Daniel Tosh makes a r*pe joke about an audience member
#21
Posted 18 July 2012 - 08:42 PM
#22
Posted 19 July 2012 - 01:47 AM
"The time has come at last for you to learn everything . . .
Fare thee well, Albert, my friend."
#23
Posted 19 July 2012 - 02:35 AM
Ha that was just perfect, summed everything up perfectly!
#24
Posted 19 July 2012 - 07:28 AM
May I ask, have you ever told a joke or said something that offended someone? How many could say they would punch you out of principle? I am sure at least one time in your life someone who'd love to deck you out of principle. This "cultural buzzard" you speak of is not as bad as say....well, the rapist, the murderer, the pedophile, the con-artist, the prisoner, and many other such people.
I have seen Micheal Jackson jokes about him raping little boys all over TV, the internet, everywhere...do you think these comedians deserve to be slapped too and called a "cultural buzzard?" How about the way women are defiled in the media to being sex objects on television or how Seth MacFarlene makes fun of people on Family Guy and American Dad? Should we string him up to? I am sure Family guy actually makes a rape joke every now and then with Quagmire. There was one I remember where a girl is tied up in the bathroom and Quagmire is implied to have his way with her.
Sure, you can call him a pig and monster because of a joke, but in my opinion I find the rapist to be a worse threat than a bad comedian telling jokes that might offend someone. Just saying when I walk out at night, I am not looking over my shoulder for Daniel Tosh, I looking out for the guys with an intention to do real harm to me.....or President Obama. XD
Totally agree Zac. Totally agree lol
"Is it funny that I am also f!@#king his retarded sister?" Lol
Edited by James S Cassidy, 19 July 2012 - 07:34 AM.
#25
Posted 19 July 2012 - 12:04 PM
I have no idea why we're even having this conversation, why anyone is having this conversation; this is sick and wrong, and indefensible.
#26
Posted 19 July 2012 - 01:20 PM
I have seen Micheal Jackson jokes about him raping little boys all over TV, the internet, everywhere...do you think these comedians deserve to be slapped too and called a "cultural buzzard?" How about the way women are defiled in the media to being sex objects on television or how Seth MacFarlene makes fun of people on Family Guy and American Dad? Should we string him up to? I am sure Family guy actually makes a rape joke every now and then with Quagmire. There was one I remember where a girl is tied up in the bathroom and Quagmire is implied to have his way with her.
Sure, you can call him a pig and monster because of a joke, but in my opinion I find the rapist to be a worse threat than a bad comedian telling jokes that might offend someone. Just saying when I walk out at night, I am not looking over my shoulder for Daniel Tosh, I looking out for the guys with an intention to do real harm to me.....or President Obama. XD
Nobody is saying the rapist isn't worse. The fact that a rapist is worse doesn't exonerate Tosh from doing what he did. That someone else is a bigger moron than you doesn't stop you from being a moron. It's an incredibly weak defense.
You did it with me and you did it with Yoshi. You completely miss the point of "personal." The rape jokes were bad, but what has people, including me, pissed of is he told HER to HER face what if SHE were raped by five guys right there. The "it's just a joke isn't an adequate defense that bullcrap.
It's not personal just because she was a woman. It was not person because she was a sex assault victim (and no where does she say she was). It was a direct insult to her face about being her ganged raped and an audience laughing at her for it. Hil-lari-ous. I'm in cracking up.
#27
Posted 19 July 2012 - 01:22 PM
I have no idea why we're even having this conversation, why anyone is having this conversation; this is sick and wrong, and indefensible.
http://comedians.jok...-type-of-laugh/ <--------------
I have to say, anyone who gets offended in a comedy club at a joke is ridiculous. You really can't compare this with John Kramer's colossal crash, because he was being serious when he went on a tangent. Daniel Tosh was not. It is a joke. A joke. Meaning, it's not serious. Meaning, don't get your panties in a bunch. If it's offensive, the joke is playing off of the idea that the topic is offensive in the first place. I'm never going to get people who don't understand this. It's like the people who get offended about South Park. "Did you see South Park the other night? They showed a flag of a black man being lynched!" Really? It's South Park. Shut up.
I'm something of a stand up connoisseur, and I've heard a great deal of jokes about either racism, sexual orientation, murder, suicide, and yes, rape, that I would likely find offensive if it were in a serious context. But it isn't. It's a joke. Does it have a punchline? It's a JOKE! My god, people never cease to amaze me... This lady was a heckler. He didn't actually want her to get raped. But a comedian takes his performance seriously. It isn't just an open forum for people to interrupt and have nice little chats and philanthropic discussions. If you're going to heckle and interrupt his act like a douche, then a comedian who is good at what he does is going to recover by making an example of you and gaining a laugh at your expense. Heckle at your own risk, lest you be humiliated. It was her own fault that she had to walk away crying and butt hurt.
Edited by PachucoDesigns, 19 July 2012 - 01:39 PM.
Karly, I don't know if you can hear this. I am not a believer, I haven't been since Sheryl died. But if you can, I want you to know that I'm truly sorry for everything bad I've ever said about you. When you were suffering, I should have been there to help you. I should have visited. I should have encouraged you to leave the house and get a job, to be active and alive the way you used to be.
I promise that I will do everything that I can to be successful and a good person, to make you proud the way you would have wanted me to. No matter what I said, I loved you. And I will always love you. Rest in Peace, you will never be forgotten.
#28
Posted 19 July 2012 - 02:17 PM
I have to say, anyone who gets offended in a comedy club at a joke is ridiculous. You really can't compare this with John Kramer's colossal crash, because he was being serious when he went on a tangent. Daniel Tosh was not. It is a joke. A joke. Meaning, it's not serious. Meaning, don't get your panties in a bunch. If it's offensive, the joke is playing off of the idea that the topic is offensive in the first place. I'm never going to get people who don't understand this. It's like the people who get offended about South Park. "Did you see South Park the other night? They showed a flag of a black man being lynched!" Really? It's South Park. Shut up.
I'm something of a stand up connoisseur, and I've heard a great deal of jokes about either racism, sexual orientation, murder, suicide, and yes, rape, that I would likely find offensive if it were in a serious context. But it isn't. It's a joke. Does it have a punchline? It's a JOKE! My god, people never cease to amaze me... This lady was a heckler. He didn't actually want her to get raped. But a comedian takes his performance seriously. It isn't just an open forum for people to interrupt and have nice little chats and philanthropic discussions. If you're going to heckle and interrupt his act like a douche, then a comedian who is good at what he does is going to recover by making an example of you and gaining a laugh at your expense. Heckle at your own risk, lest you be humiliated. It was her own fault that she had to walk away crying and butt hurt.
And yet you missed the point that both Kamina and Nate addressed.
#29
Posted 19 July 2012 - 02:52 PM
There is no point to be made here. It is a joke. It goes no farther than the fact that if you get offended by a joke, you are ridiculous, and if you heckle about it, be prepared to be made an example of. If he was actually condoning rape, then it would be a different story. But he wasn't.
Karly, I don't know if you can hear this. I am not a believer, I haven't been since Sheryl died. But if you can, I want you to know that I'm truly sorry for everything bad I've ever said about you. When you were suffering, I should have been there to help you. I should have visited. I should have encouraged you to leave the house and get a job, to be active and alive the way you used to be.
I promise that I will do everything that I can to be successful and a good person, to make you proud the way you would have wanted me to. No matter what I said, I loved you. And I will always love you. Rest in Peace, you will never be forgotten.
#30
Posted 19 July 2012 - 03:47 PM
The dilemma we face now, which I find a little funny in a sick sort way myself, is our moral compass doesn't know how to handle this. We've been conditioned that it's okay to laugh, so now when someone is hurt by it and it's made personal and directed toward, let's say a victim of the joke, we're inclined to either blame her or him. Had he gone too far? Was she out of line for speaking up? Does she... maybe deserve it? Did he mean it? It's an interesting case to look at regardless of what's right or wrong because it speaks to who we are and similar to the decisions we make out there when it actually happens. She was hurt by it, people laughed, so who do we defend? You get that in bullying and victim situations. What he's doing is for shock value and your role as a bystander, are you okay with a person outright saying "I want you to be raped" whatever the context? Is it okay to laugh at that when it's so direct, and so vague as to if it's real or not?
Personally it was a stupid move. He could have handled that so differently. Comedians need to keep up the whole "this space here is absurd" because if he was standing up there, seriously talking about how rape is you know, actually kind of funny more feathers would have been ruffled. When it's so obviously meant to be inappropriate and we can tell ourselves we wouldn't really laugh if it was remotely serious our moral compass is in the right and we can stay on our high horse and say all is well, this isn't a real-world context, and we'll probably defend the position against hecklers who point out that hey, this crap that he/she is saying? It's filthy to the core and wrong. "But it's a joke!". For someone who makes their living dealing out comedy you'd think they could handle this stuff better, right? Know when you've gone too far. Again, personally, I think the problem is "in real life" they are in shades the a-hole they make themselves out on stage and it comes out in how they react to people. People skills, you know? If they must make fun of the situation, can they do it in a way that wouldn't hurt what is still a paying costumer and potentially anyone else?
Oh, and as for talking about people who have been sexually assaulted--please stop bringing in your personal anecdotes to try and talk about what anyone else in the situation should do. This is an unfortunate bias that we all tend to fall prey to. Knowing people, or having been through it yourself, gives you a way to relate the situation but don't go thinking it makes you an expert on another person's situation. No frikken duh we want people to move on from their issues--we want them to be happy and live a normal life--but reality check there's no formula for dealing with it. Situations are different and it's why there are people out there who have to study and learn about the topic in order to help someone, not you know just knowing someone or having gone through it. I'm sorry this is directed toward you in this instance James, but you're not the only one who does it and it's understandable believe me, but think for a moment what you imply. The victim that dealt with their situation nicely is better and doing the right thing and everyone else should do the same. It's probably not what you mean, it just comes across that way, and the reality is you don't know enough about the topic from two friends alone. I felt I really needed to say something about this. You might see me do the same mistake and I would hope it would be pointed out to me.
#31
Posted 19 July 2012 - 03:57 PM
Yeah, your right and I did it too. I did it in another instance with Pacheco (and ended up removing that particular reference from the post).
My irritation with James's original argument is that he appeared to be suggesting that victims should learn to cope with it so people like Tosh could make these jokes, free from criticism. I felt the expectation was unreasonable and ridiculous. I saw no other point to bringing in that argument at the time. But that's not what I said.
#32
Posted 19 July 2012 - 04:09 PM
My irritation with James's original argument is that he appeared to be suggesting that victims should learn to cope with it so people like Tosh could make these jokes, free from criticism. I felt the expectation was unreasonable and ridiculous. I saw no other point to bringing in that argument at the time. But that's not what I said.
It's Pachuco.
Karly, I don't know if you can hear this. I am not a believer, I haven't been since Sheryl died. But if you can, I want you to know that I'm truly sorry for everything bad I've ever said about you. When you were suffering, I should have been there to help you. I should have visited. I should have encouraged you to leave the house and get a job, to be active and alive the way you used to be.
I promise that I will do everything that I can to be successful and a good person, to make you proud the way you would have wanted me to. No matter what I said, I loved you. And I will always love you. Rest in Peace, you will never be forgotten.
#33
Posted 19 July 2012 - 04:14 PM
My irritation with James's original argument is that he appeared to be suggesting that victims should learn to cope with it so people like Tosh could make these jokes, free from criticism. I felt the expectation was unreasonable and ridiculous. I saw no other point to bringing in that argument at the time. But that's not what I said.
Yeah, and I caught that too. We can't say in general what victims should do and hey, I'm not even a victim and I don't think he should be free from criticism. I think that most people have come to accept that there are comedians and jokes out there that are just absurd, and I think on the other end we should also come to accept that some people have that one topic they can't make light of whatever the context may be, and that's all experience and situation. I don't agree with hecklers I think they can handle a situation better too, like leaving, asking someone to complain to that's not in the middle of a show, or protesting after the fact. I don't know what motivated this particular woman to stand and say it but she made that decision and if it was right, I don't know. The real discussion is, should he have reacted like he did? He's the supposed professional one here and especially because he is doing what he does, the dilemma comes with do we accept it because he's a comedian, or by directing it toward her are the implication that this isn't a joke anymore too much?
#34
Posted 19 July 2012 - 04:19 PM
Sorry.
I'll get it right eventually.
Caught what? My use of the argument or the implication in James's argument. I'm not sure which part of my post you are referring to.
#35
Posted 19 July 2012 - 04:28 PM
I'll get it right eventually.
Caught what? My use of the argument or the implication in James's argument. I'm not sure which part of my post you are referring to.
Oh I'm sorry, I meant the implication in Jame's argument, though I did see both XD I just knew what you were arguing against even if you did resort to anecdotal evidence too. I'm serious that we all do it that most of the time I don't even notice (I've very sure I've argued things based off of my personal little stories rather than having any research done) and there's a time and place for when it appropriate, but when we talk about what people should be doing on such a heavy topic it's not right. It's not even fully on-topic >.>
#36
Posted 19 July 2012 - 07:19 PM
I have to say, anyone who gets offended in a comedy club at a joke is ridiculous. You really can't compare this with John Kramer's colossal crash, because he was being serious when he went on a tangent. Daniel Tosh was not. It is a joke. A joke. Meaning, it's not serious. Meaning, don't get your panties in a bunch. If it's offensive, the joke is playing off of the idea that the topic is offensive in the first place. I'm never going to get people who don't understand this. It's like the people who get offended about South Park. "Did you see South Park the other night? They showed a flag of a black man being lynched!" Really? It's South Park. Shut up.
I'm something of a stand up connoisseur, and I've heard a great deal of jokes about either racism, sexual orientation, murder, suicide, and yes, rape, that I would likely find offensive if it were in a serious context. But it isn't. It's a joke. Does it have a punchline? It's a JOKE! My god, people never cease to amaze me... This lady was a heckler. He didn't actually want her to get raped. But a comedian takes his performance seriously. It isn't just an open forum for people to interrupt and have nice little chats and philanthropic discussions. If you're going to heckle and interrupt his act like a douche, then a comedian who is good at what he does is going to recover by making an example of you and gaining a laugh at your expense. Heckle at your own risk, lest you be humiliated. It was her own fault that she had to walk away crying and butt hurt.
Here's something to bring up, how does "Wouldn't it be funny if _________" constitute a joke in the first place? Where's the set-up? The punchline? It's a statement, no way around it.
#37
Posted 19 July 2012 - 08:41 PM
Your statement is obviously full of ignorance. Being offended by a joke makes a person ridiculous? He hardly even made a joke, it was "Hey, wouldn't it be funny if she got raped?" It was retarded and completely inappropriate.
#38
Posted 19 July 2012 - 08:54 PM
Hey, a few of my friends are mentally handicapped. That was completely inappropriate.
...see what I did there? Point is, where do we draw the line with jokes? It's bad to make fun of rape, but what can we mention/talk about? The video I posted here talks about this way more clearly than I could hope to.
"The time has come at last for you to learn everything . . .
Fare thee well, Albert, my friend."
#39
Posted 19 July 2012 - 10:16 PM
...see what I did there? Point is, where do we draw the line with jokes? It's bad to make fun of rape, but what can we mention/talk about? The video I posted here talks about this way more clearly than I could hope to.
No, I don't see your point. I don't call people who are mentally handicapped retards, nor was I making a joke. Nice attempt though.
#40
Posted 19 July 2012 - 11:03 PM
http://www.shakesvil...ulture-101.html
http://www.shakesvil.../label/Toshgate
Edited by ciardha, 19 July 2012 - 11:10 PM.
When you go to war, both sides lose totally- Yoko Ono
Remember, our hearts are one. Even when we are at war with each other, our hearts are always beating in unison- Yoko Ono 2009
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