kzap333kinja
kzap333
kzap333kinja

No that's reality TV.

They're also the path away from murder, depending on which way your climbing and shadow is with his butcher's knife.

*Not creepy enough

To (probably mis)quote Community:
Frankie "You don't show these to anyone do you?"
Abed "No…"
Frankie "Then why do you make them?"
Abed "It relaxes me"

I don't think they are. I work as a freelance editor but when it was younger I used to edit Doctor Who / Buffy mashups and things like that.
It was an excuse to cut my teeth with some professional looking footage and I genuinely was a fan of both series.
The act of creating was it's own reward, a few of my videos got

Has someone been watching Charlie Brooker? That's where I heard about that for the first time.

Oh yeah he was great in Party Down, that was after I'd googled him and realized he was funny after all.
Him and Nick Kroll were cast as small roles in so many great sitcoms that I figured there must be some reason decided to research them.
Some great comedians just don't shine on certain sitcoms, if I didn't know who

Or they're having fun with no expectation of finical reward. I haven't read it in a while but I'd recommend Henry Jenkin's book 'Fans, Bloggers and Gamers' on this very subject, it's about ten years old not but still perfectly relevant.

The bald guy who inexplicably shows up on all your favorite comedy series despite never being *that* funny, then you hear his work in podcast and realize he is funny after all but somehow no show has ever been able to properly utilize him.
He's basically a bald Nick Kroll in that regard.

Surely you just get ProPlus (or the store-brand equivalent), crush them up and add them to tap water like any normal person.
Personally I mix them into orange juice and call it Go-Go Juice.

And you made some compelling points.
My original post was certainly crude but I was trying to distill my opinion/philosophy into one sentence.

Upvoted for Stargate reference.

It's why people in TV shows always eat take-out in paper boxes (something I have never experienced IRL).
If you put food on plates you can see it change from take to take but if it's in a box you never know how much is left.
Pizza is also good because the script supervisor can keep track of the exact number of slices

This will be a debate the rages on for eternity, regardless of how where the goalpost move and what topics are considered "taboo".
Comedians will keep being edgy, the media will complain that some have gone "too far" and praise others.
In 50 years we'll look back and change our minds, some of the most offensive jokes

I don't think your (the comedian's) conscience is the ultimate arbiter of value. I think the audiences collective conscience is, at the end of the day they're either going to laugh or boo.
That's what it comes down to. An unsaid joke is like Schrodinger's Cat, it's both "too offensive" and "not offensive" at the same

It's a question of how many people find it funny and how much they find it funny vs how many people find it offensive and how much they're offended.
Both are subjective and it's impossible to make an objective list of "offensive things" or "funny things". What I'm saying is, when anyone is constructing a joke that is

What do you mean?

They'll know her as the girlfriend from School of Rock and the girl from Wreck it Ralph.

Neither is right, there's no way to objectively tell if something is "right" or "wrong" either.
It's a cultural thing, every single person on the planet has their own opinion on what they think is right and wrong and what they think is funny.
There's no universal morality and no universal sense of humor.
A comedian just

I'd say no subject is off limits is long as the joke is funny. You also have to be careful what angle you take when making the joke, or as George Carlin would say "what the exaggeration is".
You can make a joke that involves homosexuality but people will rightly be offended if your joke is just "huh, homosexuality is