Nanette seems more like the name of an elderly Shih Tzu than a groundbreaking comedy special. But Hannah Gadsby's Netflix hour is Watch Come Inside Me 3indeed called Nanette — and it is a radical tour de force that calls out some of standup comedy's worst shortcomings.
SEE ALSO: This Netflix hidden gem is the must-watch comedy for our dark timesStand-up has always been a dog-eat-dog world. From set stealers to hecklers, the obstacles facing the most privileged of comedians is substantial, and the underrepresented have it even worse.
Gadsby's hour is a profound breakdown of the disadvantages she has faced as a gay woman—not just in comedy, but in life. During the course of her special, she concludes that for her own well-being, she ought to quit comedy. At the center of her argument is a fundamental flaw in the "rules" of self-deprecation.
Pick up any guide to stand-up comedy (I personally recommend Franklyn Ajaye's Comic Insights) and you'll be taught that lucky, happy, attractive, wealthy, confident people are very rarely funny. It's the (oversimplified) bedrock of an important comedy lesson: We like to laugh with the people whose flaws we can relate to and celebrate.
"Do you understand what self-deprecation means when it comes from someone who is already in the margins? It's not humility. It's humiliation."
Many comics turn to self-deprecation to create the basis of their set, Gadsby among them. But when you are regularly treated as less than because of your societal status, self-deprecation can turn from an easy punchline into a toxic soup of identity politics and degradation.
Gadsby explains the effects of this phenomenon to her audience, saying, "Do you understand what self-deprecation means when it comes from someone who is already in the margins? It's not humility. It's humiliation. I put myself down in order to speak, in order to seek permission to speak."
Doesn't sound particularly funny, right? Well, it isn't. What makes Nanettea transformative work is not Gadsby's comedic chops, though they glisten throughout. Instead, the beauty of this piece is found in its verbalization of what so many of us self-deprecators, professional and amateur alike, feel on a daily basis—a need to excuse our own existence.
Gadsby gives herself permission to reject stereotypical, two-dimensional "fat queer woman" humor and instead embrace her own revolutionary perspective. In doing so, she has given other marginalized comics permission to do the same, opening up a whole new world for audiences.
Prior toNanette, Gadsby was forced to ask herself the question so many comics dread: are they laughing with or at me? By the end of Nanette, the answer is neither. Her quiet audience is left to ponder the realities of what they saw behind the curtain. And, hopefully, begin to demand change.
Nanetteis now streaming on Netflix.
Topics Comics
Periscope introduces Producer to help professionals broadcast to TwitterThe Trump allegations have sparked a grim new Twitter trendSomeone secretly taped Kim K after robbery, and her lawyers are pissedBob Dylan wins Nobel Prize in LiteratureBust out the GIFs, the New York Times just gave Trump a legal burn'Game of Thrones' fans think this undercover cast photo could mean a big reunionInstagram app is now available for Windows 10 PCs and tabletsNBC wants to find the next big music star on the internet with 'The Stream'J.K. Rowling's 'Fantastic Beasts' franchise magically expands to 5 filmsThe Nike+ Apple Watch is coming October 28Carrier accidentally sends Google Pixel phone a week early to lucky guyWhen Michelle Obama goes high, she takes every woman with herParticipant Media acquires Rainn Wilson's social good video platform SoulPancakeSomeone secretly taped Kim K after robbery, and her lawyers are pissed'Simpsons' creator: Donald Trump candidacy has gone 'beyond satire'The rise of the (truly awful) webcam job interviewAdvice for GOP defectors who just 'can't bring themselves to vote' for Hillary13 fantastic, lesserYouTube star KSI lashes out at fans pirating his film ‘Laid in America’'Dragon Quest Builders' is for 'Minecraft' fans who want noble quests, too Adobe's Flash Updater: Bloated, Confusing & Shady 8 Free to Play Games That Are Too Good to Be True Murder, mayhem, and a crown: ‘Fear Street’ makes prom a killer affair Today's Hurdle hints and answers for May 18, 2025 AirPods Pro 3 seemingly confirmed in Apple leak Touring Microsoft, Sony and Apple Stores on Windows 8's Launch Day Best Garmin deal: Save $100 on Garmin Venu 3S NYT mini crossword answers for May 17, 2025 Wordle today: The answer and hints for May 17, 2025 Crystal Palace vs. Manchester City 2025 livestream: Watch FA Cup final for free Building a Hackintosh with Quo's Any OS Motherboard Interview with Malwarebytes' founder, Marcin Kleczynski NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for May 17: Tips to solve Connections #236 Windows 8.1: Six Things Microsoft Got Right and Others That Are Still Missing Leinster vs. Glasgow Warriors 2025 livestream: Watch United Rugby Championship for free The Best Gaming GIFs of 2012 Fandango deal: $7 off 'Final Destination: Bloodlines' in IMAX Building a Small Form Factor Gaming System with the Silverstone Sugo SG10 and Haswell Hardware Trend alert: ChatGPT is turning Reddit usernames into images Xbox One vs. PS4: How They Stack Up Today
0.8197s , 8228.484375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Come Inside Me 3】,Unobstructed Information Network