Better bloggers than me have observed that comedy favors the oppressed. There's no triumph in breaking the already broken, only cruelty. But cracking the oppressors, humanizing them, that'll get you somewhere, maybe even get someone a glimpse into their own shadowy soul. This is why for decades, black people could get away with making fun of white people and not the other way around. It's why making fun of poor retards is bad for the conscience (unless you do it ironically of course), but making fun of influential ones is very nearly a national imperative. Authority is the natural enemy of humor, and thus are hecklers born.
Heckling is not comedy, but there's a similar art to it. The trick to heckling is timing, and unlike comedy (maybe unlike comedy), you're limited to brevity. To heckle well, you have to choose the right targets, you have to have the truth on your side. The powerful but sheltered are the most deserving, the pompous almost as good, the abusers of privelege. Barring that, it's whoever the hell has the audacity to show up in your face uninvited, whoever insists on making a point whether or not it deserves the attention. The necessity of heckling rests on presumption.
Performance art is another opposite of heckling. It's pointing out alternative viewpoints without taking a gamble with the audience's judgement. It's got a mighty presumption of its own, without, frankly, any evident ability to sway. It's totally unfair, but these things are almost always made right or wrong after the fact. The taunter and the pundit reside in a sort of offensive/defensive arms race, with the loser judged the more deserving. The heckler has power of the one-liner, a short window to win the crowd. The speaker has an advantage of inertia, some limited sympathy, some pride of protracted effort. Did the barb score it's point? Did it need to be scored? (Sometimes it's a race to the bottom.) Go on too long, and the heckler deserves the hook too.
But not the taser.
(What'd y'all think? Don't be shy, I'll be here all night.)
[Oh fuck it, just go read switters]
3 comments:
Again, this is the kind of thing I'd write if I could write. People keep talking about how the tasering of Meyer isn't a First Amendment issue--that he's a Johnny Knoxville-wannabe, and not worth invoking the Bill of Rights over. But heckling is often one of the first steps toward change.
As always, you make me think--either about fundamental human rights or pumpkin pie. Either way is good.
Nothing wrong with making the poke at Kerry--the senator has earned a boatful of 'em--but Meyer made the fundamental mistake of going on well after losing his audience. Not that tasers were the answer.
And thanks.
K
bonus points for the pic of statler & waldorf.
muppets are awesome.
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