Amanda Seales | White Girl Safe | Laugh Factory Stand Up Comedy
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- Опубліковано 1 жов 2024
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#comedy #funny #humor #standup #standupcomedian #standupcomedy #amandaseales
Do you know my dad?😁
Always talking about white people smh!
🤮
Oh brother this guy STINKS!
I laughed way harder than I should have 😂😂😂 I’m lowkey jealous of the privilege
just talking while wearing pajamas on stage
You know I remember hearing the story about some entitled white girl going overseas and end up getting her damn head cut off 😄
Is that funny to you just because she was white? What if I said 7 black people died because another black person opened fire in a bowling alley? Still funny?
Next time she'll use her ....head
🗑️🗑️🗑️🗑️🗑️🗑️
Seems like its always the same weirdos in the conments
This was pretty funny
Pretty fun to see.
You guys segregating yourselves in the form of jokes. “Haha, she has privileges I don’t”
Let’s see how long you’ll be laughing if you keep going that way.
This was the driest stand up act I think I’ve ever seen tbh.
The way I’m fucking cracking up right now. Amanda is funny! 😂
😅😂🤣 #facts
Not terribly funny, but ok..on a side note the Taliban aren't from Iraq LOL.
I think it was Karlous Miller that I heard say, “white people live in America and [black people] live in the United States,” and if you know you know.
For those of us that don't know, educate us
@Tim A ROFPMSL
Education and america are a contradiction in terms.
Good one, Tim 👍
@Happivaras why would you talk about yourself like that? You're obviously educated enough to have a civil discussion. Would educating others on the meaning of the original comment come off as prejudice?
@Tim A 1stly I'm not a seppo. 2ndly 🫠 thanx for the compliment despite it being incorrect. 3rdly I'd say prejudice (pre judging) is a human condition, racism IS the admission of moronic stupidity, same belief in a childish fantasy magic skyman, or voting for dunghole chump, or any non environment first political party. 🤔
@@happivaras you had me up until it turned from social to political.
As someone who's not from the us, i wonder why it's always "ok" to make fun aggressively of white girls, especially by blacks, to me it's so disgusting, but idk why it's ok in the states.
Everyone "aggressively" makes fun of everyone else here in the US, sir.
Everyone makes fun of everyone. That’s what freedom of speech is, Ahmad.
From my point of view, I've never seen white girls mocking black girls, that would be an instant "racism" situation.
@@ahmadalmoustafa265 "I've never seen white girls mocking black girls..."
Do you spend any time in the US?
@@derekcash3608i already said i don't live in the US, so i don't know what kind of question is that. But that's not the core of our argument, what i mostly see as i follow stand up comedy, is black girls making fun of white women, same goes for Asians making fun of whites, also white comedians make fun of white women, but God forbid it goes the other way around, it becomes racist, and that's why I'm asking.
Not representative of white women or any woman, for that matter.
This was mildly racist. And not really stand up funny. More like conversation at home with friends on a Saturday night funny
What is “mildly racist”? Define and example from vid please.
@checksanity I would say something like claiming Asians are good at math is mildly racist. It isn't insulting, and it is a positive assumption but when you think about it is still racist. As for the video, I get the same feeling. She acts like a stereo typical white girl but does it in way that seems like there is underlying disdain and jealousy because they are safe because they are white. But earlier she said she had moved to a nice neighborhood. If that's the case maybe the the safety wasn't a white issue but more of a class and cultural issue which she seems to have overcome but doesn't understand why the "good" communities are the way they are. Maybe I am just reading too much into how she presented herself and maybe it is just nerves from doing stand-up comedy. Me and my friend all talk trash and race is not off limits but it is never delivered in a derisive way. The vibe I got was that is if I met her in normal life I would think "this person is a racist full of contemp and wouldn't want them as a friend." I'm not sure why this specific video has been in my head all day lol
@@GeneralNachos Thank you for responding. I have definitely experienced listening to someone’s stand up and gotten an overwhelming gut feeling and had the thought “we would not be friends.” While that’s probably true of even comics I enjoy, the fact I had such a strong negative reaction made me look deeper into why. I analyzed it and after it was easier to move on. In my case it was veiled misogyny being passed off as acceptable and relatable. From what you’ve said it seems you’re bumping into the perception/belief she’s being racist towards white people.
I understand the sentiment that stereotypes are “mildly racist,” both the positive and negative ones. I would say the distinction between mild and outright depends on how the stereotype is wielded. Standup frequently relies on stereotypes, to manoeuvre the audience’s thoughts so that everyone is relatively on the same page. Comic’s then poke at the stereotype in varied ways for comedic effect. Depending on several factors it lands or it doesn’t. I’d argue that bringing up stereotypes isn’t in itself racist.
I don’t think you’re wrong in reading underlying disdain (not sure about the jealousy read though). However, I personally don’t think that the disdain (“the feeling that someone is unworthy of one’s consideration or respect”) is unwarranted. The fact that in the US (and US tourist destinations) being white = feeling safe, while being black does not? That’s a problem and one worth being more than a little upset about. Also, it’s worth pointing out, there’s a difference between contempt for a situation and contempt of a person/peoples. Her impression of white girls isn’t dissimilar from most other comedian’s “white girl” impressions.
If you look into her further, she says things that some think tips into black superior thought. Though, it’s important to question how much of that backlash and criticism is from people with unexamined internalized acceptance of white superiority. Would anything suggesting different from the norm seem “extreme”? What about within the framework of the “norm” environment-where it’s the norm to consciously and subconsciously think of black people as dangerous. So A confident Black woman that points out uncomfortable stereotypes, with humour, would ping something right?
Every once in awhile I find myself having to re-examen personal and societal norms and biases. It’s a key aspect of being anti racist, which I’ll add is something Amanda advocates for.
Hopefully, I’ve provided some more food for your thoughts. :)
this is funny?
Meh.
I like her energy, but unless I'm a drunk female audience member, I missed where the jokes were.