The Last Laugh: How Comedy Archives and Remixes HumanitiesMain MenuTaking Comedy Seriously...Introduction1930s: "Food Fighters" - Tomatos Another DayTomatos Another Day Page1940s: "The Dictator Has No Clothes" - Charlie ChaplinCharlie Chaplin - "The Great Dictator"1950s: "American Love Story" - Lucille Ball and Desi ArnazLucille Ball and Desi Arnaz Marriage1960s: "Jail Time for Stage Time" - Lenny BruceLenny Bruce Page1970s: "7 Deadly Words" - George CarlinGeorge Carlin Page1980s: "A Delirious Regression" - Eddie MurphyEddie Murphy Page1990s: "No Laughing Matter" - Sinead O'ConnorSinead O'Connor SNL Performance2000s: "Comedy is Tragedy" - Gilbert GottfriedComedy After 9/112010s: "Dressing Down the Status Quo" - Tig NotaroTig Notaro Page2020s: "Sticks and Stones May Break iPhones" - Dave ChappelleDave Chappelle Netflix ControversyLaughing in the Face of DeathClosing ThoughtsAnthony Torrecilla122b9f0bcaaec86c6e11e3aefe5e1384900bd50f
Gilbert Gottfried 9/11 Joke (Friars Club Roast of Hugh Hefner) September 29, 2001
“It was a couple of weeks after 9/11. There was a weird feeling in New York. People were walking around in a daze. I was at the roast of Hugh Hefner, and I just wanted to be the first person to make a really-poor-taste joke about September 11. It was impromptu; I don’t remember thinking about it beforehand. I said, ‘I have to leave early tonight, I have a flight to California. I can’t get a direct flight — they said I have to stop at the Empire State Building first.’” - Gilbert Gottfried via Vulture
After the horrific attacks on 9/11, comedians were put in a tough spot professionally. Their job is to make people laugh, but how can you laugh after a national tragedy? Gilbert Gottfried’s performance at Hugh Hefner's roast in 2001 is often credited as the first publicly broadcasted joke about 9/11 shortly after the attacks. Even despite the backlash, this still influenced other comedians to develop their own 9/11 material with the intention of using laughter as healing, not mockery. This is an archive of a time and sensibility after a terrorist attack in which the question was raised to comedians and the public; what is “too soon”?