“Cancel culture” is definitely not the ticket.
Comedian Jon Lovitz argued this week that cancel culture is the new McCarthyism – unlike comedians Seth Rogen and Katt Williams who claim that cancel culture either doesn’t exist or has no real teeth.
According to Page Six earlier reports this week:
Lovitz said that the internet witch hunts that use people’s past sins or indiscretions as weapons of destruction are no different from the Red Scare and the Hollywood blacklist of the 1950s.
“I’ll just say it, it’s no different than McCarthyism,” he said.
Echoing the complaints of many other comedians, Lovitz said that the tasks of satirizing society and pointing its hypocrisies have become increasingly difficult in the age of cancel culture.
“As soon as you say to a comedian like me, ‘You can’t say that,’ the first thing in my head is, ‘Oh, and now I have to,’” he said, noting there is “a difference between making jokes and being outright mean.”
Lovitz even went so far as to argue that “The Goldbergs” actor Bryan Callen should not be canceled over a 2020 article in the Los Angeles Times accusing him of rape and sexual misconduct.
PageSix reports added, “Callen, 54, has vehemently denied the sex accusations against him, which included one woman who said the comic raped her after dinner at his home, another who said he assaulted her in an American Apparel, a third who said he tried to get her to perform a sex act in exchange for cash and stage time, and a fourth who said she felt ‘devalued’ while she dated him.”
“He should not be canceled. It’s horrible,” Lovitz said. “I remember reading the article and thought it was ridiculous. One girl said she was 24 and he was 42. She was his girlfriend for three years and she says, ‘I’m 32 now, he should have known better.’ Known what better? You’re 24 to 27, you’re not a kid. What did he do? He had a girlfriend who was younger? So? I like women that are younger, not illegal, most guys do.”
“When someone does something really horrible, raping someone, of course, you should be in prison, obviously, but stuff like a girl is on a bad date or the relationship ends and she’s mad that it ended because she got dumped, come on!” he added.
While Lovitz may have intense thoughts about cancel culture, not all comedians agree. Katt Williams, for instance, recently argued that comedians should look at this newfound age of heightened sensitivity as an opportunity to elevate their work.
“If you ask all of the people who didn’t make it to the NBA if you asked them if we just lowered the goal down another foot, they would all tell you they’d make it. Nobody likes the out of bounds, but the out of bounds has got to be there,” he said. “Some of these things are for the benefit of everything. Nobody likes the speed limit, but it’s necessary. Nobody likes the shoulder of the road, but it’s there for a reason.”
Comedians Chris Rock, Seinfeld, Bill Burr, Ricky Gervais, and Dave Chappelle have all denounced cancel culture.