Monthly Archives: January 2017

Can We Be Funny?

Our ASTU Class’s has just read Moshin Hamid’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist, a novella told in the style of a dramatic monologue that can be described as a “coming-of-age romantic historical-fiction thriller”. In a very small nutshell, the story focuses around a young Pakistani man who lives in New York City during the September 11 attacks. The whole book, including its ending, is ambiguous and does not aid the reader in putting together any clues. Such confusion is reflective of people’s actual attitudes after the event in question.

Satirical newspaper The Onion’s first issue after the attacks

I’ll never know what 9/11 felt like, I was too young to remember. I can watch movies, read books, ask my parents, but I’ll never know how it felt for something so drastic to occur on such a normal day, and I’ll never know what it felt like to live before it happened.

It’s sad to think about, but it appears that events like 9/11 are becoming more and more . . . normal. Of course an event with so many casualties in so little time hasn’t happened since, but events like the Paris Attacks, the Belgian Airport Bombings, the shooting in the Turkish nightclub, they happen, and they shake us, but we can “move on” in a week or so, blaming the whole thing on how much the world sucks nowadays. I’ll never know what it was like to be so blissfully unaware that such a thing could happen, and then be confronted with an event so catastrophic it changed the world in such massive, unpredictable ways.

People in the entertainment industry, especially in comedy, didn’t know how to respond. It was as if people were afraid to be funny, as if the ice they were walking on could break if they took the wrong breath. The TV show Friends had to edit an episode that aired on October 11, 2001; it contained a scene where Monica and Chandler get detained at an airport because Chandler makes a joke about bombs on planes. A 1997 episode of The Simpsons called The City of New York vs. Homer Simpson, in which Homer declares his distain for the city, and features the World Trade Centre prominently, was removed from syndication. Dozens of other films and TV shows decided to remove scenes containing the towers or to digitally remove them, as if they were never there. Out of sight out of mind.

Lorne Michaels and Rudy Giuliani on SNL’s first episode back

Late night shows decided to acknowledge the event. David Letterman gave an eight minute monologue with humour that didn’t go past self-deprecation and bald jokes, with light laughter from the audience. Letterman praised then New York mayor Rudy Giuliani and New York’s firefighters, which was met with sentimental applause. On Saturday Night Live, folk-rock singer Paul Simon sang “The Boxer”, while Giuliani and show creator Lorne Michaels stood onstage with members of the NYPD and FDNY. 

“Can we be funny?”, asks Michaels.

“Why start now?”, responds Giuliani, with thunderous applause and laughter from the audience.

The 53rd Emmy Awards were held on November 4th, six weeks late. American treasure Ellen Degeneres was the host. She began with some humour that was easy to handle, and addressed the elephant in the room with a joke that finally made it okay for everyone in the theatre to actually laugh again: “Think about it. What would bug the Taliban more than seeing a gay woman in a suit surrounded by Jews?”. The audience screams with laughter, people turn to their neighbours and smile. On with the show.

Regardless of our ability to live our lives without thinking of the event at every moment, it remains something that is impossible to joke about. There are a lot of devastating historical events that people feel safe making fun of, but 9/11 is not one of them. In all fairness, it is a fairly recent event, and there’s no real reason why people should make fun of it. But comics like Marc Maron walked this tightrope. In 2011 Brooke Gladstone interviewed Maron for the podcast On The Media, asking about the possibility of a “ten years later” joke. Here, Maron is referring to an instance where a women laughed at his introduction to a joke in which he almost killed two people.

“And somehow, like I built on it, to the point where I got the Holocaust involved. I said, ‘is that funny to you?’. And then people were still laughing cause I was sort of attacking this woman. And then when I said ‘9/11’ it was like ‘whoa whoa’. So I think it does still represent a tremendous pain in this country’s cultural fabric,”.

I highly recommend this podcast episode, found here: http://www.wnyc.org/story/after-911-nothing-was-funny/

Garfield, B. and Gladstone, B. “After 9/11, Nothing Was Funny.” Audio Blog Post. On The Media. WNYC. Sept. 14, 2016. Web. Jan. 26, 2017.

#hatchimalmademydaughtercry

Recently our Arts Studies class has been studying Safe Area Gorazde by Joe Sacco, a journalistic comic book depicting conversations between Sacco and Bosniaks during the Bosnian War. One of the questions asked by a Bosniak character in the book is “Do they know about Gorazde in America?”.  Sacco responds, “Yes, [I lied]”. (Sacco. 53). This book has reminded me in many ways of the war in Syria, and Americans (and westerners in general) attitudes towards it. Do Americans really know about Syria, specifically the people of Aleppo?

One night, shortly after Christmas, my parents and I sat down to watch NBC Nightly News. As experienced viewers, we knew the general layout of the broadcast’s stories: Global news, national news, medical revelation, wildcard, and heartwarming story about a young child and their brave golden retriever. On this night, the “wildcard” story was one that affected hundreds of families around the United States, bringing tragedy to those who just wanted to have a memorable Christmas. This tragedy was not the result of a severe weather catastrophe and not the result of disease. No, on this night, the National Broadcasting Company ran a four minute story about how Hatchimals, the hottest toy of 2016, were not working properly.

For context, Hatchimals are brightly coloured, cuter versions of Furby’s, with the technological advancement of being able to ‘hatch’ itself out of an egg. That’s the crucial part. There are thousands of fluorescent, noise making toys out there, but when a child takes a Hatchimal out of its box, it’s inside an egg, which the bird will break itself out of with its plastic beak when shaken. I admit, that’s a pretty cool toy, especially in the eyes of an eight year old. But they aren’t cheap. They cost around $50.00 – $90.00 in stores, while desperate parents could pay $250.00 for one on eBay. I can’t exactly remember, but I’m just hoping that I never forced my parents to but me a toy that expensive when I was that age through temper tantrums and the silent treatment.

Back to the night in question. Reports are coming in that these toys are malfunctioning, they aren’t breaking out of their shell, essentially ruining the whole point. Parents flocked to Twitter to share their stories, telling the manufacturer that their child’s Christmas was ruined because of it. One person tweeted: “Hatimal didnt hatch after 14 Hours and now all lights have gone off. How do i exchange a dud ? My 4 year old is gutted” and “# hatchimal ruined my 6 yr olds Christmas. All the effort and it done nothing Christmas day #hatchimalmademydaughtercry” (all typo’s were present in the original tweets).

This isn’t the first time I’ve seen parents blame a toy company for their child’s dependency on material objects, but for some reason, this story struck a nerve with me. While this was happening, an actually devastating event was taking place across the globe. At this time, thousands of Syrian children probably forgot it was Christmas, because they were so concerned with keeping themselves and their families alive, wondering when the next bomb would go off, and how they would get out of the hell they were living in. So many families were broken through loss, and a whole city destroyed by madness and chaos.

I’m never one to tell a person they can’t be upset because “someone else has it worse”. I understand that hardship isn’t a contest. A person living in the safest city in the world with the most loving family and perfect health can be suffering immensely inside, and that pain is valid. But this was different. I myself have been wondering what I, a teenager in Vancouver, can do to help the innocent people of Syria and other countries torn apart by war. The best answer I can come up with is to keep these people and their stories alive. Share them on social media, talk about them with your family and friends, learn the facts. By going on Twitter and telling the world how hard your child has it because their $80.00 pink robotic bird isn’t working, you are displaying your ignorance and disregard for other people’s suffering, and it saddens me how people can waste their time with such trivial things.

I think my passion towards this particular event is a build up of my frustration towards the countless tragedies that have taken place around the world in recent months. Not just the war in Syria, but also the shooting in the Turkish nightclub, the suicide bombings in Baghdad during Ramadan, the mass shootings that now seem to happen everyday in the United States. People have accused westerners of not caring and being ignorant. Of course I thought this wasn’t true, and that people did care but they just didn’t have the ability to help. But that story on NBC, those tweets, made me think that people really don’t care, and I can’t imagine what other tragic events will be pushed aside and ignored tomorrow.

 

Information about Hatchimals thanks to NBC: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/consumer/hatchimals-barbie-disappoint-parents-kids-christmas-n700601