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Tag: Louis C.K.

  • ‘Sorry/Not Sorry’ Review: Louis C.K. Is Ready to Forgive Himself. Are We?

    ‘Sorry/Not Sorry’ Review: Louis C.K. Is Ready to Forgive Himself. Are We?

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    The title of “Sorry/Not Sorry,” a documentary about the Louis C.K. scandal, makes the film sound like a hot-button exposé with the potential to be as controversial as the case itself. The offscreen infamy of Louis C.K. — his coercive and abusive ritual of masturbating in front of women, many of whom were his comedian colleagues — was first revealed in the mainstream media nearly seven years ago, amid the tidal wave of reckoning that became #MeToo. I thought: Is the film going to be about how Louis C.K. is now sorry…and not sorry? And what point-of-view will the documentary take?

    “Sorry/Not Sorry” does deal with Louis C.K.’s reaction to the scandal: his message of apology that was never quite an apology; his carefully orchestrated comeback, after only nine months, via the comedy-club circuit (a comeback that ultimately encompassed his winning a Grammy for best comedy album in 2022 and performing a concert in the round at Madison Square Garden); and how he dealt with the repercussions of his behavior within his stand-up act (short version: He’s not sorry).

    But that’s all covered in the last 20 minutes. Most of “Sorry/Not Sorry” tracks the 15 or so years leading up to 2017. During that time, Louis C.K. was becoming the most powerful figure in stand-up comedy, launching his fabled series on FX, and (offstage) indulging in his reckless behavior without fear of recrimination, because the whole comedy world was protecting him. The documentary is a production of the New York Times, and as directed by Caroline Suh and Cara Mones, it’s a meticulously sharp, responsible, and absorbing movie — an incisive study, really, of the sweep-it-under-the-rug culture that was firmly in place before the #MeToo revolution knocked some of its foundations askew. But the movie is also asking larger questions.

    Early on, we see a clip from “Charlie Rose,” in which Charlie, seated opposite Louis C.K., tells the comedian that he’s been compared to Lenny Bruce and Bob Dylan, anointed as a “philosopher king.” C.K. grins with humblebrag sheepishness (he’s clearly flattered) and then says, “I’m just a comedian.” The clip made me cringe, though not just because of what we now know he was hiding. C.K., by that point, had become a culture hero, yet if I can part ways with the culture, I always found him to be a clever but fundamentally overpraised comedian.

    “Louie,” on FX, was greeted as the second coming, but to me it was the weekly version of an “edgy” indie film that had stray nuggets of squirm-factor hilarity but insisted, in every episode, on breaking up what was best about it — its air of authenticity — with overstatement and contrivance. It annoyingly straddled the line between prickly reality and sitcom fakery. If it had been an indie film, it would have come and gone without fanfare. But on the small screen, the show somehow passed as Revolutionary Popular Art.

    I’m generally a staunch advocate of separating the art from the artist. Yet part of what came into focus after the Louis C.K. scandal is that in my (admittedly minority) opinion, the reason he struck me as a gifted but limited comedian was not because he wasn’t a smart and funny man, but because his view of the universe was so blinkered. I remember seeing him do a routine about getting ready to go on vacation with his family, and he describes walking around the van feeling something like: This is the last moment of pleasure and freedom I’m going to have for a week. I can get as impatient with my family as anyone, but I thought: Really?! You don’t even like going on vacation with them? I’m sorry, that’s not a “typical” inside-the-mind-of-a-bro-geek reaction — it’s warped. It’s the thought of someone who isn’t happy in his own skin. And I thought: It’s absurd that he’s generalizing from that. Louis C.K. always comes on like he’s touching universal chords in the tradition of Richard Pryor and George Carlin, but really he’s unpacking a distorted POV.

    No question, though: He had talent, he pushed the envelope, and he wrapped his observations in a confessional aura that often had more resonance than what he was actually confessing. He became the superstar of angry brainy white-guy angst, and he knew that his superstardom protected him. After the Harvey Weinstein scandal broke, there was much discussion of who knew what and when they knew it, and while it was obvious that Weinstein had been shielded for years by those around him, and by the whole entertainment industry, I do believe that relatively few people knew the horrific extent of his crimes.

    In the case of Louis C.K., his transgressions were far less extreme, but as the documentary reveals, they were incredibly widely known. The incident that became iconic occurred at the Aspen Comedy Festival in 2002, when C.K. invited two comedians, Dana Goodman and Julia Wolov, to his hotel room and, once there, asked if he could take his penis out, which they first thought was a joke. They gave no consent. He got undressed and masturbated, and they were horrified and felt paralyzed. They finally fled, and he called out afterward, “Which one is Dana and which one is Julia?” That’s actually a significant line, since it’s a “comic” expression of the dehumanization his compulsive ritual was really about.

    People gossip — about everything. And especially stuff like this. Louis C.K.’s pattern was, according to the movie, the comedy world’s open secret. More or less everyone knew about it and “accepted” it. It was just…what Louis C.K. did. And if you questioned it, it could kill your career. Goodman and Wolov were told to keep quiet, and the film suggests that in L.A. they were squeezed out of potential jobs by Louis C.K.’s manager, Dave Becky. Given the “Louie”-like TV series that C.K.’s company was producing (for people like Pamela Adlon and Tig Notaro), he was almost like a studio head. But the spilling-over-the-sides world of the Internet had arrived. C.K.’s behavior was cited in several high-profile blind items on Gawker. The comedian Jen Kirkman implicated him on her podcast without naming him. The truth was starting to swirl to the surface.

    It all exploded, thanks to the work of Times reporters Jodi Kantor, Cara Buckley, and Melena Ryzik. But that was headline news. The film deals most intriguingly with C.K.’s incendiary, semi-under-the-radar return to the comedy world. He was able to do it by working independently, sidestepping the corporate apparatus of the networks and studios (who never invited him back). “Sorry/Not Sorry” meditates, intelligently, on the question of how the culture should deal with someone like Louis C.K. Michael Ian Black, the pensive comedian who started a controversial tweet thread about it, says, “I was like, I’m not defending Louis’s actions. I’m having, in public, a conversation that I feel like men are having in private — and women — all over this country, and saying, ‘How do we deal with this? How do we welcome people back or not welcome people back?’”

    The Times critic-at-large Wesley Morris suggests, quite rightly, that Louis C.K. should have done a reckoning. Instead, C.K. treated what happened to him as simply the “outing” of his fetish, his obsession, and while he admitted that it was embarrassing, what he said to his audience (this is from a stand-up clip we see) is, “You all have your thing. I don’t know what your thing is….’Cause everybody knows my thing.” As if that’s the only thing that defines it — that it all became public. Louis C.K.’s “problem” is that he did something very wrong, but as “Sorry/Not Sorry” reveals, part of his problem is that he still has no idea why it’s wrong. I’m sorry, but that’s not someone squeezing comedy out of truth.

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    Owen Gleiberman

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  • Grammys CEO Addresses Louis C.K. And Dave Chappelle Nods Despite Controversies

    Grammys CEO Addresses Louis C.K. And Dave Chappelle Nods Despite Controversies

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    Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason Jr. addressed controversial comedians Louis C.K. and Dave Chappelle earning nominations for the 2023 Grammy Awards.

    Mason told The Hollywood Reporter Tuesday that he doesn’t have control over who the Academy’s voting membership body selects.

    “The thing that we can control is making sure that people that attend our events feel safe,” he said, adding that executives at the Academy won’t remove someone’s nomination even if they didn’t agree with it.

    “We’re never going to be in the business of deciding someone’s moral position or where we evaluate them to be on the scale of morality,” he continued. “I think our job is to evaluate the art and the quality of the art.”

    Chappelle and Louis C.K. were both nominated for Best Comedy Album for their comedy specials. Chappelle earned the nomination for his Netflix special “The Closer,” and Louis C.K. received a nod for his special “Sorry.”

    Louis C.K. has admitted to sexually harassing five women who detailed their accusations of sexual misconduct against the disgraced comedian in a 2017 New York Times report.

    Nonetheless, the comedian won a Grammy last year for Best Comedy Album with his special, “Sincerely Louis CK,” despite the scandal.

    Chappelle was widely criticized for making a series of transphobic jokes in the now-Grammy-nominated Netflix special, “The Closer,” which premiered on the streaming service in October 2021. Netflix employees organized a walkout in protest of the special days after it released.

    The comedian, who has three Best Comedy Album Grammys under his belt, recently sparked more controversy after hosting “Saturday Night Live” this past weekend. His monologue drew criticism from Anti-Defamation League, who accused the comedian of “normalizing and popularizing antisemitism.”

    The 65th annual ceremony for the Grammys is set for Feb. 5.

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  • Today in History: November 10, U.S. Marines first organized

    Today in History: November 10, U.S. Marines first organized

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    Today in History

    Today is Thursday, Nov. 10, the 314th day of 2022. There are 51 days left in the year.

    Today’s Highlight in History:

    On Nov. 10, 1775, the U.S. Marines were organized under authority of the Continental Congress.

    On this date:

    In 1871, journalist-explorer Henry M. Stanley found Scottish missionary David Livingstone, who had not been heard from for years, near Lake Tanganyika in central Africa.

    In 1919, the American Legion opened its first national convention in Minneapolis.

    In 1928, Hirohito (hee-roh-hee-toh) was enthroned as Emperor of Japan.

    In 1944, during World War II, the ammunition ship USS Mount Hood (AE-11) exploded while moored at the Manus Naval Base in the Admiralty Islands in the South Pacific, leaving 45 confirmed dead and 327 missing and presumed dead.

    In 1951, customer-dialed long-distance telephone service began as Mayor M. Leslie Denning of Englewood, New Jersey, called Alameda, California, Mayor Frank Osborne without operator assistance.

    In 1954, the U.S. Marine Corps Memorial, depicting the raising of the American flag on Iwo Jima in 1945, was dedicated by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in Arlington, Virginia.

    In 1969, the children’s educational program “Sesame Street” made its debut on National Educational Television (later PBS).

    In 1975, the U.N. General Assembly approved a resolution equating Zionism with racism (the world body repealed the resolution in Dec. 1991).

    In 1982, the newly finished Vietnam Veterans Memorial was opened to its first visitors in Washington, D.C., three days before its dedication. Soviet leader Leonid I. Brezhnev died at age 75.

    In 2005, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, a former finance minister of Liberia, claimed victory in the country’s presidential election.

    In 2009, John Allen Muhammad, mastermind of the 2002 sniper attacks that killed 10 in the Washington, D.C. region, was executed. President Barack Obama visited Fort Hood, Texas, where he somberly saluted the 13 Americans killed in a shooting rampage, and pledged that the killer would be “met with justice — in this world, and the next.”

    In 2018, President Donald Trump, in France to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, canceled a visit to a cemetery east of Paris where Americans killed in that war are buried; rainy weather had grounded the presidential helicopter. Authorities in Northern California said 14 additional bodies had been found in the ruins from a fire that virtually destroyed the town of Paradise.

    Ten years ago: Two people were killed when a powerful gas explosion rocked an Indianapolis neighborhood, damaging or destroying more than 80 homes. (Five people were later convicted of charges in connection with the blast, which prosecutors said stemmed from a plot to collect insurance money.)

    Five years ago: Facing allegations of sexual misconduct, comedian Louis C.K. said the harassment claims by five women that were detailed in a New York Times report were true, and he expressed remorse for using his influence “irresponsibly.” The National Republican Senatorial committee ended its fundraising agreement with Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore in light of allegations of sexual contact with a teenager decades earlier. President Donald Trump arrived in Vietnam to attend an international economic summit, telling CEOs on the sidelines of the summit, “We are not going to let the United States be taken advantage of anymore.”

    One year ago: Kyle Rittenhouse took the stand in his murder trial, testifying that he was under attack and acting in self-defense when he shot and killed two men and wounded a third during a turbulent night of street protests in Kenosha, Wisconsin. (Rittenhouse would be acquitted of all charges.) A judge in Michigan approved a $626 million settlement for Flint residents and others who were exposed to lead-contaminated water; most of the money would come from the state. A New Jersey gym owner, Scott Fairlamb, who punched a police officer during the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, was sentenced to more than three years in prison. The government said prices for U.S. consumers jumped 6.2% in October compared with a year earlier, leaving families facing their highest inflation rate since 1990. Chris Stapleton was the big winner with six trophies including song and album of the year and Luke Combs claimed the biggest prize with entertainer of the year at the Country Music Association Awards.

    Today’s Birthdays: Blues singer Bobby Rush is 88. Actor Albert Hall is 85. Country singer Donna Fargo is 81. Former Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., is 79. Lyricist Tim Rice is 78. Actor Jack Scalia is 72. Movie director Roland Emmerich is 67. Actor Matt Craven is 66. Actor-comedian Sinbad is 66. Actor Mackenzie Phillips is 63. Author Neil Gaiman (GAY’-mihn) is 62. Actor Vanessa Angel is 59. Actor Hugh Bonneville is 59. Actor-comedian Tommy Davidson is 59. Actor Michael Jai (jy) White is 58. Country singer Chris Cagle is 54. Actor-comedian Tracy Morgan is 54. Actor Ellen Pompeo (pahm-PAY’-oh) is 53. Actor-comedian Orny Adams is 52. Rapper U-God is 52. Rapper-producer Warren G is 52. Actor Walton Goggins is 51. Comedian-actor Chris Lilley is 48. Contemporary Christian singer Matt Maher is 48. Rock singer-musician Jim Adkins (Jimmy Eat World) is 47. Rapper Eve is 44. Rock musician Chris Joannou (joh-AN’-yoo) (Silverchair) is 43. Actor Heather Matarazzo is 40. Country singer Miranda Lambert is 39. Actor Josh Peck is 36. Pop singer Vinz Dery (Nico & Vinz) is 32. Actor Genevieve Buechner is 31. Actor Zoey Deutch (DOYCH) is 28. Actor Kiernan Shipka is 23. Actor Mackenzie Foy is 22.

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