In
reading interviews of John Cleese of Monty Python fame, I was surprised to see
a common a theme—John Cleese longs for more intelligence these days. Maybe I
better let him explain that.
The millenials
“In
my day, anyone who was vaguely educated—in other words, they knew where
Pakistan was—
would give you the opportunity for all kinds of humor,” he says.
Mr. Cleese thinks that too much comedy revolves around sex and other “mundane”
topics. He worries that the “general
feeling [among the younger set] is that anything that doesn’t affect you
personally is not worth knowing about.” So there’s a smaller universe of shared
knowledge for comedy writers to draw from.
This
is not good news if you are a comedy lover because there is less variety in the
comedy you are served. It’s getting to be a one-page
menu.
Political
correctness
Cleese
thinks some of the blame is due to PC. “Political
correctness started out as a very good idea. But it got latched onto by people
who hang onto a small number of truths. In my stand-up, I’ll make jokes about
Germans, Canadians, the English and the French. And then I say, ‘There’s this
Mexican joke.’ And the place freezes. Why is everyone uncomfortable? Is that
because the Mexicans need particular protection? There is a lot of condescension in it…. Of
course, jokes about Muslim fundamentalists are problematic because they
threaten to kill you.”
He
continues, “There can be major developments in the Ukraine and ISIS and Putin,
and the top story…will be that [someone] has used one of the ‘forbidden words.’”
Laughing at
ourselves is good medicine
Cleese
states that most comedy is critical of human behavior; it is saying, “This is
not a smart way to behave.” Although Cleese is always pushing boundaries, he still
longs for smart subjects. He even claims Monty Python fans are smarter than
fans of the Rolling Stones or the San Francisco 49ers.
That
certainly made me feel better: “Gee,” I said to myself, “maybe I’m smart after
all.” One of my favorite short comedy films is The Crimson Permanent Assurance, which is at least a little bit
funnier if you understand something about corporate raiders and takeovers.
So
what’s a comedy lover to do? Expand our
universe, of course. Improve our behavior so that we are not the butt of jokes.
And keep living.
Sources:
“Weekend
Confidential” by Alexandra Wolfe, Wall
Street Journal, 11-15-14
“10
Questions” by Belinda Luscombe, Time, 11-17-14
“Former
Monty Python John Cleese,” The
Independent [UK], 2-4-15