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afghanistan

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The Taliban Are Banning “Comedy Shows In Which People Are Humiliated”

November 22, 2021
News
afghanistan, comedy ban, taliban

As the Taliban continues to change every single thing about Afghanistan and effectively turning back the clock in terms of progress by decades, they just issued a new set of guidelines (though we bet they’re more than just “guidelines”) to be followed by Afghan media (via Variety). The most alarming part is their move to end Afghan dramas/soap operas featuring female actors, which aggressively continues the shift backwards to an explicitly patriarchal theocracy. That’s a whole can of worms that we have a hard time imagining sustain itself in 2021. If the Taliban don’t already have their own Internet that grants them the power to limit any global influence, they’ll need it if they want to keep up such a ridiculous, outdated ideology going.

They’ll especially need such a tool to keep up another one of the directives they issued on Sunday: banning comedy shows in which people are humiliated.

One could argue that someone will always be a little bit humiliated in comedy given how there are always power dynamics at play in the DNA of humor and comedy. Sure, we didn’t think they would go for anything like Roast Battle in the Taliban’s Afghanistan, but relegating comedy to what would very likely be just observational humor of animals and inanimate objects will, very likely we think, be an unintentional seed of discord. Naturally, people will want to joke about more than that and, at some point, find a way to do so.

Even under threat of religious police in different Middle Eastern countries neighboring Afghanistan, people have organized secret comedy shows in the desert and been getting away with it for years. It’s hard to say what sort of humor will secretly manifest itself in Afghanistan, but we have no doubt that it’ll pop up somehow. A secret political cartoon of how poorly the Taliban are ruling? Other secret shows a secret cave where people can joke freely? We’ll see in the hopefully not too distant future.

Just like it’s pretty ludicrous to wage a war on a concept like terrorism, it’s just as futile to try to ban humiliation in comedy.

That all said, we’re sure that men will probably be able to openly joke about anyone that stands in opposition of Taliban values and the “guideline” will very likely not be applied in that case.

War Machine’s 2nd Trailer Gives You an Even Better Idea of the Absurdity of the War in Afghanistan

May 10, 2017
Uncategorized
afghanistan, brad pitt, dark comedy, david michod, trailer, war machine

David Michôd‘s War Machine, the dark comedy about the long U.S. military involvement in Afghanistan, just got another trailer and it looks, sounds, and feels like a wartime comedy straight from the pen of Armando Iannucci (i.e. it looks pretty damn good). 

This new trailer gives a glimpse into the sharp, almost too close to home humor and the reveling in absurdity of the situation that perhaps this story deserves.

Look for War Machine to start streaming on Netflix near the end of the month on May 26th.

War Machine Trailer Has Brad Pitt as a General Trying His Darndest to Solve the U.S. Presence in Afghanistan

March 30, 2017
Uncategorized
afghanistan, brad pitt, david michod, exit strategy, netflix, trailer, war machine

Give a watch to the trailer to David Michôd’s latest War Machine that follows a well-meaning general trying to make sense of what the U.S. was doing remaining in Afghanistan. Of course, anything dealing with foreign policy is relevant these days, but we’re getting a sense of deliciously wry satire in this film.

We know this might a stretch, but may this, mostly because of Brad Pitt starring in the lead role of a geopolitical dark comedy, be a spiritual sequel of sorts to Burn After Reading?

War Machine starts streaming on Netflix on Friday, May 26th, 2017.

Colin Does Post-Interview Interview After Actual Interview on “Late Night with Seth Meyers”

August 11, 2015
Uncategorized
afghanistan, colin quinn, late night, seth meyers, trainwreck

Never one to shy away from commenting on how an interview is going in the middle of the interview, Colin Quinn has taken analyzing his televised conversations with talk show hosts to the next level. 

While watch him with Meyers about trying to not be in Trainwreck, Amazon book commenters, and…

…being banned in Afghanistan would be all well and good and funny on its own, Colin added another layer to the whole thing.

Watch him do a talking point-by-talking point breakdown with Seth Meyers after the taping. We hope future guests at Late Night with Seth Meyers and elsewhere think about rating their performance along similar lines.

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