Quote: AngieBaby @ September 30 2010, 11:34 PM BSTAs a woman, I'd probablly suggest something subtler like 'Well they don't have to take 5 days off when they're on the blob.'
In a comedy drama (or even a non-comedy drama) that would be a really good line.
In a sketch written by a woman, I'd think it a bit near the knuckle but acceptable.
If a man wrote it, I'd feel less comfortable.
But I'm not laying down the rules of comedy here.
I'm stating my own personal feelings.
Quote: Ponderer @ September 30 2010, 11:04 PM BSTi'm intrigued by your coyness about the menstrual cycle when the joke is about pre-pubescent prostitution.
It's a question of good taste, I believe
There are certain comedy topics that the lowest comedians on Earth appear to revel in - and bodily functions (especially those of women) often take pride of place among those topics.
That's not to suggest that high-grade comedians should not broach such topics. They should - if they can be funny rather than just-plain-vulgar about them.
With a high-grade comedian, the intention is always to be funny and/or to provoke worthwhile thought among the audience. With the low-grade comedian, the intention is essentially to humiliate the subject of the joke.
Pre-pubescent prozzies are not people I often write about comedically but, if I do, I can offer justification by saying what I write is funny (at least to me) and it highlights a growing social problem.
Jokes told by men about menstruation (unless genuinely clever) are much more difficult to justify.