In February 2019, an indignant opinion piece appeared in the Independent by one Liam Evans, a self-proclaimed “comedy aficionado” who believed that comedians ought to be subject to criminal investigation for “problematic jokes”. The piece was derided by some as alarmist, but three years on, the controversy over Jimmy Carr’s Holocaust joke has prompted the Culture Secretary to propose something similar: a new law that would make it illegal for streaming services to broadcast offensive comedy.
A spokesperson for the Prime Minister echoed her response, saying that he is looking into “toughening measures for social media and streaming platforms which don’t tackle harmful content on their platforms”. SNP Councillor Julie McKenzie has called for Carr to be “prosecuted” along with “his applauding audience”. Liam Evans, it seems, was simply ahead of his time.
The key difference is that Liam Evans does not exist. The article was a hoax, intended to draw attention to the ideological drift of the mainstream media. (For those who are interested, if you take the fourth letter of every sentence in the article the true author is revealed.)
But the success of the hoax raised a number of questions. How is it that a national media organisation would publish such absurd and authoritarian drivel by a complete unknown? Are their editorial standards really so low? And does their decision to publish the article suggest that they support the author’s calls for comedy to be regulated by the state? If so, Liam Evans was simply a useful tool, someone the Independent could promote who was prepared to say the quiet part out loud.
There has always been satirical potential in hoaxing. In the Sixties, for instance, a series of letters was dispatched to the press by Mrs Edna Welthorpe, who was enraged by the depravity of Joe Orton’s farces, which were dominating the West End. Of Entertaining Mr Sloane, Welthorpe wrote: “I myself was nauseated by this endless parade of mental and physical perversion. And to be told that such a disgusting piece of filth now passes for humour!”
When an audience member wrote a letter of complaint to the Criterion Theatre about Orton’s Loot, Welthorpe responded directly, claiming that she was an employee and that the letter had been passed to her for filing. “Please, please, as a fellow Christian, let me applaud your design in writing to the Lord Chamberlain,” she wrote. “This truly horrible play shouldn’t contaminate our streets.”
That Orton should assume a persona to fulminate against his own plays was simply his way of broadening the scope of his satirical work from the stage to the real world. He was obsessed with the sham gentility of a society that was, to his mind, essentially rotten. Orton loved to shock, perhaps because he was seemingly incapable of being shocked by anything. In his plays, he was able to take a hacksaw to those figures of authority he so despised, be they doctors, police officers, or any other breed of moralising hypocrite. But the hoax letters served a different purpose. They mocked their targets through the pretence of sympathy, effectively encouraging more of the kind of behaviour that his farces sought to lampoon.
This technique is the precursor to what we now call “trolling”. The term is often misused as a synonym for malicious and bullying online behaviour but, as traditionally understood, trolling is the art of coaxing people into a reaction. Motivations vary from troll to troll. For some, it is simply a matter of revelling in the gullibility of strangers. For others, the intention is to expose the vices and shortcomings of those in power.
Jonathan Swift was an early exponent of this kind of trolling in the creation of his alter-ego Isaac Bickerstaff, who wrote pamphlets which predicted, and then announced, the death of the astrologer John Partridge. Swift resented Partridge because of his attacks on the church, and must have been immensely gratified that Bickerstaff’s announcement had been taken on trust by so many. It is said that Partridge was thereafter continually having to fend off queries about his uncanny resemblance to a dead man.
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SubscribeLet’s hope so.
More by Mr Doyle please.
I second that motion.
Third.
Where is there a female* version of Chris Morris satirising the ridiculous contradictions inherent in trans activism and Stonewall policies to crush women’s rights?
(*And yes she would have to be female as men don’t have women’s ‘lived experience’ and so are not listened to and a trans person would be vilified as an Uncle Tom)
A generation of cretinous Milleniards (Millennial Retards)
I particilarly enjoyed ‘soft-witted celebrities eager to endorse fashionable but illiberal notions they barely understand’
It is such a nuisance that now everything is behind a paywall, except Twitter, which is the one you never want to access (and that’s probably why it is free…)
Telegram?
To be a bit trivial for a moment, I have wondered whether “trolling” is derived from the fishing technique rather than “troll” (the Scandinavian goblin who lives under bridges), as seems to be generally assumed. This article seems to say that it is indeed the former rather than the latter.
Without having noticed who the author of the article is, I was automatically thinking of Titania McGrath.
Thanks Andrew for a lot of much needed laughs. I can’t think too much about the observation that “it has become a truism that we living during a period where satire and reality are not easily distinguishable” as I might fall into gloom again
It’s Evidently Chickentown.
Hmm, this has gone far beyond satire and into the realms of utter madness. The attacks on the lifeforce birth, family, survival of the species etc, beginning with the legislation and promotion of same sex behaviour, should be treated as the danger to our children that is becoming more obvious every day.
All this clever waffle is simply mental masturbation by people who live under the guise of being proponents of free speech….Please talk about the REAL issues.
Ordinary folks are confused and frightened by the changes being applied to society, they need support and reassurance rather than this so called satire.
Stuff like this alienates real people and makes them feel worthless.
Surely this is a hoax article by someone who gets all their ideas from GBNews?
This is probably a hoax comment by a deadly enemy of the writer determined to cast doubt on whether he really exists
Got me – I enjoy watching Andrew on GBNews!
His best joke:
“What flowers should I buy my woke neighbour who has just had their first child?”
“Chrysanthebirthingpersons!”
I still laugh even now at Andrew’s sketch on Brexit in 2018 -comparing it to trying to cash in a Scottish £10 note outside Scotland. Technically it is legal, but we’ll make it so hard for you to actually do” Great sketch. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cy-b8ZhT3AE
That is brilliant and as soon as i dare, I’ll forward it to my “socialist” friend who of course thinks all Brexit voters are fascists. As beautifully described here.