Pages
- Home
- Ian Walker's New Society Articles
- 2023 Read
- 2023 ReRead
- 2023 Audiobook
- 2022 Read
- 2022 ReRead
- 2021 Read
- 2021 ReRead
- 2020 Read
- 2020 ReRead
- 2019 Read
- 2019 ReRead
- 2018 Read
- 2018 ReRead
- 2017 Read
- 2017 ReRead
- 2016 Read
- 2016 ReRead
- 2015 Read
- 2015 ReRead
- 2014 Read
- 2014 ReRead
- 2013 Read
- 2013 ReRead
- 2012 Read
- 2012 ReRead
- 2011 Read
- 2011 ReRead
- 2010 Read
- 2010 ReRead
- 2009 Read
- 2009 ReRead
- 2008 Read
- 2008 ReRead
- 2007 Read
Showing posts with label Political Humour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Political Humour. Show all posts
Saturday, June 17, 2023
Tuesday, May 30, 2023
Saturday, May 13, 2023
Thursday, May 11, 2023
Tuesday, May 09, 2023
Saturday, May 06, 2023
Sunday, March 05, 2023
Thatcher Stole My Trousers by Alexei Sayle (Bloomsbury 2016)
One of the unexpected ways in which my upbringing as the son of Communists had helped prepare me for the challenges of celebrity, an advantage that my fellow comedians didn’t have, was in the matter of staying true to yourself. The idea of the traitor, the sell-out, the apostate was central to Joe and Molly’s state of mind. Even when I was quite small we would be out shopping in town and my mother or father would gesticulate towards some harmless-looking individual and say in a whisper, ‘See him over there trying on gloves, he left the Party over Hungary in 1956 and now he’s . . .’ Here they’d pause before revealing the full horror. ‘A Labour councillor!’ Or, ‘Don’t look, but that woman by the bacon counter, she used to be in CND but now she’s . . . joined the Air Force!’ At first I couldn’t see anything different about the people my parents pointed out but over time it did seem to me that they possessed a certain haunted quality, an air of sadness, and though their mood probably wasn’t helped by being whispered about in shops by a red-haired woman and a man in a trilby hat accompanied by a silent watchful boy I sensed that the main critical voice was within their heads, that they themselves were aware on some level of the abandonment of their younger more idealistic self and it corroded them from the inside.
I did not want to end up like that. The trick it seemed to me was to not be blind to the many faults of the left while at the same time to try and stay true to those core values of workers’ rights, social justice and equality.
Me doing fund-raising benefits for left-wing organisations was an attempt to stay connected with those ideals.
As a left-wing entertainer it was accepted that you would inevitably perform unpaid at concerts in aid of various radical causes – doing benefits had become a sort of national service for alternative comedians. There was very little pleasure in appearing at them though. I did a bit about benefit concerts in my act: how you told a joke, then there was a pause while the audience vetted the joke for its political content, possible sexism, any hints of neo-colonialism, adherence to the theory of dialectical and historical materialism, and only once it was cleared would they laugh – it was like doing your material over a faulty phone line.
I went up to Sheffield to appear in a show at the Crucible Theatre in support of Nicaragua’s revolutionary, anti-American, pro-moustache Sandinista government. Following the show the cast and their friends were introduced to the guest of honour – David Blunkett the radical left-wing leader of Sheffield City Council. After the line-up Linda said, ‘I don’t like that man, there’s something funny about his eyes.'
Saturday, December 03, 2022
Friday, August 06, 2021
Saturday, January 30, 2021
The Left Left Behind by Terry Bisson (PM Press 2009)
“No TV news!” said Cap. “How are we going to figure out what is going on?”
“Alternative radio!” said Gotha. “Pacifica is still on!” She spun the dial again:
“…without the heads of state. The new Secretary General of the United Nations, Vlad, has declared a new World Government. And now for ten hours of uninterrupted harmonica music played by chimpanzees …”
“World Government,” said Gotha. “That’s got to be a good thing!”
Saturday, May 02, 2020
Thursday, March 12, 2020
Carry On Columbus
These coronavirus jokes are just going to run and run.
PS - Mr. Griffiths is that rarest of breeds: he once voted for the SPGB.
PS - Mr. Griffiths is that rarest of breeds: he once voted for the SPGB.
Sunday, April 01, 2018
It's Not a Runner Bean...: Confessions of a Slightly Successful Comedian by Mark Steel (The Do-Not Press 1996)
Geordie
'This is Mark, he's a comedian,' the man who'd set up the comedy night in Newcastle told his four mates. They looked like the four people you would choose from thousands if you wanted extras for a film set in a Newcastle pub.
'Ar, so yoor the comedian, well ah hoop yoor funna mairt,' they chipped in. We all went to the bar and ordered a round of drinks, and the stockiest among them decided to tell me a joke.
Ay, what do yer chuck a Paki when he's drooning? His wife and kids.' The others laughed.
What to do? Walk away and they'd have just thought I was weird, whereas anything that might have ended in violence was hardly an option.
The tough part of these situations is that when bigotry hides behind a joke, it's so much trickier to deal with. Launching into a tirade about racism would have only made them think, 'What a stuck-up, miserable bastard’. 'All right, it's only a joke,' they'd have said. And gone off muttering, 'He's not much of a comedian.' Besides it was quite possible that he wasn't a serious racist but had never come across the idea that jokes like that are just appalling.
The one thing I decided in the two seconds after he'd finished was that I'd say something. 'What's the matter?' he said, perturbed that I wasn't laughing. 'Doon't yer get it?’
’Na.he's a comadian,' said his mate. 'He's hewered it before.'
There's probably one time in most people's lives when, instead of thinking of the perfect answer the day after the event, it comes out at the time. I don’t remember thinking it but from somewhere came, 'Yeah, I have heard it before. But I heard the funnier version. What do you chuck a Geordie when he's drowning?'
There was another silence and for a moment I was expecting to end up lying on the floor, clutching my ribs, with blood pouring from my nose, mumbling, 'I was only making a point.'
But at the end of this tense three seconds he burst out laughing and said, 'Ya can see wha he's a comadian.'
With any luck he'll now be the Equal Opportunities Officer for the Anglo-Asian Community Relations Department on Tyneside Council.
Monday, February 19, 2018
Saturday, August 12, 2017
Friday, August 11, 2017
The Death of Stalin
I need to see this NOW. I cannot wait until October.
From the people who brought us The Thick of It and The Veep. It's fitting that it is a Liberal Democrat sticking the boot into Uncle Joe:
From the people who brought us The Thick of It and The Veep. It's fitting that it is a Liberal Democrat sticking the boot into Uncle Joe:
Thursday, July 20, 2017
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Two Pints by Roddy Doyle (Alfred A. Knopf 2012)
18-5-12
— SEE DONNA SUMMER died?
— Did she?
— Yeah.
— That’s bad. Wha’ was it?
— Cancer.
— Ah well. Cancer of the disco. It gets us all in the end.
— I met the wife durin’ ‘Love To Love You Baby’.
— You asked her up.
— No.
— No?
— I asked another young one an’ she said, Fuck off an’ ask me friend.
— An’ tha’ was the wife.
— Her sister. An’ she told me to fuck off as well. So. Annyway. Here we are.
— Grand. She’d a few good songs, but – Donna.
— ‘MacArthur Park’. That was me favourite.
— A classic. Until Richard fuckin’ Harris took it an’ wrecked it.
— It’s all it takes, isn’t it? Some cunt from Limerick takes a certified disco classic an’ turns it into some sort o’ bogger lament.
— Someone left the cake out in the rain.
— They wouldn’t know wha’ cake was in Limerick. They’d be puttin’ it in their fuckin’ hair.
— An’anyway, they’d’ve robbed the fuckin’ cake long before it started rainin’.
— Is she upset about Donna – the wife?
— Stop. Jesus, man, we were just gettin’ over Whitney. An’ now this.
— Will she go over for the funeral?
— She’s headin’ down to the fuckin’ credit union.
Thursday, November 22, 2012
Wednesday, May 09, 2012
It would also work as a great heckle
OK, I know it's a cheap shot but a funny bit of graffiti, nonetheless.
Snaffled off of Urban 75's 'I'm on ur boardz, wasting ur bandwidthz' thread.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)