this post was submitted on 30 Sep 2025
35 points (92.7% liked)

Stand Up Comedy

1289 readers
1 users here now

This community is a place for stand-up comedy videos, shorts, gifs (with audio,) news, and discussion.

Follow instance rules.

Community rules

  1. All videos need a timestamp. i.e. (5:31)

  1. Label your posts according to the type of content. [Video] , [Short] , [Comedy Special] , [News] , [Discussion]

  1. All comedy shots (images of comedians with the text of their joke) should be posted to /c/standupshots instead.

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] Five@slrpnk.net 17 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

When he flew into Saudi Arabia, Burr’s nervousness crept back, but he was struck by the amount of local Western influence. “You think everybody’s going to be screaming ‘death to America’ and they’re going to have like fucking machetes and want to like chop my head off, right?” Burr said. “Because this is what I’ve been fed about that part of the world. I thought this place was going to be really tense. And I’m thinking like: ‘Is that a Starbucks next to a Pizza Hut next to a Burger King next to McDonald’s …? They got a fucking Chili’s over here!”

Saudis already consume American comedy without the endorsement of the government, and that is subversive. Traveling to the middle east to learn that they also have American fast food chains is not 'cultural exchange.' Culture is only flowing in one direction. Bill Burr demonstrates that for some people the values that make good comedy possible have a price tag, and that is the opposite of subversive. Cultural flow does not require American comedians to collaborate with tyrants in an Entartete Kunst of comedy.