Jordan Gray, The Independent
When BBC Essex asked me onto their breakfast show to discuss the recent Jimmy Carr controversy, I felt… annoyed. Because it meant I’d have to rewatch a special that I switched off due to boredom 20 minutes into my first viewing. That’s about 30 minutes before the headline-grabbing gag — described by health secretary Sajid Javid as “deeply disturbing” — even pops up.
Then, when The Independent asked me to contribute an opinion piece on the subject, I was annoyed again… at myself. Because I lied when I told the BBC I rewatched the entire thing again prior to our interview, and now the universe was calling my bluff.
Jimmy’s latest Netflix special, His Dark Material, was filmed in my hometown of Southend. Towards the show’s end, one gag suggests that the death of thousands of Roma during the Holocaust was a “positive” thing. Watch it, don’t watch it — do what you want. I’m not your mum.
In her recent Voices piece, Dr Pragya Agarwal described the gag as “not being done ironically”. I agree. There was nothing subversive or clever about it. It was hack. But there’s a gaping canyon between “ironic” and “sincere”.
Just because his joke wasn’t a masterfully crafted piece of social satire, doesn’t make it a dangerous call to arms. It was a joke that made a theatre full of (predominantly white) people p*** themselves laughing, then second guess themselves, then applaud in shame. That’s a far more interesting conversation. I’m going to go out on a limb and say I don’t think that was a room full of Nazis. It was a room full of “us”. Is that what makes it uncomfortable? There’s a reason comics keep coming back to the Holocaust. It’s one of the biggest stains on human history and has embedded in society two types of trauma. For members of the minority groups whose ancestors were persecuted, it’s a painful and alienating reminder of their “otherness”.
It’s also a sickening reminder to the rest of us that there exists a mechanism in our minds that can be hijacked, by charismatic leaders, to commit atrocities on fellow humans. If, like most of us, you’ve not yet made peace with that part of yourself, a well-timed Holocaust joke can be disarming.
There’s an irony to Jimmy’s fans telling the offended to “get over it”, when Jimmy’s gag extols the exact opposite philosophy. Deconstructing his own “edgy as all hell” joke, Jimmy said: “People say ‘never forget’. Well, this is how I remember: I keep bringing it up”. Buried somewhere beneath all Jimmy’s flippancy is a moral imperative that we are not supposed get over the trauma of the Holocaust.
It should always hurt and shame us, and an occasional dose of gallows humour helps to grease that wheel. Jimmy Carr does not believe that thousands of Romas dying in the Holocaust is a positive thing. I know this because the core mechanism of the joke itself requires him to not believe that. The audience is laughing because they don’t believe it either. If Jimmy and the audience did believe that, there would be no laughs — there would be rally cries.
When Jimmy is on stage, Jimmy is acting. Comics play versions of themselves who shamelessly, flippantly and deliberately misinterpret information to subvert our expectations. What’s especially toothless is Jimmy introducing his own gag as a “career-ending joke”, when he knows it’s about to slay the room — having tested the material on smaller audiences for weeks leading up to the special.