LOUIS New Season...Monday, May 5 @ 10P on FX

I think the Bee joke was a running gag this episode.

Because It wasn't that funny to be stolen, yet dude kept going on about how funny it was. At first I thought when he was asking Louie to repeat it he was being an asshole, then he stole it. Being even more of an asshole.
 
tis is going to be a future Writer's Circle thread:

Why haven't we seen more comedic series like Louie with a Black lead...

is the audience not as excepting of 'experimental comedy' from a black comedian?
 
That was real life, real pain this episode. I have 3 daughters and they're nuts especially at that age all they do is scream

This show always ends abruptly
 
Louie deserves the freedom he has, he has some misses but when he hits it's truly great.

Afghanistan.
 
Everyone is missing the most important part of Louis C.K.'s SNL monologue



Comedian Louis C.K.'s monologue on this week's Saturday Night Live does not quite rise to the level of an Upworthy headline — he did not obliterate inequality; he won't change how you see poverty forever — but the first couple of minutes, discussing what he calls "mild racism," do make a decent point that is worth your time.

"I'm not racist. However, I do have mild racism," he says, explaining that he can't help but take mental note of people of color when he encounters them. He describes his initial reaction — approval at seeing a Chinese or Indian doctor, anxiety at seeing a young black man "unless he has a big smile on his face" — that betrays an unmistakable, knee-jerk racism.

He's talking about implicit racial bias: "when, despite our best intentions and without our awareness, racial stereotypes and assumptions creep into our minds and affect our actions," as my colleague Jenée Desmond-Harris explained.

Thirty years of neurology and cognitive psychology studies show that it influences the way we see and treat others, even when we're absolutely determined to be, and believe we are being, fair and objective.

The idea of implicit racial bias, no matter how well-established by empirical research, is still controversial. People don't like to think that they could be racist; they prefer to divide the world into a binary of "racist" or "not racist," with themselves in the latter category. But that makes it a lot harder to address the effects of implicit bias, which impact everything from hiring to police conduct.

Louis C.K., by teasing himself for his well-intentioned "mild racism" and explaining it as a product of the environment he grew up in, is making it a little less scary to acknowledge implicit bias. It's reframing it such that people can be told about implicit bias without hearing an accusation they feel the need to deflect. That's a helpful step toward addressing the issue.

The rest of Louis C.K.'s monologue centered on a fairly ham-fisted Israel-Palestine metaphor and a weak bit on child molestation — the joke was that it's awkward to joke about child molestation and more awkward still to acknowledge that child molestation must be enjoyable for child molesters, ha ha — that was clearly designed to draw controversy and certainly did.

http://www.vox.com/2015/5/18/8618585/louis-ck-snl-monologue-racism
 
Louis C.K. Will Call You Up to Talk About His Alleged Sexual Misconduct
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Jordan Sargent
05/15/15 03:30PM
Filed to: LOUIS CK
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A few months ago we got an email from a tipster who said he was awaiting a phone call from Louis C.K., who will host the final episode of Saturday Night Live’s 40th season this weekend. The subject of their phone call was sexual misconduct allegations made by the tipster’s friend against the comedian.

Our tipster, who works a 9-to-5 job but does comedy at night, had sent an email to C.K. at the address louisck@louisck.com.* The tipster—we’ll call him Jason—says he had received fan club correspondence from that email, and he had used it when he was a teenager to send C.K. fan mail. (A rep for C.K. would neither confirm nor deny that C.K. uses that email.)

In his first email, Jason plainly lays out his grievances against the comedian, signing it “a former fan.” (In the following screenshots, provided to us by our tipster, we have redacted his name, email address and phone number):

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According to Jason, C.K. replied with the following, and then sent another email to correct a typo:

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Then, per Jason, the two arranged the phone meeting (the following thread shows the response emails coming from “louisck@louisck.com”):

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I talked to Jason after this phone call with C.K. He characterized their conversation as stilted and non-substantive. His interpretation was that C.K. was “sizing me up” to “find out what I had heard.” Jason left the conversation under the impression that the two would speak again soon. In the four or so months since, they haven’t.

I had asked Jason about the events that motivated him to email C.K. out of the blue in the first place. He was reluctant to go into much detail, but he said that two women he knew had been mistreated by him. He described one of the alleged incidents, which he said had happened sometime in the second half of 2014: A female friend of his told him that C.K. had come up to her at a comedy club, grabbed her by the back of the neck, leaned into her ear, and said “I’m going to fuck you.”

This was not the first allegation of sexual misconduct levied against C.K. In March of 2012, we ran a blind item titled “Which Beloved Comedian Likes to Force Female Comics to Watch Him Jerk Off?,” which described an incident that had supposedly taken place in Aspen a few years prior involving “our nation’s most hilarious stand-up comic and critically cherished sitcom auteur” and two unnamed female comedians:

At the Aspen Comedy Festival a few years ago, he invited a female comedy duo back to his hotel room. The two ladies gladly joined him, and offered him some weed. He turned it down, but asked if it would be OK if he took his dick out.

Thinking he was joking (that’s exactly the kind of thing this guy would say), the women gave a facetious thumbs up. He wasn’t joking. When he actually started jerking off in front of them, the ladies decided that wasn’t their bag and made for the exit. But the comedian stood in front of the door, blocking their way with his body, until he was done.

The item, which we couldn’t pin down at the time, was, as several commenters noted, a now well-circulated rumor about C.K.—although, in a confusing development, the comedian Doug Stanhope, a friend of Louis C.K., took to Facebook and claimed to be the culprit. (Several of Stanhope’s Facebook commenters replied that they thought it was about C.K.)

One of the commenters on our post affirmed that the whispers of C.K. taking his dick out whenever he pleases are well-known within the comedy world:

I have it on good authority (friends in the biz) that it’s Louis CK. I’ve heard stories about his propensity for whipping it out and jerking off in front of women at inappropriate times (i.e. dinner table, bar, etc.).

Another source relayed a story about a similar incident, at an afterparty at the Just For Laughs comedy festival in Montreal several years ago. The comedian allegedly took two women up to his room, but at some point they barged out, claiming he had started masturbating in front of them without warning.

Jason had heard the Aspen rumors, and said he reached out to us because he thought up-and-coming female comics should know “the reputation” of perhaps the most powerful stand-up comedian in the world.

We had no means of verifying Jason’s claims directly. He said the women he knew had told him they wouldn’t come forward, citing C.K.’s reputation and power in the comedy world. The two members of the comedy duo who were supposedly subjected to the Aspen jerk-off incident wanted nothing to do with the story then, and did not respond for comment when contacted before the publication of this post.

We’ve reached out to C.K.’s rep about these allegations and are awaiting word back.

Have you been sexually harassed by Louis C.K., or do you know someone who has? Have you heard rumors of the sort? If so, please leave a comment below or contact me at jordan@gawker.com, anonymity guaranteed.


http://defamer.gawker.com/louis-c-k-will-call-you-up-to-talk-about-his-alleged-s-1687820755
 
Louis CK's Request to Perform Rejected by Denver Comedy Club
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Disgraced comedian Louis C.K.'s comeback attempt hit a roadblock when a Denver comedy club refused his request to perform stand-up there. It seems like a longer time ago than it actually was, but C.K. was once on top of the comedy world, standing tall as the one of the most celebrated stand-up comics in recent memory. His TV specials drew great reviews, his tours sold out arenas, and his FX comedy series Louie was routinely the recipient of major awards and shining critical praise. That was of course until C.K. was accused of sexual misconduct by multiple women in November 2017.

C.K. ultimately admitted the allegations against him were true, and quietly faded from the limelight. Both HBO and FX cut ties with C.K., his upcoming film I Love You, Daddy had its theatrical release canceled, he was dropped from his planned voice role in The Secret Life of Pets 2, and an animated series he was working on with TBS at the time was scrapped. It looked like C.K.'s career might be over, and it's safe to his accusers and detractors would probably have been fine with that. However, his exodus didn't last.

Related: Louis C.K. Claims Sexual Misconduct Admission Cost Him $35 Million

In August 2018, Louis C.K. re-emerged from hiding, and started performing unadvertised stand-up sets at comedy clubs. Some people were happy to see him back behind the mic, while others were angry he was trying to reignite his entertainment career without really offering much in the way of restitution for his actions. Some were also upset that he was coming out as a surprise performer, saying that they wouldn't have come to the club if he was on the marquee. Now, Jezebel (via The Wrap) reports that a recent request by C.K. to perform stand-up at Denver's popular Comedy Works club ended up being rejected by the club's owner, Wende Curtis.

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Curtis says she was contacted by a rep for C.K. last month, asking to book a date for the comedian to perform at Comedy Works. She initially considered allowing C.K. to pick from a few options, but ended up being inspired to contact one of C.K.'s misconduct victims first. After getting her side of the matter, Curtis told C.K.'s rep thanks but no thanks, and rejected his request to perform. This is so far the first reported case of this happening during C.K.'s post-scandal stand-up career.

More recently, Louis C.K. has been the subject of an entirely different scandal, after a stand-up set surfaced online that featured him taking shots at the survivors of the Parkland school shooting. While fellow comedian Rob Schneider subsequently jumped to C.K.'s defense, most didn't seem to agree. It remains to be seen if C.K.'s comedy career can ever fully recover from the 2017 allegations made against him. What's clear is that he has both passionate defenders and passionate detractors, one of the latter being the owner of Comedy Works.
 
Female comics clash over Louis C.K.’s return to standup
By Mara Siegler

April 12, 2019 | 7:53pm


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A panel of female comics at the Women in the World Summit had differing opinions on disgraced comic Louis C.K.’s comeback.


Cameron Esposito said, “You are a terrible person if you’re trying to get back in clubs this early . . . Could you at least give us a couple years to just have another person stand up and get a chance to talk?”

Judy Gold was more democratic.

“You cannot tell an artist not to do their work . . . If a comedy club is willing to have him, I believe in all freedom of speech, no matter what.”

Wanda Sykes, meanwhile, said it was up to audience reactions.


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Louis C.K. Accuser Speaks Out: ‘What C.K. Did Was Not Done With Consent’
By Megh Wright@megh_wright
Louis C.K. Photo: Brian de Rivera Simon/WireImage

One of the five women who accused Louis C.K. of sexual misconduct in a 2017 New York Times report has come forward publicly for the first time to clear up an important part of her story. Julia Wolov, one half of the comedy team Dana & Julia, wrote a piece for Canadian Jewish News this week, and its title gets right to the point: “Counterpoint: I Didn’t Consent to Louis C.K. Masturbating in Front of Me.” Wolov wrote the piece in response to an op-ed the site published from Toronto comedy-club owner Mark Breslin last week titled “Why I Brought Louis C.K. Back From the Dead,” in which he got several facts about the C.K. story wrong, most importantly the claim that the women gave C.K. their consent before he masturbated in front of them. “Contrary to Breslin’s accounting, what C.K. did was not done with consent. We never agreed nor asked him to take all his clothes off and masturbate to completion in front of us. But it didn’t matter because the exciting part for him was the fear on our faces,” Wolov writes. “Just as it must be very exciting for Breslin to be one of the only comedy clubs to book Louis C.K. and write about it in the Canadian Jewish News.”

Breslin, who owns the Toronto comedy club Yuk Yuk’s, wrote the initial op-ed to explain why he recently welcomed C.K. to his club to perform eight shows over five nights and how financially successful the run of shows turned out to be, noting that the club broke a record with how fast the shows sold out. “Tickets were seen on resale sites selling up to $1,000 a ticket,” he wrote. (Breslin also mentions a Vulture article he was featured in back in January, in which 17 club owners said whether or not they’d book C.K. at their venue. Breslin said yes at the time, adding, “We should only be so lucky to book him.”) He goes on to say that he “conducted an unscientific market survey” among people he knew to hear people’s thoughts on the C.K. controversy and concluded that “a lot of people felt he had been treated unfairly,” which ultimately led to his decision to book the comedian at Yuk Yuk’s.


Wolov also takes issue with the way Breslin wraps up his article, in which he talks about C.K. revealing onstage that his grandfather was a Hungarian Jew who escaped the Nazis. When Breslin heard this, “I felt even better about my decision to book him,” he wrote.

“Since Breslin seems to take pride in his Judaism, he should know that four of the five women from the Times article are Jewish. The author’s attempt to convince himself and the Jewish community of the validity of supporting C.K. by saying he is part Jewish is shameful,” Wolov writes, adding that she receives “consistent hate mail” and even death threats from C.K. supporters: “Did this factor into the author’s ‘unscientific market survey’?”

“We too work in comedy. We will probably never make tens of millions of dollars to lose. Louis C.K. is still very wealthy,” Wolov continues. “Although we may never have the stature to perform at Yuk Yuk’s, we will continue to navigate our careers the best we can. So, when you pat yourself on the back for Louis C.K.’s career resurgence and helping your business thrive, maybe think about the human beings encumbered in this story.”
 
Here's what went down during Louis C.K.'s set at Dave Chappelle's recent comedy show

A source who was at the event tells EW that a heckler interrupted C.K.'s set at one point and referenced the comedian's sexual misconduct allegations.
By Rachel Yang
August 12, 2020 at 07:17 PM EDT




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Dave Chappelle' recent inclusion of Louis C.K. at his summer stand-up series caught some people by surprise, but all other details seemed wrapped in secrecy. Did C.K. actually perform? How did audiences react to the controversial comedian?
EW can confirm that C.K. did indeed perform the night of Aug. 5 as part of the ongoing Dave Chappelle & Friends: An Intimate Socially Distanced Affair (also known as Chappelle's Summer Camp online) in Yellow Springs, Ohio.



According to a source who attended the event and who requested to stay anonymous, C.K. served as the de facto "secret headliner," as his set followed those by Chappelle and comics Michelle Wolf and Mo Amer.
"It was a mixed-to-positive reaction at the beginning," they tell EW of C.K.'s surprise appearance. "He was not really on his game and he got some hecklers about halfway through."

The highlight of C.K.'s 20-minute set followed an interruption by a heckler who referenced the sexual misconduct allegations against the comedian, our source says.
The comic was doing "silly, non-distinct" impressions of random people and asked the roughly 250 attendees to give him suggestions. "From the back, some guy was like, 'How about the toilet seat you jerked off on?'" the audience member says. "People were like, 'Oh, crap. That was brutal.' And then he had a pretty good comeback, which was, 'I don't do my best material on these shows.'"
Although that earned C.K. laughs, we're told it generally felt like the comic was either phoning it in or workshopping half-baked material, as he had a notebook with him. Unlike his prior sets that garnered controversy, such as in 2018 when he mocked transgender people and the Parkland shooting survivors, C.K. stayed away from political or risqué topics this time around.

Still, the atmosphere during C.K.'s performance was uncomfortable, according to the audience member.
"Everybody was on pins and needles," they say. "Of all the people that could've been the secret headliner, it was way out of left field."
Ahead of C.K.'s set, we're told that Chappelle gave him a short-but-sweet introduction, describing the comic as "somebody whose comedy I admired for his whole career" and said "a lot of you will recognize him."
The glowing preface shouldn't come as a shock, given that Chappelle defended C.K. after the latter was accused of sexual misconduct by five women in 2017 (allegations which he later said were true).
The two are longtime friends and in his Netflix comedy special Sticks & Stones, Chappelle stood up for the former Louie star.
"Louis C.K. was a very good friend of mine before he died in that terrible masturbation accident…He didn’t do anything you can call the police for," the comedian said in his 2019 special. "They ruined this n—’s life, and now he’s coming back playing comedy clubs and they’re acting like if he’s able to do that that’s going to hurt women. What the f— is your agenda, ladies?"
Overall, C.K.'s segment notwithstanding, our source says the two and a half hours were enjoyable. The standout of the night for them was Amer's 7-minute set, during which the Ramy star riffed about confusing governmental COVID-19 mandates. Besides Chappelle, no one else on the lineup was announced ahead of time when attendees bought tickets online.
Another reason for the positive experience was the lengths Chappelle and the organizers took with safety precautions in the face of the pandemic.
Seats came in twos, and everyone was spaced out 10 feet apart. Not only were there hand sanitizer stations, but we're told workers were around to supervise if people actually cleaned their hands. Additionally, there was a temperature check station, Chappelle-branded face masks for every attendee, and employees who scanned people with security wands. The comics themselves did not don masks but were separated from the audience by what resembled a fence and only one person took the stage at a time.
The staffers were so vigilant, the source tells EW, that any time an audience member pulled down their mask, they were quickly reminded to put it back on. They say they saw multiple people who had apparently attended previous Chappelle shows, as they arrived with branded masks.
"[Chappelle's] trying to prove that if you're responsible, you can do a good performance, some way some how," the audience member says.
Security was tight as well, as attendees had to put away their phones in Yondr cases that prevented them from accessing their devices until the event ended.
And with looming questions about whether Chappelle will actually publicly release any of the footage from the sets (aside from June's 8:46 special), our source says production had at least one video camera recording the performances. This means Chappelle is at least planning to archive and store the footage, if not release it.
Despite any of the event's hiccups, our source says they had a good time and from what they saw, so did others in the crowd.
"Overall it was an excellent and unique experience," they say. "When else are you going to see a comedy show in a giant field wearing a mask, with 10 feet between everybody? It's definitely a once-in-a-lifetime thing."


 
Not a joke: Louis C.K. won a Grammy for Best Comedy Album

Reality: 1, Cancel Culture: 0

By Nick RomanoApril 04, 2022 at 09:37 AM EDT




Need proof that "cancel culture" isn't real? See Louis C.K., a man who went back on the stand-up comedy circuit less than a year after admitting in 2017 to pulling out his penis and masturbating in front of female comics. And last night, less than five years after those stories came to light, the Recording Academy awarded Louis C.K. a Grammy.
C.K.'s Sincerely Louis C.K. won Best Comedy Album in a category that included Nate Bargatze's The Greatest Average American, Lewis Black's Thanks for Risking Your Life, Lavell Crawford's The Comedy Vaccine, Chelsea Handler's Evolution, and Kevin Hart's Zero F---s Given.
The comedian didn't appear at the 2022 Grammys ceremony, which was held Sunday night at the MGM Grand Las Vegas. CBS also didn't televise his win.

Louis C.K. won a Grammy for Best Comedy Album, less than five years since admitting to sexual misconduct.


C.K. jokes about the sexual misconduct on the album itself. In 2017, five women from the comedy world came forward in a New York Times exposé to detail their own personal horror stories with the comedian. The accounts had a theme: C.K. would routinely start masturbating in front of women without permission, or he would ask them to watch him masturbate. In a statement released at the time, C.K. said "these stories are true," but he maintained "I never showed a woman my dick without asking first."
"I have been remorseful of my actions. And I've tried to learn from them. And run from them," he said at the time. "Now I'm aware of the extent of the impact of my actions. I learned yesterday the extent to which I left these women who admired me feeling badly about themselves and cautious around other men who would never have put them in that position."

C.K. had lost a considerable amount of work in the fallout from the revelations, but he went back to stand-up comedy in 2018. By 2020, The Washington Post reported he was again selling out comedy venues. Dave Chappelle — who's now also a controversial figure for his comments on trans people — helped rehabilitate C.K.'s public image by bringing him out as a surprise guest at a 2020 comedy show.
You can bet C.K.'s Grammy win this year sparked some pretty strong reactions on social media.
"If you don't give a shit about those women, f--- you, bad on you, this isn't just about Louis, this is about those PEOPLE and what he did to them," tweeted Wendy Molyneux, a Bob's Burgers writer who's also working on the script for Deadpool 3. "He's a shitty little man with a shitty little problem and f--- people who don't care about stuff like this. I'm so annoyed."
"You think it's silly, you think it's funny, you've probably never felt like someone was gonna kill you if you didn't do what they wanted sexually in the moment," she added. "It's not very silly when it happens, not much of a goof. Anyway, f--- Louis CK, f--- Woody Allen, f--- the whole system."

Michael Ian Black, who sparked a backlash of his own when he supported C.K.'s return to stand-up in 2018, tweeted that he didn't even know C.K. put an album out last year.

"There's a lot of funny stuff on the album but it's impossible not to listen to him in a different way than before," he tweets as part of a thread. "He tries to move past the sexual stuff right at the top, but it's pat, and all it does is remind me that he never had a public atonement. That's obviously a choice."

His full Twitter thread, as well as other social media reactions to C.K.'s win, can be found below.







In other news, music producer Lukasz Sebastian Gottwald, a.k.a. Dr. Luke, who is still in a legal battle with Kesha after she accused him of sexual assault, was nominated for two Grammys for his work on the songs "Kiss Me More" and "Best Friend." (He lost.) Cancel culture, amirite?
 
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