• SNL Comedian Nimesh Patel Kicked Off Columbia University Stage by Offen

    From Ubiquitous@1:229/2 to All on Tuesday, December 04, 2018 13:09:08
    XPost: alt.tv.snl, rec.arts.tv, alt.politics.correct
    XPost: soc.college, alt.education.higher
    From: weberm@polaris.net

    Saturday Night Live writer and comedian Nimesh Patel was kicked off
    stage by Columbia University students on Friday night halfway
    through his performance because students found his jokes
    "offensive."

    Patel's comedy skit was cut short after the students who organized
    the event interrupted him and demanded that he end his performance
    early.

    The students got on stage, took the comedian's microphone, and
    denounced his jokes in front of the audience, as first reported by
    The Columbia Spectator.

    The event was called cultureSHOCK: Reclaim, a charity performance
    showcase hosted by the university's Asian American Alliance. The
    goal of the event was to provide "a platform for a diversity of
    Asian American artistic expression," as well as seeking to break
    through "stereotypes and challenges."

    According to The Columbia Spectator, members of the student group
    found Patel's skit offensive, specifically when the comedian joked
    that being gay cannot be a choice, adding that if a man is both
    black and gay, "no one looks in the mirror and thinks, `this black
    thing is too easy, let me just add another thing to it.'"

    When told to leave, the comedian protested, explaining that his
    performance was simply familiarizing students with the "real world."
    The student organizers, however, remained insistent that Patel end
    his skit.

    "We deeply apologize for inviting [Patel] in the first place and
    bringing these comments into a space for inclusion and acceptance,"
    the student group posted to its Facebook page following the event,
    "We apologize for the hurt his words caused members of the
    community."

    The student group added that members were "still processing" what
    had happened.

    A few students who attended the event told PJ Media that audience
    members did not boo or shout during Patel's performance, and
    therefore, they felt that ending the event early was unsolicited.

    "I was very surprised. Either that means I'm not as sensitive as I
    should be, or the whole thing was just dramatic," said one student.

    Not all students felt the same way, though.

    "I really dislike when people who are older say that our generation
    needs to be exposed to the real world," said another student, Sofia
    Jao, to The Columbia Spectator, "Obviously the world is not a safe
    space but just accepting that it's not and continuing to perpetuate
    the un-safeness of it - is saying that it can't be changed."

    "When older generations say you need to stop being so sensitive,
    it's like undermining what our generation is trying to do in
    accepting others and making it safer," added Jao.

    It seems as though it was not too long ago when the opposite was
    true, and younger generations were the ones calling for older
    generations to loosen the constraints on comedy.

    --
    Dems & the media want Trump to be more like Obama, but then he'd
    have to audit liberals & wire tap reporters' phones.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)