Anonymous wrote:Female comedians are all so awful. Glazer, Chelsea Handler, Whitney Cummings, and Amy Schumer were all the same exact lol I’m a shameless whore, my vagina, and abortion humor over and over and over.
Anonymous wrote:Not a great episode, but better than the ones that started the season. The sorority girls, singing siblings, and American Doll were funny enough. The time traveling girls on the bull was kind of dumb but somehow that song stuck in my head. The monologue was offensive but definitely had its laugh lines. Shane Gillis and Dave Chappelle are free to offend on SNL so why not Glaser?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think her stand up is generally pretty funny -- she's not my favorite but I think she has some good bits. I don't think SNL was her best work -- maybe she was nervous? I think a lot of comedians try to take some of their favorite bits from their act and cram them into the shorter monologue time frame and you end up losing the flow from the original act, and it seems forced. Monologues are generally better when they are written specifically for the show, but I think a lot of stand up comedians are uncomfortable doing stuff that they haven't vetted and worked out in front of audiences.
So far this season, the writing has just felt off in almost all the skits. The AG doll one was okay, but not that creative. The sorority girl one was really stupid (and a missed opportunity because a sorority girl skit would seem to hit in her heartland). Unfortunately, SNL lost most of their best skit actors this year and didn't replace them with actors of equal calibre. And I don't know what's going on in the writing room but they clearly lost some talent. Hoping they are able to find some new ground.
On the female comedian critique above, I have strong feelings. I often like female comedians better than men, but I do think that there's a real problem with them being boxed into a shtick in which they are just overtly focused on their sexuality -- like people only want them on stage if they are going to do a quasi porn act. I feel like female standups were basically shut out of comedy 30+ years ago -- there were a few and they mostly made ground by making fun of themselves (Roseanne, for instance, or Phyllis Diller as an even more extreme example). Then along came Amy Schumer and shocked everyone by talking about sex and her body so openly. I think all comedians have a lot of pressure to press the boundaries and shock, and for female comedians that manifests as just a lot of easy jokes about blow jobs and sex. It gets old fast, IMHO. I think one of the funniest stand up specials I've ever seen was Michelle Wolf's Nice Lady, and it was like she made a conscious choice that she wasn't going to go that route. Wanda Sykes is another that just doesn't really do that, and is so so funny. Fortune Feinster is another that is able to do stuff that is not just sex jokes. (Let's hear if for the lesbians who are able to talk about something other then men's d(cks in their standup.) I thought Ali Wong was really funny in her first stand up and then her marriage fell apart and her act became like 80% sex jokes which are just more awkward than funny. And I think Whitney Cummings used up all her funny jokes 10 years ago and now just tells stupid sex shockers. I think part of the problem with getting famous is that you no longer live like a normal person, so no longer have the normal person material for jokes, but I guess that's a problem that stretches across gender.
How about Amy Poehler, Tina Fey, Tig Notaro, Maria Bamford, Kristen Wiig? I’m not really into comedy and I can think of tons of funny women comedians that don’t do the vagina, abortion stuff that the boomers find so shocking. The female comedians aren’t funny thing is so lazy and dumb.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think this woman is funny at all. What did she host last year? The Golden Globes? She was terrible at it and it was weird to see all the praise she got for it. I felt like I was being gaslit.
Shocking, but not everyone has the same sense of humor. I don’t find the tool man guy funny at all but I understand your generation loved him.
Who is the tool man and what generation are you in?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think this woman is funny at all. What did she host last year? The Golden Globes? She was terrible at it and it was weird to see all the praise she got for it. I felt like I was being gaslit.
Shocking, but not everyone has the same sense of humor. I don’t find the tool man guy funny at all but I understand your generation loved him.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think this woman is funny at all. What did she host last year? The Golden Globes? She was terrible at it and it was weird to see all the praise she got for it. I felt like I was being gaslit.
Anonymous wrote:I think her stand up is generally pretty funny -- she's not my favorite but I think she has some good bits. I don't think SNL was her best work -- maybe she was nervous? I think a lot of comedians try to take some of their favorite bits from their act and cram them into the shorter monologue time frame and you end up losing the flow from the original act, and it seems forced. Monologues are generally better when they are written specifically for the show, but I think a lot of stand up comedians are uncomfortable doing stuff that they haven't vetted and worked out in front of audiences.
So far this season, the writing has just felt off in almost all the skits. The AG doll one was okay, but not that creative. The sorority girl one was really stupid (and a missed opportunity because a sorority girl skit would seem to hit in her heartland). Unfortunately, SNL lost most of their best skit actors this year and didn't replace them with actors of equal calibre. And I don't know what's going on in the writing room but they clearly lost some talent. Hoping they are able to find some new ground.
On the female comedian critique above, I have strong feelings. I often like female comedians better than men, but I do think that there's a real problem with them being boxed into a shtick in which they are just overtly focused on their sexuality -- like people only want them on stage if they are going to do a quasi porn act. I feel like female standups were basically shut out of comedy 30+ years ago -- there were a few and they mostly made ground by making fun of themselves (Roseanne, for instance, or Phyllis Diller as an even more extreme example). Then along came Amy Schumer and shocked everyone by talking about sex and her body so openly. I think all comedians have a lot of pressure to press the boundaries and shock, and for female comedians that manifests as just a lot of easy jokes about blow jobs and sex. It gets old fast, IMHO. I think one of the funniest stand up specials I've ever seen was Michelle Wolf's Nice Lady, and it was like she made a conscious choice that she wasn't going to go that route. Wanda Sykes is another that just doesn't really do that, and is so so funny. Fortune Feinster is another that is able to do stuff that is not just sex jokes. (Let's hear if for the lesbians who are able to talk about something other then men's d(cks in their standup.) I thought Ali Wong was really funny in her first stand up and then her marriage fell apart and her act became like 80% sex jokes which are just more awkward than funny. And I think Whitney Cummings used up all her funny jokes 10 years ago and now just tells stupid sex shockers. I think part of the problem with getting famous is that you no longer live like a normal person, so no longer have the normal person material for jokes, but I guess that's a problem that stretches across gender.
Anonymous wrote:I didn't love her monologue, but appreciated having an edgier comic who's a woman in the spot (and OMG that dress was worth it alone - amazing and legs for days that made me quite envious). See above comments for why I appreciated having a comic like her pushing the envelope, even if it wasn't my cup of tea.
Anonymous wrote:Female comedians are all so awful. Glazer, Chelsea Handler, Whitney Cummings, and Amy Schumer were all the same exact lol I’m a shameless whore, my vagina, and abortion humor over and over and over.
Anonymous wrote:I think her stand up is generally pretty funny -- she's not my favorite but I think she has some good bits. I don't think SNL was her best work -- maybe she was nervous? I think a lot of comedians try to take some of their favorite bits from their act and cram them into the shorter monologue time frame and you end up losing the flow from the original act, and it seems forced. Monologues are generally better when they are written specifically for the show, but I think a lot of stand up comedians are uncomfortable doing stuff that they haven't vetted and worked out in front of audiences.
So far this season, the writing has just felt off in almost all the skits. The AG doll one was okay, but not that creative. The sorority girl one was really stupid (and a missed opportunity because a sorority girl skit would seem to hit in her heartland). Unfortunately, SNL lost most of their best skit actors this year and didn't replace them with actors of equal calibre. And I don't know what's going on in the writing room but they clearly lost some talent. Hoping they are able to find some new ground.
On the female comedian critique above, I have strong feelings. I often like female comedians better than men, but I do think that there's a real problem with them being boxed into a shtick in which they are just overtly focused on their sexuality -- like people only want them on stage if they are going to do a quasi porn act. I feel like female standups were basically shut out of comedy 30+ years ago -- there were a few and they mostly made ground by making fun of themselves (Roseanne, for instance, or Phyllis Diller as an even more extreme example). Then along came Amy Schumer and shocked everyone by talking about sex and her body so openly. I think all comedians have a lot of pressure to press the boundaries and shock, and for female comedians that manifests as just a lot of easy jokes about blow jobs and sex. It gets old fast, IMHO. I think one of the funniest stand up specials I've ever seen was Michelle Wolf's Nice Lady, and it was like she made a conscious choice that she wasn't going to go that route. Wanda Sykes is another that just doesn't really do that, and is so so funny. Fortune Feinster is another that is able to do stuff that is not just sex jokes. (Let's hear if for the lesbians who are able to talk about something other then men's d(cks in their standup.) I thought Ali Wong was really funny in her first stand up and then her marriage fell apart and her act became like 80% sex jokes which are just more awkward than funny. And I think Whitney Cummings used up all her funny jokes 10 years ago and now just tells stupid sex shockers. I think part of the problem with getting famous is that you no longer live like a normal person, so no longer have the normal person material for jokes, but I guess that's a problem that stretches across gender.
Anonymous wrote:I have never seen her nor heard of her but her monologue was definitely funny…..
I liked how she pushed the envelope a bit too!