From Deseret News archives:

No laughing matter?

When comedy and religion collide

Published: Saturday, Jan. 26, 2008 12:25 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Comedy is always about throwing the listener a little off-balance, about pushing against something — the status quo, stereotypes, expectations. Religion, on the other hand, is about "a sense of self and a sense of meaning," says Michael E. Nielsen, a former Utahn who teaches psychology of religion courses at Georgia Southern University. "You put your heart and soul into it." Not surprisingly, sometimes people feel offended when they think their religion has been mocked. People may say "Oh, lighten up," but that's often hard to do "if someone's cut you to the core," Nielsen says.

His Web site features religious jokes, with a disclaimer at the top of the page: "The humor you'll read may delight or it may offend, so venture forth at your own risk."

· · · · ·

Here's a joke that Lisa Geduldig sometimes tells: "Jews aren't supposed to eat pork. But there's a small, unknown clause in the Torah that if it's wrapped up in a wonton, it's OK."

In "A Muslim, A Mormon and A Jew Walked Into a Bar," Geduldig is the Jew. She likes to poke gentle fun at her Jewishness — but sometimes she tells the non-Jews in her audiences, "OK, you can't repeat anything I've said here." In the first place, she doesn't want to incite anti-Semitism, she explains. But also, she knows that the same joke told by a religious insider somehow sounds different — has a meaner edge, maybe — when it's told by an outsider.

Story continues below
That's why Mormons might joke among themselves about LDS undergarments, coming up with slang nicknames, but might feel offended if someone else makes the same joke. Some Mormons who have laughed at Salt Lake Acting Company's annual satire "Saturday's Voyeur" — with its jokes about missionaries and Mormon influence at the Legislature — stopped laughing when SLAC dressed its actors in LDS garments on stage.

Some comics have lines they won't cross. Others, like Bill Bronner, say there's nothing they wouldn't make fun of — it's how you do it that's crucial.

Bronner once ran the Comedy Oasis in Salt Lake City and now lives in Los Angeles, where he runs the "Free Speech Show" and the newly launched comedynation.com. As an agnostic, he says, telling jokes about religion is his way of "striking back" at people who tell him he's going to hell because he drinks.

"You're a little self-righteous if you think your religion is above ridicule but you're willing to stand in judgment of everyone else," he says.

Recent comments

Plus why blame the Mormon? The Catholic host of the comedy show took...

read the article | Jan. 26, 2008 at 8:36 p.m.

Robert, I believe your comment is misguided. You seem overly anxious...

Keith Lowell Jensen | Jan. 26, 2008 at 12:48 p.m.

Ditto
Going to a Mormon Church, I found most of them sitting in the...

Larry | Jan. 26, 2008 at 12:41 p.m.

Image
Robert Noyce, Deseret Morning News

previousnext

Latest comments

watch out for next year for sure, the negatives are just closet (and...

And something else, I generally follow players from the state schools when...

I could care less that Max Hall said what he did. The feeling is mutual BYU...

BYU is champion of the state

Dear Max, probably could have done without that comment. Probably would've...

Hall mouths off about hate of Utah

As a Utah fan, let me first say congratulations to Max Hall, the Cougars, and...

Geno's and Pat's are good.. but, they are mostly for tourists, the real...

Hall mouths off about hate of Utah

(You even got a middle initial... how's that for 'ya Max) It's nice to see...

Air Up There, The

Even today, I still cannot get enough of this movie or Charles Gitonga Maina....

Cougars beat Utes in overtime

...disappointed with Max Hall's comments that he hates everything about UofU....

Over the last few days I read comments of people complaining about tasteless...

Advertisements