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Ricky's tricky humour

January 21st 2012 00:02
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ricky gervais

I don't understand the whole Golden Globes and Ricky Gervais thing.

In 2010 an English comedian is invited to anchor an American show business awards night, but his jokes are perceived as outrageous insults and the US psychotherapy industry experiences a six-month boom as the slighted celebrities seek solace.


Just as things were returning to normal, with Mel Gibson again able to recite the serenity prayer without a voice quaver, it was announced that the Golden Globe organisers had invited Gervais back to host the 2011 event.

Hollywood shuddered. It registered on the Richter Scale. You could smell the fear. It registered on the sphincter scale.

And Ricky Dene Gervais, born June 25, 1961, himself winner of seven BAFTAs, five British Comedy Awards, two Emmys, three Golden Globes and the 2006 Rose d'Or, delivered.

It was so brutal that America went into shock. They simply had no response to someone who stood before an audience of Hollywood elite and, beaming live into the homes of every good citizen who believed in truth, justice and the celebrity way, crucified them.

Not only did he make fun of Charlie Sheen, Bruce Willis and Robert Downey Jr, he even insulted Hugh Hefner!

They hadn't felt like this since Pearl Harbour.

The response, as you would expect from a nation which gave us Superman and The Incredible Hulk, was swift, strong and to the point. After they had woken the next day and downed some stuff to treat the hangover, and some more stuff to treat the fact that they had woken up at all, Hollywood fought back.


Ricky Gervais, they said, would never shove humble pie, or whatever it was he was peddling, down our throats in our town again. Ever.

It took several months for the outrage to abate, and for the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, which runs the Golden Globe Awards, to invite Mr Gervais back to host the 2012 awards.

Huh? Am I the only one confused here?

George Bernard Shaw once said, "England and America are two countries separated by a common language." It means that there are some fundamental differences in the way they use English.

Take, for example, the concept of irony. In the UK, there is a fine line between irony and sarcasm, and yet British history is rich with comedians who have danced on that line and royally entertained us as they did so.

In the US, however, the line is a thick one and tends more to divide slapstick and sarcasm, and the line itself is a no-go zone. Subtlety, paradox and (worst of all) irony are not the currency of Hollywood. Motto: In Charlie Chaplin, Abbott and Costello and The Three Stooges We Trust.

What do you expect of the inventors of canned laughter?

Gervais's infra dig humour at the 2010 and 2011 Golden Globe Awards crossed a cultural divide which was already entrenched 100 years ago in Bernard Shaw's day. No wonder they were baying for his blood, and that of the misled morons who run the Hollywood Foreign Press Association.

Why on earth would they invite him back a second time, let alone a third?

Ratings.

Showbiz awards ceremonies, including the Oscars, have been falling from grace for some years. Not enough reality perhaps, but whatever the reason, the Golden Globes was experiencing an annual decline of interest along with the rest of them, an industry-wide trend which appeared cyclical and irresistible.

Until Ricky Gervais lobbed in 2010 and made tabloid headlines throughout the known universe. Yes, that's why they invited him back in 2011 for a repeat dose. Ratings.

And that's why they invited him back for the 2012 event last weekend. Except, this time, all his insults had the power of a powder puff. All titter, no terror. Just when he was bringing to Hollywood a sea change, a new understanding, a sweeping vision of comedic nuance as perfected and performed by Brits since the time of Chaucer, Gervais went lame and became a Hollywood local.

I don't know why. I just don't understand the whole Golden Globes and Ricky Gervais thing.
Ricky Gervais picture: Finlay MacKay, Time Magazine. An abbreviated version of this article first appeared in mX newspaper in Australia.

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William Safire, 1929-2009

September 27th 2009 23:39
william safire
William Safire receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2006

William Lewis Safire, Pulitzer Prize winner, language expert, long-time columnist for The New York Times and speech writer for President Nixon, has died at the age of 79. The Baltimore Sun newspaper described him as a conservative columnist and word warrior who feared no politician or corner of the English language.

Author Eric Alterman, in his 1999 book Sound and Fury: The Making of the Punditocracy, called Safire an institution. "Few insiders doubt that William Safire is the most influential and respected pundit alive," Alterman wrote.

He was born William Lewis Safir (he added an e to his surname later for what he described as pronunciation reasons) on December 17, 1929. A Jew, Safire was throughout his life a staunch and vocal advocate of Israel. The young William attended the Bronx High School of Science and then spent two years at Syracuse University before dropping out. He worked as a radio and television producer, in public relations and as a publicist before joining the Nixon presidential campaign in 1960.

In 1973 Safire joined The New York Times as a political columnist, beginning a 32-year stint as one of America's most respected political pundits and its mostly widely read language expert. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1978 for commentary on the alleged budgetary irregularities of Bert Lance, an adviser to Jimmy Carter (and widely acknowledged as originator of the saying, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it").

Safire described himself as a "libertarian conservative", defined by Wikipedia as, "A term adopted by a broad spectrum of political philosophies which advocate the maximization of individual liberty and the minimization or even abolition of the state".

Bill Clinton was more interested in Safire's nose than his prose. Clinton said he wanted to punch that nose after Safire called his wife "a congenital liar".

Safire also wrote several novels and was chairman of the Dana Foundation, a philanthropic organisation which supports brain science, immunology and arts education.

Upon announcing the retirement of Safire's political column in 2005, Arthur Sulzberger Jr, publisher of The New York Times, said, "The New York Times without Bill Safire is all but unimaginable. Whether you agreed with him or not was never the point — his writing is delightful, informed and engaging."
Image: UPI.com




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George W Bush, who in 2000 started his forceful march to the US presidency by asking, "Is our children learning", leaves the public stage shortly, which is sad because he will now have fewer opportunities to mangle the language.

Debate may rage forever over relative merit of the gaffs which have come to be known collectively as Bushisms, but The Global Language Monitor, an organisation which tracks language trends, has just published its Top 15 list of Bushisms, and coming out on top is "misunderestimate".

It is hard to argue with this choice. Misunderestimate has cuteness value, like irregardless. You just want to rush up to Dubbya and hug him and wish him well in his future communication efforts.

If you must argue with this first choice, it may pay to do so quickly. Let us not forget the lesson of another presidential gaff. They laughed when Thomas Jefferson got his tongue in a knot and let fly with the non-existent word "belittle".

Today it is part of the language. It is a particularly useful word when describing George W Bush's language skills.

For more on Bushisms, see here.

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