Hitch makes an exception: hefty, Jewish, & dykey women are funny

Hitchens, Still Stirring Controversy; Women, Still Not Funny

Christopher Hitchens wrung just a little bit more manufactured
umbrage out of his “Why Women Aren’t Funny” shtick this morning,
appearing on The Brian Lehrer Show on WNYC to defend the oh-so-
controversial thesis of his recent Vanity Fair column.

The seldom-sober polemicist told guest host Alice Rhee that the idea
for the column arose from conversations with the magazine’s “fearless
editor, Graydon Carter.” Hitchens continued, “We’ve long pondered the
question of why it is if you want to have someone who is funny to
dinner, you are by and large going to have to ask someone who is
male.” (In other words, ladies, should you ever be so fortunate as to
dine chez Carter, kindly keep your mouth shut.) Both Carter and
Hitchens were recently criticized at a public event by The Huffington
Post’s Eat the Press editor Rachel Sklar, who also criticized the
piece in a post called “Christopher Hitchens Would Piss Me Off If His
Piece Weren’t So Damn Boring.”

In the face of Rhee’s mild skepticism, Hitchens then recapitulated
his none-too-subtle argument that, for a man, coaxing a woman to
mirth is the next best thing to bringing her to orgasm. “If you can
really make a woman laugh, that’s to say make her throw back her
head, make her show all her teeth and her lovely tongue, then you’ve
changed her expression, as it were,” he said. “The sexual allegory of
it isn’t mutual, if you follow me.”

“I follow you completely,” deadpanned Rhee.

Hitchens went on to say that he knows of only one woman who is both
as funny as any man and doesn’t fall into the disqualifying
categories of “hefty, dykey, or Jewish”: British cartoonist Posy
Simmonds. The reason she commands Hitchens’s respect? “She can match
me in dirty limericks, in which I’d thought I was unbeatable.” Memo
to Sklar: Time to start memorizing words that rhyme with fellatio.

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