Thursday, December 1, 2011

A Spoonful of Obscenity Helps The Hard Truth Go Down: How Outsider Comedians rose from the Fringe to the Main Stage of American Culture

The goal of this paper is to explain the historical and cultural significance of popular stand-up comedians emerging from the late 1960's to 1980's in America. Figures like George Carlin, Andy Kaufman, or Lenny Bruce were more than mere entertainers, but became powerful speakers able to shift the public's opinion on controversial issues. The radicalism of these performers made it possible and even expected for comics to address taboo, critique authority, and use profane and perverse language and behavior. What is significant is some performers do not use offensive language just for shock value, but to challenge the status quo. Like Rock musicians of that time, comedians also went from simple entertainers to public figures able to critique the hypocritical inefficacy of social authorities. These comedians started out in small venues in inner cities to mainstream stardom. Because these comics did not the follow the traditional methods and language of the then established comedians, they are classified as “outsider comedians.” This new form of comedian was a product in part to the anti-authority, radical movement of the Cultural Revolution of the 1960’s and continued to evolve and change until outsider comedy became widely accepted in the late 1980’s. This time frame will be put the outsider comedian into a historical context.  The comedian’s physical movements, speech, and writing will be analyzed by multiple levels of textual analysis to reveal their most effective techniques.  Interviews with local comics today, will provide a retrospective on the outsider comedian’s contributions to American culture

Word Count: 250

Thursday, October 20, 2011

“Revolution via Dick Jokes: How Outsider Comedians Rose From the Fringe to the Main Stage of American Culture."


Topic:  I am writing about stand-up comedy because I want to find out how comedians are able to discuss controversial subjects to help my reader understand how entertainers can influence the social consciousness of the mainstream.
Description:
                I saw a stand-up show last Tuesday. The headliner Tommy Sinbazo shot off (no pun intended) with jokes about masturbating with his fiancĂ©’s fancy beauty lotion, dressing up as Santa Claus and pretending to rape his future son as a punishment for bad behavior, and digging up a corpse to use a sex toy; to provide a little topical commentary on the economy.  If these topics were discussed anywhere else save for in your weed dealer’s basement, you’d probably end up fired, defriended, and maybe in handcuffs.  Yet Sinbazo yielded no more resistance but a couple groans, which he replied “I’ll fucking take that, a groan is just a laugh you won’t own up to.”  Ten more jokes about human genitalia and several laughs’ not “owned up to” later and I’m talking to the performers after the show.  The first thing I noticed was that these performers had ceased to be the loud, profane, and obnoxious characters they were on stage and were now polite, gracious, and friendly. I told them about my research proposal and they agreed that’s it’s interesting to study how comedians are able to get away with such racy content today. Not only is it tolerated at most clubs but expected. Sinbazo gave me an example to illustrate how the craft of comedy has been able to change and adopt a more vulgar form of speech: “Before if you did bad[poorly on stage] you said you ‘bombed’, now people say they ‘ate a dick’ like, ‘aw man I sucked so hard today, I ate like six dicks’” We all laughed and I said that was my point exactly. I want to find answers to questions like “Why has discourse of this manner been an effective form of social commentary since the latter half of the 20th century?” but to do that I must first find the answer to “How did we get from ‘bombing’ to ‘eating six dicks’?” Asking monumental questions like this makes me feel as though I’m following the footsteps of other great Anthropologists like Gilbert H. Herdt or Margaret Mead, but I’m stepping of flaming bags of dog poo in size 18 clown shoes along the way. Which isn’t as weird as the Sambian Flute Ceremony if you ask me.
                Ok enough, with the anecdotal bullcrap. That was just to illustrate how I’ve been a big fan of comedy, I love to make jokes, and hope to one day be able to write/perform jokes for an audience rather than my friends or classmates forced to read my writing; to explain why this topic is personal to me.
                 On a more scholarly level, the aim of this project is to research how the comedian is a public figure different from the leaders of American government, businesses, news media and universities. Politicians, news anchors, and mainstream celebrities are heavily censored and pressured to structure there language so they appeal to a mass audience. Some comedians have done the absolute opposite and try to offend and provoke their audience which has ironically resulted in mass appeal proven by sold out shows, HBO specials, and multiple Grammy awards. The comedian is able to transcend both the public and private spheres of conversation and speak about personal and intimate issues that people keep to themselves, even though so many share the same concern.  In this way, the comedian is given a certain authority, they become “a minor mystic” (Douglas 306) Analyzing the role and the impact of the stand-up comedian requires a combination of literal analysis of the performer’s material and a historical analysis of the performer’s reception by society. American Studies is a discipline that's terms and theories serve me well in trying to interpret the effect of stand-up in American culture.

Preliminary context description:
                I have classified these comedians as “outsider” comics, social commentators outside looking in. I do not use the term outsider in the sense of a simple dichotomy because these comics on the individual level do not approach everything in a radical fashion.  They instead only hold this outsider appeal mainly from their stage persona, which may be influenced and borrow from their life experience but exaggerate to make contrast to what an acceptable public figure looks like. The stand-up comedian is a social agent to mock and critique authority and by doing so provides relief to the stressed out workers of the formal economy. As researcher Mary Douglas puts it “Jokes expose the inadequacy of realist structuring…and so release the pent-up power of imagination.” The comedian is able to provide new thought and ways of seeing because the comedian is actually encouraged to pursue outlandish thoughts and concepts that others block out in order to stay focused on their work and duties. This what I mean by an “outsider comic” a person who is not held down by scrutiny of cable news conglomerates or voters, but by being provocative,  offensive, and informal.
                I have also narrowed down a time frame and specific comics to reference and analyze. These comics were chosen because of their controversy, popularity, and prolific careers. These comedians also were able to get their start because they emerge from the more radical and free thinking neighborhoods created by the cultural shift of the 1960’s. Neighborhoods like Greenwich Village in New York City or Haight and Ashbury of San Francisco provided fertile locations for outsider comedy to emerge.  The comic most cited for a shift in vulgarity, frankness, and social criticism of stand up is Lenny Bruce who went through multiple arrests and a bankrupt inducing legal battle with authorities to defend this new form of entertainment. Other countercultural figures would emerge challenging taboo subjects such as race, drugs, abortion, and patriotism. The two most prominent figures would be George Carlin and Richard Pryor. Andy Kaufman and Robin Williams would also emerge coincidentally and change the straight-laced “one-liner” type delivery styles to more absurd, physical, and manic styles of performance. All of these new voices sprang up after the Lenny Bruce opened the door to shock comedy in the 1960’s to 1980’s. The last and most recent comic I would reference would Bill Hicks of the 1980’s who sparked a second wave of counter-culture comedy, and was reaching global fame right before meeting an untimely death. In Richard Zoglin’s book “Comedy at the Edge” he sums up the shift of comedic style in the 1970’s as “old comics made jokes about real life. The new comics turned real life into the joke.” (Zoglin 5)

Sources:
Mukerji, Chandra handra, and Michael Michael Schudson. Rethinking Popular Culture, Contemporary Perspectives In Cultural Studies. Univ of California Pr, 1991. <http://books.google.com/books/feeds/volumes?q=0520068920>.


Zoglin, Richard ichard. Comedy At The Edge, How Stand-up In The 1970s Changed America. Bloomsbury USA, 2008. <http://books.google.com/books/feeds/volumes?q=9781582346243 >.


Wednesday, October 5, 2011

The Wisdom of the Fool:

Subtitle:  "How Outsider Comedians Rose From the Fringe to the Main Stage of American Culture."

Topic:  Controversial Stand-Up Comedians of 20th America

Question: How did stand up comedians use their "outsider" status to address taboo and obscene subjects to a mass audience in the late 20th century?

So What?: I am working on the topic of standup comedy because I want to find out how comedians are able to discuss controversial subjects to help my reader understand how entertainers can influence the social consciousness of the mainstream.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

"Go Skate Into an AIDS Tree, You Motherfucker"


Snazzy title ain't it? It says a lot about contemporary society that Louis C.K can spout outrageous lines like this and have a successful TV Show and Stand up tour. But what interests me other than twisted humor is the changes in American society that I believe have played a part in Louis C.K's emergence to mainstream popularity. Lenny Bruce received repeated arrests for obscenity while performing standup in 1960's, George Carlin even testified in Supreme Court Case against FCC after his "Seven Dirty Words" and "Filthy Words" routines were aired on Pacifica radio. Comedians and performers jeopardized their careers and faced public persecution for trying to express their selves in an unrestricted manner. This language and hostility may be used partly for shock and attention grabbing, but more so the language is used capture and emphasize the speaker’s frustration and bewilderment at the absurdity of life. The comedian's appeal is a paradox because the speaker is detached or dejected by society and by commenting on that, is thus relatable to the American Public.
The correlation of the "outsider" image of popular American Comedians is the theme of my research proposal. My goal is to find which historical, behavioral, or cultural factors play into American's tastes in comedy. The evidence produced from this study could aid in future studies about other mediums such as punk rock or street art that start from counter/sub culture roots to becoming popular icons of American Culture. So my research question is:
"Why has Stand-Up comedy's popular use of the "outsider" image been/become so appealing to the American public?"

My methodology would be literary and historical analysis of controversial comedians who have pushed the boundaries of obscenity as an act of dissidence. Since my argument is that Stand Up comedy is a powerful form of dissidence because the performers are not only allowed but expected to be uncensored, outrageous, and shameless, so virtually any comedian's work could be examined. But the comedians I've selected to examine lean towards certain anti-authoritative stances: religion, corporate marketing, and government, are males, have an extensive amount of material, and their careers occurred somewhere between the period of the 1960's - 1990's, since standup comedy today is saturated with shock comics. The comics I would like to analyze would be George Carlin, Bill Hicks, Lenny Bruce, and Richard Pryor. The problem would be that I am a fan of these performers and may hold a bias that would affect my objectivity. So I could also examine comedians that I don't like or were not successful- e.g. Michael "Kramer" Richards and the "N word" fiasco to counter it, but that's really trading one bias for another. To avoid making the study too broad, I will not go in depth about intersectionality or other social factors (gender, ethnicity, or class) to which would require me to address too many comedians. Books, course readings and journal articles I have attained will be used to define the general theory and structure of comedy and forming humor.

Word Count: 502

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Blog 1- My Personal/Intellectual Interests



Howdy Classmates,


          The names George Burton and I'm finishing my last semester at UMBC majoring in Sociology and minor in American Studies. Sociology asks the question I wanted to explore- the implicit and explicit meanings of social constructs. My favorite part of sociology was determining the causality and impact of American symbols- or semiotics. Rather than using quantitative data to find correlations in hospitals or criminal courts, I was studying values such as the puritan work ethnic and seeing how it affects society’s beliefs and practices. American Studies compliments this by analyzing both high and common culture and put many of America’s time honored beliefs right under the microscope.





          When I’m not racking my brain interpreting American Society I’m singing in my band called “The Rumble.” My favorite bands are “The Black Keys” and “The Hives.”  I love punk and surf for its manic energy and I like blues for its dark mystical quality and grunge for its vulnerability. I’m also in UMBC’ Russian choir- the instructor is real hoot when he’s screaming Russian and broken English at you.


Speaking of old people screaming, I love studying comedians. Comedians are appealing because they are uncensored, unpredictable, and are just saying these twisted thoughts that wouldn't be tolerated on any other medium. I tend to connect to the ones that are hostile, angry, and dark. A few of my favorite stand-ups are George Carlin, Louis C.K., and Maria Bamford.

Finally, I’m a foodie. I love eating out because you can learn so much about a culture. By looking at culture’s popular dish you can possibly learn about their agriculture (the staple crop will be showcased), climate (tropical fruits or winter wheat?), Religion (are their dietary restrictions on the menu), even international trade (which spices are prominent).

Above all else, I just love a good conversation.