NYT: Automakers Want Trump to Keep Biden EV Mandates in Place
No Experience Necessary: Kamala HQ TikTok Team Was Nothing But Gen Zers
Girl Allegedly Sexually Assaulted by Venezuelan Illegal Living in Family's Basement
Did Pam Bondi Really Steal a St. Bernard? Journalism Has Gone to The...
MSNBC Contributor Asks If We Want Someone Who Made Terror Watch List as...
ABC News Tell You How to Join Bluesky
Will 'Journos' Ever Learn?: X is the Mainstream, Not The Atlantic and Other...
Conservatives Not Pleased With Trump's Labor Secretary Nominee
Mayor of Denver Seems to Walk Back Threat to Use Police to Prevent...
Chief Diversity Officer at the NIH Retiring at the End of the Year...
Mark Cuban Goes Full BlueAnon Accusing Elon Musk of Having Bot Army
Trump's Surgeon General Nominee Praised Facebook for Its Censorship During COVID
Biden Says He Left the Country Better Off Than 4 Years Ago (Which...
WH's 'Building a Better Future' Post With Pic of Kamala Harris Waving Goodbye...
U.N. Secretary-General Seems a Bit Concerned His 'Climate Finance' Is Drying Up

'WTF': So, that harpy who said Amy Schumer 'inspired' Dylann Roof? Well, guess what ...

The answer, it seems, is no.

Earlier this week, the Washington Post published an op-ed suggesting that Amy Schumer’s comedy “‘inspires’ monsters like Dylann Roof.” The WaPo was rightly called out for publishing such crap, but as it turns out, there was a whole other layer to this scorching stupidity.

Advertisement

https://twitter.com/sonnybunch/status/619591996815097856

The op-ed’s co-author, Dr. Stacey Patton, in addition to being a thoroughly nasty person, has also admitted that she basically had no idea what she was talking about when she wrote the piece:

Dr. Patton said a few things that surprised me.  For starters, she said she’s not a specialist on comedy or humor.  While she does enjoy comedy (she likes George Carlin, Richard Pryor, Martin Lawrence, the Queens of Comedy, and Bill Maher among others), she told me that watching comedy isn’t something she gets to do often.  In fact, before the ‘Schumer issue’ came up, she had never seen Amy Schumer perform stand up, and she had never seen Schumer’s Comedy Central television show. Even more surprising, she said she didn’t watch any of Amy’s performances or shows while writing the article, not even as background for the piece. Her judgement was based on what she read,  presumably in The Guardian, which had just published an article accusing Schumer of “having a blind spot for race.”

The Interrobang; Have you ever watched Amy’s television show… in preparation for the article?
Stacey Patton: Nope. Not at all. 
The Interrobang: Her stand up set[s]? have you ever watched any of them?
Stacey Patton: Nope. None of them.

Despite seeing the quotes out of context, and without the benefit of knowing anything about Amy’s comedy, she was comfortable making judgements about whether Schumer’s comedy was or wasn’t racist.  She also was comfortable deciding whether Schumer’s audience was or wasn’t racially diverse (she characterizes Amy’s following as predominately white), and she was comfortable to conclude that Schumer’s comedy breeds racism in others.

Advertisement

Read the whole thing, if only to get the full facepalm experience.

https://twitter.com/bmcsmith92/status/619597045993762816

Pretty neat trick, huh?

https://twitter.com/Yair_Rosenberg/status/619593240413605888

Oh, we can imagine.

https://twitter.com/SonnyBunch/status/619592583040344064

Advertisement

Lucky us.

 

***

Related:

‘This is garbage’: WaPo op-ed actually suggests Amy Schumer’s comedy ‘inspires monsters like Dylann Roof’

‘Lay down and die!’ Turns out the writer sliming ‘racist’ Amy Schumer is a NASTY piece of work

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement