BTW a different but related point: Last year Manchester hosted a women's comedy festival. A good festival, many good acts, and I hoped the shows were successes but I was against the principle of the festival.
It's no doubt easy being a white male, but in my mind having women-only comedy festivals is almost asserting that women can't stand on their own two feet (what a disablist thing to say!).
That's, imo, blatantly absurd - comedy is as far as I can tell, a pretty much gender/race/age/sexuality/belief-neutral mental pursuit.
Effectively enforcing quotas is almost the same thing - we have to have x number of women by decree, because they couldn't make it on on their own merit.
Quote: Mr Writer Like In The Song @ 10th February 2014, 3:40 PM GMT
I think what you're saying is that gender shouldn't be a factor in selection. Which actually, I broadly agree with.
Aye - I suspect we pretty much agree a problem exists, just disagree over how best to address it.
Quote: sootyj @ 10th February 2014, 3:45 PM GMT
I think it's tougher to get started if you're a lady in some areas of open miking.
Because mostly people start in open mikes more than anywhere else. Now I've been to way to many where it's been 9 guys and one gal and rape, rape, rape gag.
You need ovaries the size of bowling balls to do that week in week out.
I think it's got a lot better. But you still have to make up for all the years when it wasn't.
I'd actually sort-of blame the audiences here. There's a certain type of audience/club that seems to appreciate that and obviously know that women aren't funny, and neither are men who don't do rape/paedo/racist 'jokes'.
I'm pretty sure that the problem is that there's some sort of correlation between humour and general intelligence/learning, and an inverse relationship between general intelligence/learning and bigotry...
(BTW - note 'learning' not 'education'...)