Chappelle Was Right (Yair Rosenberg) [View all]
As I watched Dave Chappelles much-discussed Saturday Night Live monologue poking fun at recent anti-Semitic incidents involving Black celebrities, I finally figured out why I no longer felt comfortable cracking jokes about anti-Semitic conspiracy theories.
In his 15-minute appearance, Chappelle, a habitual line-stepper, deliberately mocked the presumptions of both anti-Semites and their critics, with little concern for where the chips fell. He closed his potent performance with a pronouncement: It shouldnt be this scary to talk about anything. Its making my job incredibly difficult, and to be honest with you, Im getting sick of talking to a crowd like this. I love you to death, and I thank you for your support, and I hope they dont take anything away from mewhoever they are. In context, this felt like a cheap but clever attempt to immunize himself against criticismsay nothing, and his comedic choices go unchallenged; say something, and youve proved him right.
That said, Chappelle is correct that its become more difficult to poke fun at anti-Semitism in front of an audience, but not because some censorious Jewish cabal is looking over the shoulder of Netflixs multimillion-dollar man. The problem, I realized, is that as anti-Semitism and related conspiracy theories become more normalized in our discourse, laughing about them becomes harder, because you never know who might not get the joke.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/11/why-its-become-harder-to-joke-about-anti-semitism/672120/