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Reports

For the Moment, Obama Seems Ridicule-Proof

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Posted on Nov 14, 2008

By Eugene Robinson

    Barack Obama’s election victory may have been good for the country, but it’s been awful for comedians. Just ask poor Don Rickles.

    He was absolutely killing the audience on David Letterman’s show the other night with his trademark scorched-earth put-downs. Rickles seemed at the top of his game—until he tried to tell a joke about the new president-elect. Not even a well-timed rimshot from the band could have saved him.

    It was just a quick bit in which he imagined Obama, faced with his first international crisis, telling his advisers he couldn’t be interrupted because he was busy playing basketball. The joke bombed.

    Rickles’ attempts to save the gag only made things worse, and he quickly moved on after pointing out that it was just a basketball joke “that I should have never done.”

    As I said, poor Don Rickles. After all, he practically invented the in-your-face, politically incorrect style of humor that pays so many comedians’ meal tickets these days. It must have been galling to have to sheepishly disavow a joke that was so inoffensive compared to the rest of his oeuvre.

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    And what was wrong with the joke, anyway? Wrong is too strong a word; anachronistic and off-center might be closer to the mark. It is a fact that Obama (like George W. Bush) is something of a gym rat, and it is a fact that Obama (unlike Bush) likes to spend his time in the gym playing basketball. His sinking a three-pointer during his trip to Kuwait was one of the indelible moments of the long campaign.

    So why didn’t the audience laugh? The main reason, I think, is that “black men playing basketball” is a stereotype and the audience probably felt this was an inappropriate way to talk about the first black president-elect. Even though, as I noted, he does in fact love to play basketball. (Not that there’s anything wrong with that.)

    I’m not mad at 82-year-old Don Rickles, who owes his long career to the artful exploitation of stereotypes. But I do think I’m going to enjoy watching and commenting on the cultural attitude adjustments made necessary by this first-in-history presidency.

    As the Obama family settles into the White House, popular culture is likely to have a string of awkward encounters with stereotypes. I’m going to enjoy this because, in the end, what will be lost is the ability to paint “African-American culture” with a broad brush. To the extent that the Obama family’s tastes or habits seem in any way distinctive, they will have to be seen as the Obama family’s specific tastes and habits—attributable not to a group, but to a set of individuals. The idea that “all black people” are like this or like that has always been absurd, and this absurdity becomes inescapable when a black person occupies the singular position of head of state. 

    Conversely, every first family has the unique ability to share its interests and enthusiasms with the nation. If, for example, it turns out that the Obamas have a knowledgeable appreciation of African-American history and culture, many people might come to realize that “black history” is really just American history—and that it’s profoundly relevant all year round, not just in February. 

    All of which is admirable and high-minded, but not very funny. I wouldn’t worry, though. Soon enough, comedians will find a way to safely skewer the new president.

    Right now, it’s not at all safe—and that’s understandable. Americans are rightly proud of the historic advance that Obama’s election represents. Our nation’s struggle with race and racism goes back nearly 400 years; we can afford to take a few weeks or months to savor this moment. Those people in David Letterman’s audience were feeling a little protective of the president-elect. They weren’t quite ready for him to be turned into a Borscht Belt punch line.

    But the afterglow won’t last forever. Making fun of our political leaders is encoded in our national DNA, and this trait will inevitably express itself. Eventually, some comic will come up with a spot-on Obama impression, the way Vaughn Meader did with JFK. Eventually, audiences will revert to irreverence. Eventually, perhaps, Dave Chappelle might even bring his comic genius out of mothballs.

    President-elect Obama should enjoy this honeymoon from late-night ridicule. It won’t last forever.
   
  Eugene Robinson’s e-mail address is eugenerobinson(at)washpost.com.
   
    © 2008, Washington Post Writers Group


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By rhbee, November 16, 2008 at 9:48 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Nataloff.  Have you seen the You tube one about the puppy going to the White House?  And about your comment, I couldn’t agree more.

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By eireannach, November 16, 2008 at 11:00 am Link to this comment

Hi lawlessone.
I’m from Canada.
In the geographic sense I’m from America, as in North America.
So I guess in relation to the US that would make me a North North American.
it’s so early in the morning…..

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By cemmcs, November 14, 2008 at 7:12 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

If only Malcom X were alive, he could ridicule Obama.

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By choirgirl, November 14, 2008 at 12:22 pm Link to this comment

well, it might have been funny if rickles had said - ‘he was too busy looking for where dubya hid a copy of the constitution…’ but seriously folks, and gene, you’re right. and rickles is old school. i’m jewish and his jewish jokes make me cringe. and you know as well as i do, the creeps who tell real racist jokes arent going away. i watch cspan a lot and some of the callers just make me, uh, cringe again.“Now, I’m NOT a racist, BUT….” yah. if you have to tell me that, well, you know. So maybe once we can find something political we can tell a joke or two. wouldnt want him to get a reputation for being humorless.
Let’s keep making fun of Palin. Not because she’s a woman, because she’s a brainless twerp. always room to make fun of them!

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By lawlessone, November 14, 2008 at 11:41 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Wouldn’t it make sense, especially for truthdig.com, to finally stop referring to people by the amount of melanin in their skin and/or geographical heritage?  After all, the evolutionary record strongly suggests 100% of us in our past originated from somewhere in Africa?  In that sense, all of us are Afro-Americans. 

At most only 50% of the DNA in his cells came from recent African heritage.  Does it make any more sense to highlight that than referring to him as a Kansas-American or a Hawaiian-American.  Wouldn’t it be far better to start expending every effort, even linguistically, at bringing us back together for once instead of focusing on our minor differences? 

Wouldn’t it be best to refer to him as what he really is. . . a “Real American,” an amalgamation of what we can and should be?  A pride and joy for us all?

As for the “comics,” least we forget, Obama referred to himself as a “mutt.”  Let them chew on that along with his choice of dogs for the kids.  Frankly, I like the term “Mutt.”  That is not only my choice when choosing pets, its my own term for myself, and proud of it.

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By Nataloff, November 14, 2008 at 11:08 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

There are already tons of Obama jokes flooding the Web. It’s just that they’re recycled racist jokes that substitute the “O” word for the “N” word. It is a peculiar phenomenon of insult humor that, when a stereotype becomes personified, it somehow seems less objectionable: e.g., making fun of Richard Simmons instead of all effeminate (code word) men, ridiculing Elizabeth Taylor instead of all heavy people, telling Helen Keller jokes instead of razzing the entire disabled community, attacking Hillary rather than all women, changing “Polish” to “blonde” to give ethnic jokes new life, and what was “Seinfeld” but the embodiment of Jewish stereotypes in the form of a dysfunctional coterie. Robinson’s column is a significant and hopeful observation of the current generation that seems to be able to leave political correctness behind and embrace simple human decency (which is what PC was supposed to reflect in the first place). On the other hand, the best way Obama can avoid becoming his own punch line will be by not screwing up in the first place.

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By coloradokarl, November 14, 2008 at 10:02 am Link to this comment

Racism isn’t going to go away because we have a black President. Making jokes up about a well educated, hard working and apparently excellent husband and father is a tough sell in any color, especially towards a young black guy by an old white guy. Years ago as I shared a bottle of wine with three black vietnam vets I blithered that “I Understood The Race Issue”. I was told in short order “Until You Wear the Brown T-shirt, You Will NEVER Know!”  Thank You Eugene Robinson!

                                                            Karl

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By RdV, November 14, 2008 at 8:59 am Link to this comment

Rounding up the tired old Clintonistas isn’t going win him any new rallies of hope and change and just might put the wilt on the bloom overnight.

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By Charles Fox, November 14, 2008 at 8:25 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

As the Obama family settles into the White House, popular culture is likely to have a string of awkward encounters with stereotypes. I’m going to enjoy this because, in the end, what will be lost is the ability to paint “African-American culture” with a broad brush.

This is spot on. And it reminds me of a discussion we had a number of years ago about whether “Hispanic” was a better term than “Latino” or if “Mexican-American” should be used. It finally occurred to me to ask, “Why use any of them?” The people they refer to aren’t one group. There probably aren’t two who have the same set of experiences. They’re individuals. Treat them that way.

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