Rupert Bear
Saturday 12th February 2022 1:50pm
56 posts
Quote: Aaron @ 12th February 2022, 12:23 PM
There have been changes in comedy and sensitivities over the last couple of decades, of course. Some of them for the worse, and some of them for the better. But I think you are conflating something that has happened incidentally (PC/woke stuff) with other, less immediately obvious changes that are the actual reasons for the changes you dislike, Rupert Bear.
Primarily, I find the change to be towards the personal and the art, away from the pure entertainment. Note the small number of pure sitcoms on television, and even smaller number written by writers. We are currently in an age where personal stories are much more in vogue than simply 'funny'. The number of stand-ups with semi-autobiographical or 'autobiographical inspired' narrative comedies, which are more about telling a tale and portraying a particular experience on screen, than seeking to make the viewer laugh as their primary driving objective, can be seen as reflective of this.
There is nothing incidental about PC/Woke stuff, it didn't just 'happen'.
But yes, big changes in outlooks, but in my opinion not for the better. Comedy was never about personal narratives, about story telling, it was designed to make people laugh. Take that laughter away and you're left with a blandness that's hard to categorize, but it isn't comedy. For example, it would be hard to have another 'Two Ronnies', or 'Only Fools and Horses' as it would offend to many people who were unwittingly the subject of the humour.
Have we become to sensitive? The British also came in for a roasting as stiff upper lipped Colonel Bogey's with no malice intended, but now God forbid a minority sub-culture is ridiculed and becomes a subject of comedy. I'm not the only one saying all this and the Internet is full of topics lamenting the death of British comedy, but those with an agenda are oblivious to it.