Metahive wrote:Scrib wrote:They probably weren't laughing because of the rape joke, they did so because she was a heckler. Sorry, but when you go around fucking with people's experiences they fuck with you back. It was mean and spiteful, but I don't know about most people, comedy clubs and the like are things they go out to enjoy rarely, it's not surprising that a culture of dislike for hecklers would grow and get out of hand once.
Sorry, pure bullshit since Tosh's entire shtick was already about making fun of rape which had the audience on the floor LOLing. You're reaching.
I'm not saying that they didn't laugh at the rape joke before, I'm saying that they laughed at Tosh's response regardless of whether it was funny or not simply because it was a heckler. And "on the floor LOLing"? Really? Did I miss something in the article or are you overstating?
You may also not give a shit in this particular case, good for you, but in any situation where one holier than thou fuckstick decides to interfere in other people's experience in a probably ineffectual and disruptive way, then said crowd will indeed be against her. Like I said, everyone has a fucking cause, the religious people sit quiet for religious jokes, the vegetarians shut the fuck up, the people with children with Downs or whatever wriggle uncomfortably, and so on as we get further down the line and more uncomfortable. It's a good rule of thumb to just realise that your idea of what's right and wrong is not at the center of people's reality, and will never be. Now you may feel like you've found the fucking holy grail of uncomfortable subjects, one that allows you to be a disruptive asshole with little to no repercussion, but the comedian and his fans also found theirs: hecklers.
I notice you ignored something I said earlier,
it's important for comedians to not kick down on the totem pole, especially not against people who can't help their condition. Vegetarians and the religious are so by choice, women and racial minorities are not. Therefore making fun of them is not only lazy but also something that obstructs social progress. Sexist misogynism is still rampant in western society, it must be attacked and countered whenever it rears its head.
Wait...I don't get your point, are you claiming that it's okay to make fun of certain people because their way of life is optional, even if they don't see it as such? Or do you simply prioritize it lower than mockery of minorities? Either way, I think comedy can at times point out a lot of the idiosyncrasies in our culture as well as allow us to look at things that we normally avoid in a lighter frame (not in this case) so if you're claiming that we should outright stop making jokes about minorities at all then I disagree.
And what exactly prevents you from walking out, complaining, starting a petition, organizing a boycott, all of which are probably more effective in the long run than getting yourself mocked and thrown out? I mean, if you're a self-righteous attention whore I can see why you would pick the heckling option but there are ways to deal with outrage without pissing on everyone because you think you're so superior.
It's not pissing on everyone, it's pissing on misogynist scumbags. It's much more effective to counter assholes just as they're doing their asshole thing than later, since it shows them right there that their BS isn't tolerated by everyone.
Finally, let it be known that I'm of the firm opinion that encouraging and perpetuating rape culture is far higher on the scale of douchebaggery than disrupting some third-rate comedian. Therefore preaching to me about the evils of heckling in this situation falls on deaf ears.[/quote]
This seems like good advice. Indeed why should people be comfortable around misogyny ever? The problem is that people can and will always skip past your argument if you are too much of a hassle and when they don't want to have a discussion. The 100 people at the comedy club do not give a shit about a discussion that very moment, standing up,yelling and getting banned does fuck all except make you the bad guy. People are more than willing to simply ignore your argument in favor of their immediate comfort. Getting your friends, starting a stink online and protesting might make someone think twice. In certain contexts, getting up and yelling does little for your cause apart from making you look shrewish. Especially in a comedy club, where the comedians and the fans won't tolerate this and they have the majority of the power.
It's simply ineffective as far as I can see. There are certain contexts, like in a conversation where jumping on Tosh could be effective,but in scenarios where we have a social contract to prevent these sorts of things, doing them doesn't benefit you.
Even look at this case, what brought attention to this? What made Tosh apologize? It wasn't Heckler #232334223443 gets it.