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Normand: Comedy Now Morality Police?
17 Mar
Summary
- Comedian Mark Normand fears comedy is becoming morality-based.
- New Netflix special 'None Too Pleased' premieres March 17.
- Social media fuels partisanship, hindering idea exchange.

Stand-up comedian Mark Normand, ahead of his new Netflix special 'None Too Pleased' premiering March 17, has voiced concerns over the changing landscape of comedy. He observes that humor is increasingly judged by political leanings rather than its comedic merit, a trend he attributes partly to social media's polarizing effects.
Normand feels that comedy has become "weirdly morality-based," where sensitivity often trumps the craft of joke-telling. He contrasts this with past eras where controversial topics were fair game if transformed into genuinely funny material. His new special, he explains, is a rapid-fire show designed to poke fun at this lack of nuance and partisan division.
He further elaborated on how audiences often prioritize identifying a comedian's political stance over enjoying the humor, leading to a fractured reality where ideas cannot be freely exchanged. This tribalism, he argues, has also impacted late-night television, which he describes as predictable and ideologically uniform despite diverse casts.
Normand's 'None Too Pleased' special includes disclaimers to reassure audiences that potentially sensitive topics are handled with humor, not as political statements. He insists that the art of comedy lies in making difficult subjects funny, emphasizing that a laugh is always the key objective, not delivering a lecture or slogan.




