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This is a link post GEITF 2014 - Frankie Boyle: State of the TV Nation
...includes Jimmy Carr laughing in the audience.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 18:59, , Reply)
This is a normal post
Is this the one where a really obnoxious guy calls another really obnoxious guy a cultural tumour? Having a go at Jeremy Clarkson? Ooooh, that's so edgy and dangerous, that'll really ruffle some feathers!
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 19:14, , Reply)
This is a normal post you sound like a stand-up
you should be on mock the week
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 19:41, , Reply)
This is a normal post I hate Frankie Boyle.
When the borders close you can fucking have him.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 19:25, , Reply)
This is a normal post
can i get a bag of bollock fudge, it's err, for a friend
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 20:32, , Reply)
This is a normal post Yes.
Just show me your tuppence.
(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 1:01, , Reply)
This is a normal post Love Frankie
he's put on weight
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 19:28, , Reply)
This is a normal post 15 mins in and I'm still watching
Interesting stuff

Ha, his comments on Richard Herring!
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 19:32, , Reply)
This is a normal post Its an intelligent and informed debate
we need more of this on TV
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 19:35, , Reply)
This is a normal post I think podcasts are actually the perfect medium for interviews and discussion.
Chat on TV seems pretty redundant.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 22:55, , Reply)
This is a normal post Thir-fucking-teen!!!
Good effort Mr Monkey On!!!
(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 0:07, , Reply)
This is a normal post Danke!

(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 0:12, , Reply)
This is a normal post *Shields eyes from the majesty*
Happy Candleday you old git!
(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 5:30, , Reply)
This is a normal post much candles bro

(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 7:42, , Reply)
This is a normal post Ta

(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 11:23, , Reply)
This is a normal post Candley dangley.

(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 9:38, , Reply)
This is a normal post Merci

(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 11:23, , Reply)
This is a normal post He's no Stewart Lee.

(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 19:37, , Reply)
This is a normal post true true
but unless the second coming happens, I don't think Stewart Lee will ever be surpassed.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 19:38, , Reply)
This is a normal post You obviously
never ran into Stubbo.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 19:53, , Reply)
This is a normal post Or Funnymancharlie.
What a star he was.

Or what was that loud shouty bloke who did hundreds of routines in his back garden? He was a GENIUS.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 21:47, , Reply)
This is a normal post Never forget the comedy genius that was Albion Gray

(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 22:01, , Reply)
This is a normal post I miss Stubbo
:(
(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 0:10, , Reply)
This is a normal post We all do
I call for a minutes silence. Or visiting /board, as it is also known.
(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 0:53, , Reply)
This is a normal post thank fuck

(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 23:13, , Reply)
This is a normal post Excellent interview.
Interesting to hear the experience of someone trying to work with the BBC.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 20:01, , Reply)
This is a normal post He has to be PM or king of an independent Scotland.

(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 20:05, , Reply)
This is a normal post I'd vote for him if he were the best option.

(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 20:08, , Reply)
This is a normal post I loved his comic relief performance, which the bbc cut, he was knowingly burning his bridges

(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 20:24, , Reply)
This is a normal post good watching
same as Gervais, he comes across as a decent bloke when he's not performing
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 20:19, , Reply)
This is a normal post Apart from when he's spouting homophobic or misogynistic drivel

(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 20:24, , Reply)
This is a normal post he does tell a lot of anti-gay jokes, but I don't believe he or his audience is anti-gay

(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 20:44, , Reply)
This is a normal post who Gervais or Boyle?

(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 21:00, , Reply)
This is a normal post Gervais, he has used 'gay' as a slur and has seemingly positioned himself as anti-feminist

(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 21:09, , Reply)
This is a normal post Not sure how he's positioned himself as anti-feminist and homophobic
he's publicly spoken out against homophobia and misogyny
he did play a homophobic and misogynistic character once, but that was a character
as for using the word 'gay' as a slur, he would argue that words can change in meaning, just like the word mong - which he also uses as a slur.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 21:26, , Reply)
This is a normal post I couldn't give a fuck how he'd argue about words changing meaning
He seems happy to deliberately offend people by using 'gay' and 'cunt' (and, as you remind me, 'mong') as slurs then he blames the offended people for taking offence. He reminds me of the kind of people who say it is OK to call black people 'niggers' because "that's what they call each other".
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 21:41, , Reply)
This is a normal post I get the whole nigger thing, but...
Frankie Boyle uses that word (essentially calling black people niggers) in a joke about the ministry of war having a department of nigger-bombing. In that joke, the word is offensive (and is paraphrasing a historic person) but the use of it in that joke isn't.
Similarly with Dave Chappelle, he used that word alot in one of his performances, but he was expressing a truth about how some black people use that word.
And in Shaun of the Dead, the guy in it says 'whatssup ma niggers' to his white friends, and I can't see that as in anyway racist.
The problem with using words like 'nigger', 'gay', 'queer' (e.g. Queer Theory), 'mong', etc, in new ways, is that you run the risk of empowering those who use it in the old negative way. But that doesn't mean that language should not be played with and offensive language be reappropriated (much like how the punks tried to acquire nazi symbols and rob them of nazi ideology).
The problem with making the word nigger taboo is that you essentialise its meaning, that it is by its nature both a signifier of black people and a word to hurt people. The problem is that you ignore the social context of this speech act, and so end up demonizing the innocent, just like some blacking up was rightly denounced as racist, but then all black up was denounced as racist and so blacking-up with no racist basis (such as some Morris Dancing) came under attack - and we can imagine whiting up becoming a similar crime and thus the whiting up that happens in some African tribes being denounced.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 22:08, , Reply)
This is a normal post But Gervais didn't use mong, cunt and gay in new ways.
He used them as slurs, as insults intended to cause offence. He is not reappropriating the words.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 22:19, , Reply)
This is a normal post He does use mong as an insult, but not an insult of the mentally disabled.
I often use the word invalid as an insult, usually against someone who's lazy or who exaggerate their illness. I don't use it as a word for people who are physically disabled, because I don't think the word has any place describing them - I don't think its original medical usage should have any meaning or power in today's world.
As for the word cunt, Gervais is following the view of at least one major feminist.
zeezeescorner.tumblr.com/post/27342164977/germaine-greer-on-the-social-power-of-the-word-cunt
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 22:30, , Reply)
This is a normal post not only Germaine Greer, but the other highly intellectual feminist Judith Butler says the same thing
and you're calling them anti-feminists, you monster!
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 22:37, , Reply)
This is a normal post I've just read the piece you linked.
You and I seem to have understood it quite differently.

In the context Gervais uses cunt, he means a most awful person. That objectifies and diminishes women, as Greer says. If he used it to mean, for example, something powerful, exciting, hidden then I'd be agreeing with him.
Similarly for gay and mong. Using gay to insult someone simultaneously insults gays by implying that they are such awful people that they are synonymous with awfulness. [I seem to be channeling John Inman now].
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 22:54, , Reply)
This is a normal post just my opinion, but you're over thinking it
many people use words without thought, it's lazy abuse which should be corrected, especially when a public figure, but its not an intentional slight on a particular group.
Also words can be abstract. You can call someone a cunt in the same way you call them a shit. It's not specifically descriptive of a vagina or a stool sample, it's just a word, not deliberately negative toward women.

I'm not making excuses for Gervais, just my own interpretation of cunt as a swear. I personally love fannies so it would be silly to use them as an insult.
Sorry to post and run, I'm not ignoring any replies, just going offline now
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 23:03, , Reply)
This is a normal post I think you're actually agreeing that Gervais was/is wrong
just that the intention, the mens rea, is absent.
I would say that Gervais's intention is feminist, anti-homophobe, anti-racist, and anti-disabilist. That his intention is based on the evidence of linguistics and embedded in a method of emancipatory action that was most prominently used by feminists and the gay rights movement.
He cannot thus be criticised specifically on what he says, but how successful he is in changing and escaping the oppressive relations that these words initially operated in. This is how we criticise those feminists and gay activists that sought to play with language, not by saying that they were essentially mysogynous (spelling?) and homophobic but that their theory of action, their praxis, was wrong.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 23:21, , Reply)
This is a normal post yes and no
I can see it from both sides. We should have swears that can be said without offending other people by accident. But equally we should have some responsibility for things said in public.
(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 11:14, , Reply)
This is a normal post yes, Greer is arguing something else.....I'll give you that...and I've actually never heard or read her argument....but I was just adding weight to the playing with language theme
as for when you say 'using gay to insult someone simultaneously insults gays....', I feel a bit unwell
yes, it works in the case of gays (if that's what their official and natural name is) but you can't say 'Using mong to insult someone simultaneously insults mongs...'.
Mongs are not mentally disabled people. Niggers are not black people. The linkage that these words made in the past should be attacked in every way in today's world. The insulting power of these words can be divorced from their original meanings.
As for the gay word, I personally dislike it being used as an insult, and its similar to when a man is called a girl, or he throws like a girl. This doesn't mean that a word cannot diverge into two distinct usages, which may well happen with the word gay, but I think that such a development is more difficult than words like mong and nigger and invalid and moron and ....
I would back up my argument that a word can be a powerful insult without referring to its original meaning and social act by providing some examples of words we use today as insults but that have no conscious or unconscious relation to its original meaning, but I can't be arsed to do the research.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 23:12, , Reply)
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Shut up Bert, or Ernie, or whatever. You're like The Guardian, wrong about everything, all of the time.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 23:31, , Reply)
This is a normal post ts;dr

(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 23:58, , Reply)
This is a normal post This is a really good thread and I want to read through what you linked
but I'd definitely disagree with the "Mongs are not mentally disabled people. Nigger's are not black people." part.

Those words do pick out sets of people, and it's very clear what set of people they pick out. Being slurs, there's an additional chunk of meaning carried along with their denotation, which is information about the speaker's attitudes towards the referent (and maybe the listener as well).

There's a real lack of good work on the linguistic properties of slurs, at least in part because of how hard it is to come up with tests that probe people's linguistic intuitions without dragging in their feelings about the world.

If you took out a picture of different ethnic groups and told people to circle all of the chinks or something, they might not do any circling because they don't share the implicit attitude that's packed into the slur's meaning, but it doesn't mean they don't know what group of people it refers to. In fact, if you didn't know what people the slur referred to, it would be harder to recognize that it was offensive to begin with.

It's a bit like giving someone a true or false test with sentences like "Albert Einstein, the horrid bell end that he was, was born in the German Empire."
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 23:57, , Reply)
This is a normal post
No. This is not a really good thread. Next you'll be telling us that Bill Hicks was the greatest comedian that ever lived. Funny is funny. Cunts are cunts. Funny can be rude and offensive. But rude and offensive does not equal funny.
(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 0:04, , Reply)
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I definitely agree that things that are rude aren't automatically funny, if that's all you're saying.

But if a guy gets famous while saying homophobic and misogynistic stuff, and loads of people laugh at it and pay money to see it all the time, I think you're better off trying to figure out why that can happen than just asserting that it isn't funny after all.

Telling people that something's offensive just makes it more funny when a famous guy gets up on stage and gets away with telling jokes about it to his audience. I don't like it, but I'm pretty sure that's the point of those kinds of jokes.
(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 0:45, , Reply)
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I see.
(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 1:23, , Reply)
This is a normal post re: the last bit of your post *Bono alert*
I think you're totally right.

I know someone who was interviewed back when the FFC was trying to decide whether Bono was describing a sexual act when he said "really, really fucking brilliant" at the 2003 Golden Globe awards.

I think he makes a pretty good case that "fucking" as an intensifier isn't referring to sex stuff.
languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/?p=801

I think you could probably show the same thing with a number of insults, but not all of them.
(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 0:28, , Reply)
This is a normal post I've spent days in an edit suite next door to him, and I promise you he's a right nerk.
And that's cunting swearing.
(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 11:25, , Reply)
This is a normal post interesting discussion
i actually prefer frankie when he isn't telling jokes
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 20:35, , Reply)
This is a normal post Indeed. Mostly articulate, but a couple of inconsistencies?
Thought Richard Osman got the interviewer bit spot on. Challenging without being Paxmaniacal.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 21:13, , Reply)
This is a normal post excellent interviewer
threw some really difficult questions, and listened to the answers rather than saying 'yes or no Mr Boyle, a simple yes or no, say yes or no, its not like my questions could be in any way leading, its a simple yes or no, say yes or no you dweeb, even a baby can say yes or no, say yes or no, yes or no, yes or no, yes?, no?, I'm making you look like an idiot on TV...'
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 21:34, , Reply)
This is a normal post ↑ Very much this
As much as I find his criticism of Brass Eye insightful in that, I can't think of anything Boyle himself has done which holds a candle to Morris's work. Tramadol Nights was by and large just 'shock' humour rather than wit.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 21:17, , Reply)
This is a normal post but I think he was arguing that 'wit' is heavily establishment and middleclass
so to be witty, for him, would be a personal failure
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 21:28, , Reply)
This is a normal post I get that
I just know I'd rather watch Chris Morris's type of 'wit' than a joke about Katy Price's disabled child. Not because I find it outrageously offensive per say, more because I just don't find it as funny.

Maybe that makes me middle class and heavily establishment.
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 21:34, , Reply)
This is a normal post Could be. I prefer Chris Morris, Mitchel and Webb, et al, and I'm heavily middle class and establishment.
I didn't like Tramadol Nights
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 21:40, , Reply)
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Generally, there is much to be said for intelligent humour, and I'm not going to let Frankie Boyle convince me that it's just my privilege that prevents me from seeing the worth in Mrs Brown's Boys.
(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 8:05, , Reply)
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Fucking brilliant! Truth to power &tc,
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 21:11, , Reply)
This is a normal post power is truth, you idiot
you're making power more powerful!!!
(, Tue 16 Sep 2014, 21:12, , Reply)
This is a normal post Who gives a fuck about TV anymore?

(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 10:55, , Reply)
This is a normal post
interesting to hear him talk like this.
(, Wed 17 Sep 2014, 12:09, , Reply)