Scott Raab: Like many nice Caucasians, I cried the night Barack Obama was elected. It was one of the high points in American history. And all that’s happened since the election is just a shitstorm of hatred. You want to weigh in on that?
__
Chris Rock: I actually like it, in the sense that — you got kids? Kids always act up the most before they go to sleep. And when I see the Tea Party and all this stuff, it actually feels like racism’s almost over. Because this is the last — this is the act up before the sleep. They’re going crazy. They’re insane. You want to get rid of them — and the next thing you know, they’re fucking knocked out. And that’s what’s going on in the country right now. — Chris Rock: The ESQ+A
I think many of us know a right-winger or two we’d like to see knocked out… in Mr. Rock’s totally inoffensive and non-violent sense, of course.
Dave
I see Chris Rock is weighing in on “Peak Wingnut” now…hope he has more luck than John did.
Cat Lady
From Chris Rock’s lips to the FSM’s orecchiette.
Violet
I really hope he’s right. Demographics are on the side of him being right eventually. When Peak Wingnut will hit though…sheesh.
gnomedad
Less happy thought: Unemployed need not apply, some firms say
Ash Can
Chris Rock is a treasure. And I earnestly hope he’s right.
tPirate
I don’t even know who Chris Rock is, but I agree – have agreed since early 2008, when I predicted this last bout of energy before sleep. Palin was the Snickers bar, and she’s gone now, so they’re gonna get sleepy.
Zifnab
I was a big fan of Chris Rock’s gun control policy.
someguy
It’s not over until they say it over. Was it over when the Muslims bombed Pearl Harbor?
Villago Delenda Est
Chris is aware that the little dears will wake up and repeat the cycle, right?
EconWatcher
I’ve long thought that once Chris Rock has made enough money and gets tired of the comedy circuit, he should run for office. The man knows how to frame issues. I think he’d be great.
Legalize
This Chris Rock fella probably has a career ahead of him making humorous, off-color remarks about timely topics, in front of large numbers of people.
suzanne
@Cat Lady:
LMMFAO! Win.
PeakVT
I say Peak Wingnut is still valid, but trying to predict the exact timing is a mugs game. Rock is just the latest to fall into the trap. We won’t see the peak until we are past it.
Yutsano
Chris is an eternal optimist. I only hope he’s also a prophet here as well.
@gnomedad: The thing that concerns me there is the precedent that might make that illegal originally was ruled to protect brown folks, so I bet if it goes all the way to the SCOTUS the 5-4 decision ruling for the employers won’t be good.
@suzanne: Mmm…orecchiette. Though it seems a bit odd eating what literally means “little ears”.
Warren Terra
I’ve never really paid much attention to Chris Rock, but that was a good interview, an interesting conversation.
LGRooney
I see it another way: they’re fucking insomniacs and they keep waking us up in the middle of the night!
Civil War Peak, Reconstruction Peak, Jim Crow Peak, White Flight Peak, Civil Rights Peak, Assassination Peak, Southern Strategy Peak (this has been the toughest one to get back to sleep)…
I’d love to believe it the way Rock sees it but I am neither that optimistic nor that forgetful.
Kryptik
He has more faith in the threshold of crazy the country can sustain more than I do. The problem is that the country is like the parent that coddles the kids who go crazy because they know, deep down inside, they’re ‘good children’, simply giving them more incentive to be little shits, because hey, it works.
@gnomedad:
Yeah, this is old news. When the trend first hit, I was galled, because the rationale the firms that refused to hire the unemployed was ‘They must be unemployed for a reason’. In other words, lack of job is proof of guilt, you must be a shitty worker and not worth their time if you dare not have any employment, so fuck you and the bus you had to catch to get here.
It really is such abominable shit. And it’s more of that Economic Calvinism that has fucking gripped this whole country like a stranglehold.
@EconWatcher:
They tried that movie already. It wasn’t very good.
Cris
Why not? The usual dismissal is “He’s a comedian, not a politician.” Let’s ask Senator Franken his opinion of that.
Console
Chris Rock is probably my favorite person to see interviewed. No matter what he’s talking about, it’s like he’s always giving setup, punchline, tag, tag, set up, punchline, tag… yet he’s still saying these insightful and great things.
Brachiator
Right on target. The thing is, though, you hope that they will finally give up before doing more damage to the country. And this is where the problem lies.
Joel
I loved Chris Rock’s take on Lebron leaving for Miami…
ruemara
@gnomedad:
My guy has been ue for 3 years. This has been old news.
Suck It Up!
Interesting. I thought along the same lines as Chris Rock. I pictured all this hate as the pus that oozes out of a healing wound.
gil mann
@Console:
“Bring the Pain” was too awesome for Rock’s own good–no way there’s not a massive drop-off in quality after that–so I’m not a big fan of his stand-up these days, but as a guy who sums things up/distills things down he’s peerless. He’s reaching Vonnegut levels of saying offhanded shit that’s both revelatory and eminently quotable.
Calouste
@Cris:
“He’s a
comedianclown, not a politician.” typically only applies to people after they have been elected.RP
I’ve been thinking about this a lot lately. I know the standard response is that they’re ruining discourse by moving the “Overton Window” way over to the right, but I think the political spectrum is balanced on a table or something, and that if you move too far in one direction, eventually you’ll fall off and cede the table to the other side. I think the tea party and the extreme hatred and nuttiness will burn itself out in near future, leaving a lot more space for the grown ups.
Console
@gil mann:
Exactly. It’s like prose, but not really. I think the Vonnegut comparison is apt.
Elizabelle
Thanks for spotlighting this, Annie. Would have missed it.
Hope Chris Rock is correct. He’s whipsmart.
Agree with Rooney’s comment at 16, though.
trixie larue
I like his perspective on this. It’s optimistic, despite what we are seeing in the present. Kids go to sleep and they do wake up; but every day they are a little older and little wiser. Sounds good to me.
RedKitten
@Zifnab:
Heh. Me too.
Chris Rock is another one who proves that the best comedians are blisteringly intelligent individuals. And yes, he really does have a gift for looking at things from a completely unusual perspective, summing it up, and delivering it in such a pithy fashion that we’re all left smacking our heads and wondering why the hell we never thought of it that way before.
tkogrumpy
I’d give a million dollars for Chris Rock’s Rose colored glasses.
R-Jud
@LGRooney:
Hmm. I think the whole “slavery peak” was the toughest one to put to sleep, no? It took 200 or so years to go from the establishment of a slave trade in the American colonies to to emancipation.
And if you notice, each of your “peaks” accounts for fewer and fewer dead from violence as time goes on.
Shinobi
Eh, I think Chris Rock is only partially right. Some of this is generational, and that means bedtime is a long time coming.
slag
Peak Wingnut was a lie.
Seriously. Somebody needs to buy this mug for all you people.
alicia-logic
@Cris:
His usual reply is “I’m a satirist, not a comedian.”
Stefan
Less happy thought: Unemployed need not apply, some firms say
That is just out and out evil.
cyntax
@Warren Terra:
Check out his documentary Good Hair:
Shinobi
Open Thread Contribution:
How DARE they use Muppets to lobby for the survival of shows which include Muppets. http://bit.ly/gW8tw4
Phoebe
@Villago Delenda Est: I know! Has he read Nixonland? He’s my age so he didn’t quite live through that, but I read about the kids acting up last night [“Long Hot Summer” chapter — yeah I’m way behind schedule]and they didn’t exactly go to sleep then.
But I hope he’s right. At least every time they wake up there are less of them. Maybe.
@cyntax: I saw that recently and loved it, but wanted to see him interview his wife. That just seemed like a huge glaring screaming absence.
Mnemosyne
I’m very interested to see where Chris Rock’s career ends up. He’s very ambitious and, while he doesn’t always quite reach the goals he set for himself, he keeps trying new things.
I mean, Rock wrote and directed a remake of Eric Rohmer’s Chloe in the Afternoon! Do you think Michael Bay has any clue who Rohmer was?
Apsalar
Anyone else see the shout out from Dan Savage today?
http://www.thestranger.com/seattle/SavageLove?oid=6782602
Writing about Representative Christopher “Craigslist Congressman” Lee last week on Balloon Juice—a blog I read daily—BJ contributor “Mastermix” said: “If we want to do something about the high divorce rate, we might want to get real [about] the role of a discreet, mutually-agreed-upon affair as a safety valve.”
Caramuru
That reminded me of something Alan Moore said in an interview:
RalfW
The panic over stopping gay marriage is the same deal: they know it’s over, but they’re gonna shit-storm till the under 30’s kick their asses…in 20 years. Or maybe give up sooner?
Nicole473
my inherent cynicism suggests the TP is more likely a harbinger of the future.
marcel
@Cat Lady:
@Cat Lady:
From Chris Rock’s lips to the FSM’s orecchiette.
Pretty goddam obscure, but pretty funny once I sorted it out.
About Chris Rock’s comment on peak wingnut – that didn’t work out so well for the Jews (or anyone else, actually) in Germany 80 years ago. Let’s hope it works out better for all of us this time around.
(Oh my godwin!)