fired back in the 80s
for being a real weird racist.
Is he a victim of Cancel-culture?
Eddie Murphy said a bunch of terrible shit
about gay people and
then apologized about it
in the 90s when people spoke up.
Martin Lawrence was
barred from NBC in the 90s
for doing offensive standup comedy.
Damon Waynes was fired from
SNL in that same decade
for making a character flamboyantly gay.
Then there was that time Lisa Bonet
appeared in a very adult film
and was nearly fired for
it from The Cosby Show
due to objections from Bill Cosby.
This is just capitalism and
the entertainment industry.
It's just comedy and it's nothing new.
Really, the only thing that
you could say has changed
is that famous celebrities and comedians
have way more direct
exposure to criticism.
You could go on Twitter right now
and call Tom Hanks a
dick-witted (bleep) receptacle
and he might read it.
I don't know why you'd want to do that,
but you could is my point.
And the irony is that we're
not seeing an epidemic
of overly-sensitive PC-obsessed
Millennial audiences,
but actually overly-sensitive performers
who don't like the
realization that perhaps,
they aren't always on the mark,
that, perhaps, times are changing
and they need to keep up.
But instead of accepting
that, they blame the audience.
You know, to the point where
they're so focused on
responding to Cancel-culture
that they forget to be all that funny.
Like here's Adam Corolla on
the latest Comedy Central Roast
spending like a minute-and-a-half
responding to imaginary people
he predicts will be offended by the show.
- And if I can ray it
for just one minute here,
you're a great sport, you
have a great sense of humor,
unlike the social justice warriors
who are gonna be out there tweeting
that all the jokes are problematic.
You people can blow me,
you pussy fuck sticks.
(cheering and applauding)
This is a (bleep) roast!
Comedians need a place
where they can be offensive
without your bullshit, fake outrage,
(cheering)
you hashtag heroes!
- A thing that didn't happen.
That clip continues and continues
to be very embarrassing.
I won't show you the whole thing.
Because we all know what roasts are, Adam.
We also know what bad jokes are.
Like, perhaps when Jerry Seinfeld
makes a gay French king joke
at a college and no one laughs,
it's because the audience is
like 45 years younger than him
and don't think the act of being gay
is an edgy punchline anymore.
He should know that, right?
After all, this is the
demographic of his ideal date.
So um, you wanna (bleep)
some teens, Jerry?
You might want to update that material,
polish that teen (bleep) material, Jerry.
You objectively-a-teen (bleep), you.
Jerry, the teen (bleep).
Where was I?
All right, so you know what
also helps with this stuff?
Apologizing.
And I mean like not just saying
I'm sorry if anyone
out there was offended,
but seriously brah, get thicker skin,"
but actually apologizing.
Because a lot of the reason someone like
Shane Gillis got (bleep) canned
has to do with the way he handled
the scandal after the fact.
Showing that he didn't have what it took
to deal with the heat
or that he stuck to his principles
and was like no, the casual racial slurs
were pushing boundaries,
this is my fight song, I won't apologize,
and SNL was like okay we're
a cowardly institution
and we want money, so bye.
Even the Washington (bleep)
Examiner recognized this fact
while still managing to pretend
Cancel-culture in general was a problem,
which it really isn't but whatever.
Apologies matter.
So many people who complain
about Cancel-culture
and our society's lack of
forgiveness forgets that.
Jonah Hill did a pretty good one.
Dan Harmon super apologized.
Even Justin Bieber understood
the very basic steps
needed for an apology.
Do you forgive them?
That's up to you.
But they apologized in
a seemingly sincere way,
recognizing what they did
wrong and why it was wrong,
and then continued with
their careers, uncanceled.
Because a lot of the time
that's all a company and
the public needs to hear.
We want to forgive these people.
It literally took two racist scandals
over the span of four years
for us to cancel Mel Gibson,
who continues to work in movies
and is, in fact, not canceled.
Remember that Kevin Hart Oscar story?
He literally just had
to apologize and didn't.
That's why he wasn't the host.
Not because of Cancel-culture, but ego,
the refusal to own up
to basic consequences,
the brazen pride in not
progressing with the times.
Which again, is fine
but you can't also whine
about Outrage-culture
because, I don't know if
you've figured it out yet,
it's not a thing, it's a myth.
OJ Simpson has 900,000 Twitter followers.
Donald Trump bragged about groping women
and became a, that can't be right,
president?
But sure, humor changes.
You need to evolve.
Remember that pretty gosh darn funny comic
from all those Comedy Central roasts
named Lisa Lampenelli?
Probably one of the edgiest comics
when it came to insult humor
dealing with race and sexual orientation?
She recently retired
and became a life coach.
And her reasoning wasn't
that audiences were too PC
or that Millennials are too sensitive,
nor did she put out a comedy
special called Triggered
where she complained about
how she can't say the n-word.
No, this was her reason.
- So, now that we're in such crazy times
where kids are killing themselves
because they're going through hard things,
where people are having a
hard time being transgender,
where people are crapped
on because they're women
or because they're minorities,
and I just said I wanna do something
that has absolutely, no-mistake-about-it,
has a positive message.
And, again, it doesn't
mean not being funny,
it doesn't mean crying,
it doesn't mean at least it's for charity,
it doesn't mean that it's
not gonna be who I really am.
'Cause the real me now is somebody
who kinda grew up and said
oh, I'm absolutely
gonna have some positive
freaking message for people.
- Hey, look at the very self-aware person
evolving with the times
and rationally explaining
why that's totally okay to do.
Because yeah, it's really tough to be
a certain demographic of people right now,
and people are hurting
themselves and getting hurt.
And so maybe when a rich
celebrity says a slur,
we should hold them accountable
and not necessarily allow
them to have a wide reach
on say, a major variety TV
show or the (bleep) Oscars.
It's really not any more
complicated than that.
I get that no one wants to be
the person offended by a joke.
No one wants to feel like
the pie is in their face.
And that's probably why there's this weird
everyone-is-too-sensitive pushback.
Like, sure, I can't stress enough
that comedians are allowed to say
whatever the (bleep) they want
and that people shouldn't
have their lives ruined
over a few jokes.
But I also can't stress enough
that this isn't what's happening.
It's just, some consequences.
Can't say racist (bleep)
and also be on SNL
the year they finally
hired an Asian person.
Not a controversial statement.
Being an entertainer is
literally about knowing this.
It's about knowing how words work
and that while no word should be censored,
the context of using
those words super matter.
Like I wonder if there's someone
who can point this out better than me?
- There's absolutely nothing wrong
with any of those words
in and of themselves,
they're only words!
It's the context that counts.
It's the user, it's the
intention behind the words
that makes them good or bad.
The words are completely neutral,
the words are innocent.
I get tired of people talking about
bad words and bad language.
(bleep) It's the context
that makes them good or bad.
The context that makes them good or bad.
- Hey, That old dead man
is super duper right.
Words are tools.
You can use them to build something
fantastic or funny or profound,
or you can use them to hurt
people who don't deserve it
in painfully un-entertaining ways.
And sometimes, like tools,
words have to be used
very carefully to avoid disaster.
Like a chainsaw or whatever this thing is.
It's up to the craftsmen to
understand that very basic idea.
And that Shane Gillis guy?
(bleep) craftsman, though again,
he's pretty funny in that sketch
about the hero fireman getting fired
for being a Trump supporter.
- What the (bleep)?
- Was this you last night?
(burp)
- Are we not talking about the fire?
- This is about whether or not
you are fit to be fighting fire
the night after a bender.
- But like, you know that old dead guy
I just showed video of?
He did a joke making fun of mass deaths
that was probably not un-funny.
It was for a special plan to be titled
"I Kinda Like It When a Lotta People Die".
And happened to be recorded on the days
of September 9th and 10th of 2001.
And the next day something else happened
and he cut the bit and
he changed the special,
because he was a man very
aware of the time he lived in
and what words were and
weren't appropriate.
He knew that while comedy
technically has no boundaries,
good comedy totally does.
People love to pull out the Carlin card,
ah, Carlin would hate
these sensitive babies,
these whiny Millennials so sensitive
about racism and sexism.
And maybe, but I'm going to quickly read
another quote from Carlin
about Andrew Dice Clay.
And I'm already on the edge of my seat
wondering if it will have anything to do
with everything we've talked about
or even specific people
we've talked about.
(clearing throat)
"Most comedians, myself
included, pick on people
"who have some power and
position and abuse it.
"But Clay, he picks on
foreigners, homosexuals and women
"who are all underdogs in this society.
"And it makes me wonder
what he's thinking,
"because he says all these
things and his audience responds
"because he plays to their prejudices.
"But he's Jewish and doesn't he know
"that these same people who hate gays
"and foreigners and women
"have Jews somewhere on their list?"
So uh, yeah, shut the (bleep) up
about the evils of Cancel-culture,
you insufferable snowflakes.
Also, you are babies.
Big stupid babies with dick-shaped heads
and vagina mouths,
big talking babies with
like bulbus phallic forms
and floppy labia jack-jawing orifices
and a lot of veins.
Everywhere there's veins.
That's you right now.
It's disgusting.
And frankly I'm pretty offended by it.
And furthermore.
(inquisitive music)
Surprise, we've been uncanceled.
Thanks for watching.
If you disagree, that's fine.
Sound off in the comments
and fight each other.
It'll be really fun for everybody.
Make sure to checkout our
podcast Even More News.
If you wanna support us on Patreon.com
Shot Some More News,
got to the URL I just said
and we got T-Public
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