Once again, Mr. Shakespeare, that is the question. Steve provides perspective on a week in which the Barr was lowered.
Heading out to the big cocktail party tonight? Don’t go to the club until you
have thought through your position on the issue
du jour. People may not want to talk in polite company about their views on
Trump or Clinton, but when the issue is the outrageous language of two female
comedians who are poised at the extremes of our polarized society, you better
not be the one who shows up at the raw bar whispering “Huh? Who said what?”
Here’s the quick background. On Monday, Roseanne Barr
hurled a projectile vomit of a tweet that would have been considered hideously
racist in 1953, characterizing Obama senior advisor Valerie Jarrett as the
offspring of a Muslim terrorist and an ape. Yes, Barr did actual tweet that
an African-American was somehow less than
a human being. Barr's wildly successful new television series was cancelled
by ABC faster than you can say “Roseanne Barr is dumber than a box of hammers.”
Barr then attempted to diminish her culpability for her despicable comment by
claiming that she had issued the tweet while under the influence of Ambien. To
their considerable credit, Sanofi, the makers of the sleep medication, publicly noted
that “"While all pharmaceutical treatments have side effects, racism is not a known side effect of any Sanofi medication.” Ka-boom! Countless lefties weighed in,
applauding ABC for the immediate decision, which bore considerable financial
repercussions.
Flash forward a mere 48 hours to Wednesday night’s airing
of Full Frontal with Samantha Bee.
The show’s host, one of the most aggressive anti-Trump voices in the army of
left-leaning late night comedians, delivered a diatribe against Ivanka Trump,
savaging the President’s daughter for tweeting a photograph of her young child and herself at the moment that Trump’s
immigration policies are requiring border agents to separate parents from their
infants and young children. Bee lashed out at Ivanka for not using her
influence with her father to end the heinous policy. Signing off the segment,
Bee delivered the C: “Do something about
your dad’s immigration practices, you feckless c - - t!”
Two women, both perceived to be crossing a clear line in a
vitriolic damnation of a political enemy. One, however, it must be noted, is
intelligent enough to know how to use the word “feckless.”
Thus, timing and circumstance launched yet another shit for shat in the Grand Twenty-First
Century Culture Civil War in the United States of America. There’s the
conservative media lead: if the Hollywood entertainment complex fires Roseanne
Barr for her egregious words, but does not similarly fire Samantha Bee for hers,
is this not proof that the media powers-that-be have a profound liberal bias? At
more significant levels, the juxtaposition of the two female comedians once
again ignites the two most raw issues roiling our society in the age of Trump:
(1) the steady resurgence of bigotry and racial hatred, and (2), the explosive power
of the pervasive misogyny and sexually predatory behavior by men in positions
of power. And, at the very heart of the matter is the debate that you better be
ready to field at the cocktail party at the club: can the comments of these two
comedians even be equivalized at all? Is Samantha Bee’s comment on the same
scale and degree as Roseanne Barr’s? Where do you stand?
To Bee, or not to Bee. That is the question.
Did Samantha Bee cross a line? In my own tacitly Roman
Catholic and heavily Kennedy Democrat (Robert, thanks for asking) upbringing,
there were any number of words that one never said, but nobody was going to
clobber me with a two-by-four or glue my mouth shut if I said “goddammit” or
even “shit.” People would get mighty pissed off if they heard someone talking
about a female dog, and back then, the word “f—k” was not the benign adjective
that is spread around so casually now that I occasionally hear it deftly slipped between syllables in a particularly lengthy word. F-bombs are now so pervasive that
it’s just plain ri-fucking-diculous.
But there were two words in particular that one never said. Never. One begins with a “n,” and the other with a “c.” Both words
have a crude, vulgar, and hateful history of degradation, subjugation, and
cruelty. These words are so powerful that simply to say either one out loud would
seem to be transformed into one of the bigoted and hateful oppressors who made these
words so poisonous in the first place.
One of these words has actually gone through a startling
and somewhat unsettling morphing in the past few decades. Use of the “n” word
has evolved since my youth into a form of empowerment among portions of the
African American community. African-Americans began using the "n"-word as a way
of simultaneously reminding the society of its lingering and often well-masked
bigotry, while simultaneously attempting to pre-empt ownership of the word for
the very purpose of draining it of its toxic venom through casual use. But the
rules were clear: this was something that only
African-Americans could do.
To my knowledge, there’s been no broad-based attempt to
embrace the “c” word for such purpose. It appears to have remained a
universally repugnant epithet, although I did hear one leftist political
commentator advance this rationale as one of an array of arguments proffered in
the past 48 hours in defense of Sam Bee’s use of this word. Indeed, many
voices have advanced an unqualified defense of Bee.
I am not so sure.
Let’s start with the issue of the comparison of the two
cases: Roseanne Barr accusing an African-American of being a mutant creature
than is less than a human being is exponentially
worse on the Richter Scale of fire-able
offenses than anything Sam Bee said. It is one of the worst examples of racism
I can remember since… well, now that I think about it, it actually wasn’t all
that long ago that Donald Trump called African countries “shitholes.” The fact
that Roseanne Barr tried to disown responsibility by blaming a sleep medication
is a further comment on the character of the two women. Sam Bee took immediate
and full responsibility for her action in a sweeping and unqualified apology.
More than anything, one has to be puzzled by the logic of
Samantha Bee’s assault. For an intelligent left-wing feminist to call another woman
by a term that is historically degrading to all women would seem to indicate
that her only intent was pure shock value. Perhaps she took a gamble that only
by crossing this line could she draw enough attention to the horrific
immigration policy she intended to shine a light on. By some measure, she has
succeeded… probably more people are aware of this terrible Trump White House policy than were as of
Wednesday night at 7:00 pm EST.
But anyone who makes that argument would have to concede
that the coverage of the immigration story has been incidental relative to the
swirling controversy about Bee herself. And most would also acknowledge that
using the “c” word to describe the President’s daughter handed Trump, Sarah
Sanders, and Fox News a gift that will keep on giving in the form of endlessly
looped video clips.
Should Samantha Bee be fired? Or allowed to continue with
her broadcast now that she has performed penance in the form of a sincere
apology?
Once again, we must challenge the premise. Effective
managers know that there are a range of options between the extremes of
termination and inaction. TBS could have reprimanded Bee by taking her show off
the air for a month. Perhaps better: what if they asked Bee to devote one of
her shows to the topic of how words can be used as AR 15s, torpedoes,
improvised roadside devices, and scalpels? That might have been a more constructive
outcome than watching liberals and conservatives nurse their wounds and retreat
to their corners, ever more angry and polarized.
But to have anyone call a woman – no matter how
loathsome that woman is – the “c” word, and to have no formal redress beyond an
apology appears to me to be a concession that this vile word is now fair game
for anyone.
Who wants that world for our children?
In the end, if we justify calling Donald Trump’s daughter
the “c” word because Trump himself has debased our national dialog to the point where we feel we can only be heard if
we are as crude, cruel, and evil as Trump is, then he has actually finally won.
Then we have become what he is, and then he really does deserve to be President
of the United States.
In her rousing speech endorsing Hillary Clinton at the 2016
Democratic Convention, Michelle Obama famously said, “When they go low, we go
high.”
Sam, I am a huge fan of yours. I appreciate that you had
the guts to make a total and
unconditional apology. Get back to work and to doing a great job.
To Bee, or not to Bee? That’s easy. Sam, we need you to keep
being Bee. Keep slinging your arrows
against a sea of troubles. Let Roseanne, Trump, and those who emulate them continue to lower the Barr.
But for the sake of our country, we must be the ones who forever seek Michelle Obama's high road.
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