Is Donald Trump Funny?
Comedy has always had a political edge, but
never like this.
On late-night shows, in stand-up routines
and scripted sitcoms, the opposition to President Donald Trump is more intense
than a rally full of pink pussy hats. He’s an endless source of material for
joke writers, but also a five-alarm crisis, with barely a voice in mainstream
or alternative comedy that isn’t against him. Punchlines morph into earnest
manifestos about diversity or health care. The jokes and jeremiads give Trump
opponents the release they need—never mind how they might alienate Trump
supporters on the receiving end. And they drive Twitter rages from a president
who once felt all publicity was good publicity—until he became pop culture’s
No. 1 whipping boy.
Maz Jobrani, the stand-up comedian and
actor, has been trying to channel his own experience hating and protesting
Trump into his work. Marching at LAX against the travel ban becomes one bit.
Arguing with his mother about her saying she likes that Trump speaks his mind
becomes another. But it’s hard to be funny when you feel like your country is
going to hell, and everything starts to sound more shrill than amusing.
“He has emboldened racists. I say that.
There’s no joke. There’s no punch line,” Jobrani told me, in an interview for
POLITICO’s Off Message podcast. “But I think if you do that, you better have a
punch line coming soon.”
But he quotes a line from the comedian D.L.
Hughley: “Comedy is like giving people their medicine in orange juice. They
don’t taste it.”
Stephen Colbert, who since the election
dropped the pretense of playing it down the middle in his new role at CBS, has
turned nonstop mocking Trump into skyrocketing ratings. Jimmy Kimmel turned a
monologue about Obamacare into what amounted to a viral ad denouncing
Republicans’ perceived cruelty. “Weekend Update” is coming back early, ahead of
the new season of “Saturday Night Live,” which will have Alec Baldwin back in
his Trump wig, though Sean Spicer’s departure will probably mean fewer Melissa
McCarthy cameos behind her rolling podium.
Appearing on Colbert’s show on Wednesday
night, satirical filmmaker Michael Moore—a cartoon of the left himself who
nonetheless predicted Trump would win last year—argued that McCarthy should get
the credit for taking down Spicer. “We need an army of satire,” he said. A few
minutes later, James Corden opened his CBS show following Colbert in a top hat
and tux, singing a parody mocking Trump’s tweeted transgender ban for the
military.
Jobrani knows it’s all deepening the chasm
between conservatives and the entertainment world—but he doesn’t care.
“Trump supporters or people on the right,
whenever I’ve done—even under Bush, when I would do jokes, they felt like I was
attacking them. And I’m not attacking you, I’m attacking this politician,” he
said. “If you’re going to take it personally, like it’s your—like I’m making
fun of your mother, then that’s an issue you have.”
Jobrani says that people who can’t laugh at
Trump are just too invested in the president, and not invested enough in the
free speech and critical thinking that to him is the whole point of democracy.
He’s heard the response that comes back: “‘Well, then, why don’t you make fun
of Obama?’ Because he just didn’t do a lot of stuff that was funny to me.”
Jobrani arrived in America when he was 6,
on a visa he may or may not have overstayed illegally: His father brought him
and his sister on what was supposed to be a two-week trip for their winter
break in 1978, but decided in the face of the Iranian Revolution not to go
back—on such short notice that they’d left his baby brother behind with
relatives. He recorded his new comedy special out on Netflix next week, Immigrant,
on stage at the Kennedy Center in April with a giant photo of his Iranian
passport picture projected above him, inspired by his reaction to Trump.
Raised near San Francisco, Jobrani was in a
political science Ph.D. program at UCLA before dropping out for a performing
career that started out with many roles as a terrorist. But it’s the
stereotyping he’s seeing going on now, in real life, that has him worried.
“No matter how American I am—I’ve been here
for most of my life—there are people that still don’t consider me American,”
Jobrani said. “It’s like, OK, if you’re going after green-card holders, what’s
next?”
His routine about the travel ban centers
around how differently he and other darker-skinned marchers at LAX in February
reacted to the police, compared with the white people who were there. In his
joke, everyone’s in it together, marching, chanting, yelling—until the police
show up, and he says the white people got right in their faces, while he and
the other nonwhite people in the crowd quietly edged away.
That feeling is real, he said, accentuated
by a climate Trump has encouraged.
“I feel, somewhere in the back of my mind,
I would feel like they could take my citizenship away, and send me back to
Iran,” Jobrani said. “I honestly do feel that there is a thing in my mind that
my rights could be taken away at any minute. And not just my rights; anybody’s
rights.”
Jobrani has been profiled by casting agents
and TSA agents alike, but he said he doesn’t mind how that’s played into his
current big role. On the CBS sitcom “Superior Donuts,” the Iranian-born actor
plays an Iraqi, and one with a much stronger accent in English than he has in
real life. He asked the writers about making the character, a dry cleaner,
Iranian, offering to bring knowledge and a little Farsi to the role, but they
saw the humor in lines that referenced living through a war. He noted to them
that the Iran-Iraq War could provide that material, but they told him they
didn’t think most Americans would be familiar enough with that.
It’s an awkward fact that playing around
with ethnic stereotypes has boosted Jobrani’s career, as with so many comedians
of color. Does that make him uncomfortable? Not really, he insists—but he’s
thought about comedian Aziz Ansari’s plea to nonwhite actors to avoid playing
up their accents and other stereotypes (a big theme of Ansari’s first season of
“Master of None”). Jobrani sees his Faz as in the tradition of Danny DeVito’s
Louie DePalma on “Taxi” and Rhea Perlman’s Carla on “Cheers.”
“To have a character with an accent making
people in middle America, or wherever it is, laugh, I actually think that’s
progress, because whether he’s like, saying ludicrous stuff, or some of his
stuff is like sexist or whatever, I still feel that we are taking a step in the
right direction,” Jobrani said. “It reminds you that there are
people—immigrants—that are just businessmen, that are going to say stuff that
is ridiculous. But I think it’s a drop in this big pond that goes in the right
direction.”
Others in Hollywood have pushed for more.
Arnold Schwarzenegger, in a recent speech at the Creative Artists Agency, urged
the crowd to channel its frustration with Trump and what’s happening into
scripts and other ways of shaping the popular imagination.
“I want them to know that they have power,”
Schwarzenegger said in his own recent Off Message podcast interview. “If
they go out and they rally and they go and let their frustration be heard and
go and join a movement or whatever it is, be involved and don't just sit there
and look at the news and look at the news and look at the television and then
complain. That’s not good enough.”
Like most comedians, Jobrani has left most
of the material recorded in his special behind and is working on new bits. He’s
trying to tell jokes about being a father, about his son and daughter, but up
on stage, it’s the political stuff that ends up getting most of the laughs in
spite of his best efforts.
“Even though I’m not trying to do Trump
jokes, I end up doing Trump jokes,” he sighed. “But I’m exhausted of Trump
jokes.”
http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/07/29/is-donald-trump-funny-215435

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