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The Ms. Foundation for Women Goes for a Welcome Laugh in Aggressively Unfunny Times

A long time ago (2016), in a land similar to our own but very different (pre-Trump America), comedy was about the absurd. Presidents were fun to make fun of because they were confined by the stature of the office. It was fun to imagine how they would be if they were a more extreme version…

A long time ago (2016), in a land similar to our own but very different (pre-Trump America), comedy was about the absurd. Presidents were fun to make fun of because they were confined by the stature of the office. It was fun to imagine how they would be if they were a more extreme version of their staid selves. Itโ€™s why Obama had an โ€œAnger translatorโ€ on Key & Peele. Itโ€™s why George Bush Sr. was mocked regularly for his malapropisms (as was his son, Dubya). Itโ€™s why comics portrayed Bill Clinton as being all libido and lustful, hungry ego, jogging to McDonaldโ€™s. These were exaggerations, a play on who these men wereโ€”and who they couldnโ€™t fully be in the public eye.

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Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?

But when it comes to Trump, how do you exaggerate on a clear, anxiety-inducing exaggeration? Watching a rally with him is already a mirror darkly into a world of the absurd. Up is down. Left is right. And if he says the sky is blue, you peak outside just to make sure.

Still, in these increasingly unfunny times of migrant children in cages, separated from their parents at the border; massacres at supermarkets and houses of worship; and demagoguery of the press and other American institutionsโ€”laughter can be good medicine. Which is why I (along with our social media editor Corey Townsend) went to the Ms. Foundation for Womenโ€™s 23rd annual Comedy Night at Carolines on Broadway in New York City Tuesday, Oct. 30.

Presented by Carolinesโ€™ own Caroline Hirsch, womenโ€™s rights activist Gloria Steinem, and Ms. Foundationโ€™s president and CEO Teresa Younger, the event was the first of two I went to this week meant to honor (and entertain) women. (The latter was Womenโ€™s Media Centerโ€™s Womenโ€™s Media Awards on Thursday at Capitale in New York City, where Womenโ€™s Media Center co-founder Steinem was also present. It was hosted by past honoree Soledad Oโ€™Brien, with Rep. Maxine Waters as the keynote speaker.)

We at The Root try to find our laughs where we can get them to keep from crying, so it was nice to watch a gaggle of funny ladies tell edgy jokes to a mixed crowd of women young, and young-at-heart. As Younger promised when she opened the show, quipping, โ€œItโ€™s so hard for me to be a white man in America,โ€ the Ms. Foundation leader said, โ€œIf youโ€™re offended by this, youโ€™ll move past it.โ€

And it was true. The jokes went so quickly, furiously and funny, even the ones where I managed to clutch a pearl or twoย were fleeting, like when SNL alum Sasheer Zamata joked about her mother instructing her to โ€œcover upโ€ as a child out of respect for her father in case for some (bizarre) reason his pre-pubescent daughter enticed him, and she dead-panned an Eveโ€™s Bayou reminiscent quip about how sheโ€™d spent her childhood trying to woo him to no avail.

Yee gawd.

I still laughed though.

โ€œThese are shitty times,โ€ said Younger, which made me think of my job editing a staff who writes daily about these shitty times, later adding that Tuesday nightโ€™s event was all about being together and creating community through some fun, semi-offensive but very good jokes.

Comic Judy Gold managed to date herself (and myself when I laughed) after she named dropped Mary Jo Buttafuoco in a bit. Comedian Chloe A. Hilliard made everyone laugh relaying her dating desire for โ€œa sturdy white man from the middle of the country with no gluten allergies.โ€ Daily Show alum Michelle Wolf joked about the so-called threat of men creating sex robots so they could abandon having sex with actual women completely. (โ€œYouโ€™re greatly overestimating how much weโ€™d like to have sex with you,โ€ she said.) Actress, comic and disability advocate Maysoon Zayid made everyone laugh and think with her jokes about having cerebral palsy, challenging how people view people with disabilities and sex.

But my favorite, rising star Zamata, flipped the presidentโ€™s โ€œgrab โ€˜em by the pussyโ€ remarks by chastising women whoโ€™ve never looked at their own vulvas.

โ€œGet those hands in those pussies,โ€ she quipped. โ€œItโ€™s 2018! Grab your own pussy. Men touch their dicks all the time ... Could you imagine owning a house and you never see the basement ... but youโ€™ll let other people go down there?Sometimes strangers!โ€

While the jokes were furious and funny, this was a comedy show with a purpose. Younger, in her opening remarks, mentioned the midtermsโ€”because theyโ€™re both important and inescapableโ€”and encouraged the women (and men) in the audience to get out and vote, drag a friend to vote, make phone calls encouraging people to vote and literally, drive some folks to the polls if you have to.

โ€œOur lives depend on how we are making steps,โ€ she said.

And Steinem also touched on the overall shittiness theme in her remarks after Younger, adding that, โ€œIn the middle of this atmosphere, everything everyone is going through might not be funny at this time.

โ€œItโ€™s so important that we support each other,โ€ she added. โ€œLaughter is not just a small thing ... You can make people afraid, but you canโ€™t compel someone to laugh ... How important it is is a proof of freedom. Never go any place where they wonโ€™t let you laugh.

โ€œTonight, we are free.โ€

Straight From The Root

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