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Ron Nyswaner

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The Contradictions of Tracy Morgan

Posted: 06/11/11 12:43 PM ET

I'm currently producing a movie, Predisposed, that stars Jesse Eisenberg, Melissa Leo and Tracy Morgan. I'm on the set with Tracy every day. I can't speak to Tracy's beliefs, or the outrageous things that comics sometimes say in order to shock people, but I know that Tracy treats everyone on our diverse crew with remarkable respect. Our crew contains a higher than average number of minority members, including several proud, out gay people, and Tracy interacts with everyone in the same gracious, generous, loving way.

I'm struggling to understand the disparity between Tracy's behavior on our set and the things he said on stage. I certainly can't dismiss nor diminish the pain his statements have caused. And I can't speak for him nor try to guess what he truly thinks about anything.

But it seems to me that Tracy -- who makes his living in the world of outrageous stand up comedy - has channeled the anti-gay anger in our culture and is holding it up for us to examine. The things he said are merely more outrageous versions of homophobic beliefs that all of us live with -- and silently accept -- every day.

It was reported that Tracy said gay people are a "mistake," they can't really love each other and that their "love" is a disguise for the fact that they actually "hate" the opposite sex. He wasn't making a speech on public policy. He was doing a comedy act that's built upon saying outrageous things about all kinds of people.

Barack Obama does not support gay marriage but "prefers" civil unions for gay couples. This is the same position held by Hillary Clinton when she was running for President. Both have said that marriage is meant for a man and a woman. Neither President Obama nor Secretary Clinton makes a living doing stand-up. They create and shape public policy that directly influences and impacts the way we live.

What underlying beliefs might President Obama and Secretary Clinton hold that inspire their public positions on gay marriage? Do they believe that being gay is somehow less right or natural than being straight? Is being gay some sort of mistake? Do they think that gay people are not capable of truly loving a person of the same sex or, at least, not as truly and deeply as people of the opposite sex love each other?

Would they deny these statements? I imagine they would. But how else can they -- or anyone, really -- oppose gay marriage? To hold to the belief that gay people are not entitled to the same marriage rights as straight people is to say -- in a much subtler form, of course -- some of the things Tracy said in his act. How else can anyone defend his or her opposition to gay marriage? Either we're just like you and just as capable as loving someone of the same sex -- as you are capable of loving someone of the opposite sex -- or we're not. To Barack, Hillary, Tracy, and the 47 percent of Americans who do not support gay marriage, I say: either I'm the same as you or I'm not. And if I'm not, what am I? A "mistake?"

I campaigned for Barack and wept with pride at his inauguration. I deeply admire Hillary and was greeted graciously by her at the White House. I support them, despite their stated opposition to gay marriage, because I don't believe they mean it. I think Barack and Hillary took a public stand against gay marriage because they wanted to win a public office. They're playing a political game, the same game Bill Clinton played when he created Don't Ask, Don't Tell and supported the Defense of Marriage Act. He needed to win back Southern voters in 1996 and he supported homophobic laws to do it. A lot of gay people, and gay supporting liberals, voted for Bill in 1996 (I didn't). And a lot of gay people, and gay supporting liberals, voted for Hillary and Barack in 2008. But the beliefs that motivate opposition to gay marriage are not so different from the things Tracy said last week. We wink at the former and condemn the latter when, really, we need to be done with all of it. Perhaps there's not much difference between politicians and stand-up comics, after all.

Yesterday, on the set of our movie, I sat in a minivan with Tracy Morgan, who wept as he told me about his violent childhood. I cannot understand the brutality of dire poverty or the soul-killing experience of growing up black in racist America. And Tracy cannot understand the pain of a gay child raised in homophobic America, under the constant barrage of taunts, threats of violence, and the ever-present fear of being exposed and rejected. His pain is not mine and mine is not his. Neither of us reached adulthood unscathed by the shared prejudices of our culture. We've arrived at manhood slightly distorted, wounded and limited by our battles. We have been hurt. We make mistakes. But our mistakes are made in a cultural context. Yesterday, while the world Tweeted away, issuing accusations and condemnations, a black, straight comic and a white, gay writer sat in a minivan, crying and trying to understand.

 
I'm currently producing a movie, Predisposed, that stars Jesse Eisenberg, Melissa Leo and Tracy Morgan. I'm on the set with Tracy every day. I can't speak to Tracy's beliefs, or the outrageous things...
I'm currently producing a movie, Predisposed, that stars Jesse Eisenberg, Melissa Leo and Tracy Morgan. I'm on the set with Tracy every day. I can't speak to Tracy's beliefs, or the outrageous things...
 
 
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Giovanni Vitacolonna
04:12 PM on 06/14/2011
Limping analogy at best, Jairo. What Tracy said was wrong to say. You cannot "riff" about killing children for their sexual orientation. Tracy is a public figure viewed by millions of people. I get what Tracy was trying to do~he doesn't have the charisma to pull it off no matter. What is it that you don't get about it being very, very wrong?
05:19 PM on 06/14/2011
interesting that you used "limping" to berate an analogy.

anyhow, i'm sort of confused on the scenario and context in which he made these carefully selected, inflammatory statements. was he on stage in a public space at a kkk rally giving his ideology and philosophy on life, or was he on stage at pay-for-admission venue performing a comedy routine? if only the article had been more clear...
03:47 PM on 06/14/2011
In PC culture, many times people jump all over the letter of the joke and not the spirit of the joke. I do think Tracey Morgan should have couched that part of his monologue before and after by making clear he really would support his son in that situation, and then show us in full comedic detail the negative side of his personality that he still wrestles with. Knowing the way he's willing to strip off the veneer and walk the line of crazy, I think that's probably what he was really trying to do here. It's too bad that he failed to walk that line and he may have hurt some people and it blew up in his face.
03:47 PM on 06/14/2011
Sounds like a lot of people are commenting without seeing the video. I haven't seen the video yet and don't know that it's widely available. Tracy Morgan is very differnt in person than in print.

Tracey Morgan has comes across to me as someone with a good heart. I don't know how bigoted he really is, but his style of humor is to crazily make fun of his own insecurities and navigatie the real world versus his own macho stereotypes. Having seen a lot of his work but not the offending piece, I bet that's what he was making fun of here, his own insecurities. I don't think he was making fun of or promoting violence against gays. He expected everyone to realize that he isn't violent and his extreme emotions about his son were both real and laughable--that given our culture, it's okay to feel them but it's not okay to act on them, but it's okay to joke about them (if done very carefully--which is not his forte.)
04:18 AM on 06/14/2011
I sometimes think that the WBC has been doing the GLBT community a very good turn by demonstrating such extreme homophobia. All homophobia is insane, and the Phelps church, and now Morgan, demonstrate the insanity in uncompromising and visceral detail. AS the Phelps family trucks their message across America, they paradoxically bring communities together, suddenly allied in defense of their children, their loved ones, equal rights. And it seems to me that this sort of shock has salutary effects-- not on us, but on our straight friends and neighbors.
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Giovanni Vitacolonna
12:18 AM on 06/14/2011
Stop it. Don't attribute something profound to what he was doing. I know what he thought he was doing~ he didn't do it. He encouraged violence. Period.
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Giovanni Vitacolonna
02:54 PM on 06/13/2011
Performance art is not validation for joking about violence against children. It's wrong. If Tracy had a violence filled childhood, he ought to know better. He ought to be very sensitive to it and not joke about killing his own child. I can't say it enough. The man joked in a public forum about stabbing his own child, referring to the child using a racial slur. There is no defense for it. There is no defense for joking about killing one's own child.
04:54 PM on 06/13/2011
"Performance art is not validation for joking about [thing I think is more important than other things.]"--Every anti-art crusader who ever believed that their personal pet issue was more sacred than everyone else's.

If artists caved to you and yours, there would be no art.
02:53 PM on 06/13/2011
What a load of crap! Wall to wall excuses, deflections, and shoddy rationalizations. You have no right to consider yourself capable of rational thought.
02:49 PM on 06/13/2011
Tracy will come out victorious in the end. This is back firing big time on the nancy boys
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Giovanni Vitacolonna
01:16 AM on 06/15/2011
Dream on. His career is dead.
01:01 PM on 06/13/2011
I have every bit of respect for you as a writer, Ron, but this statement is reprehensible. Yes, you have a vested interest in Morgan (producing a film with him), but defending him in this matter must go against your conscience. I hope you either clarify what you've said, or retract it altogether. I'm deeply disapponted.
12:30 PM on 06/13/2011
Interesting. I'm pretty sure that there is something called "freedom of speech" in this nation, whether you like what's said or not. Morgan is a comedian. He's the kind of comedian that incites emotions in his audience. He's not the first comedian to present controversial views in a stand-up act. George Carlin, remember him? And who's that other one... oh yeah, Denis Leary. And Redd Foxx. I know there are others, even female performers. So stop condemning Tracy Morgan. He's doing his job, and he's got people really thinking about how their own views are seen by others.
12:36 PM on 06/13/2011
We're talking about VIOLENCE here, not "controversial views". Violence against young gay people is an epidemic in this country. Do consider Halocaust jokes appropriate?
01:45 PM on 06/13/2011
Yeah, if they're funny. And I'm a Jew. Comedy is the only art form that lefties refuse to acknowledge and accept. A painter, a poet, a writer, a filmmaker, any sort of artist can tackle things like homophobia, racism, and war, and can do it in an unflinching real way, and we embrace it. But the only way a comic is allowed to do that is if he openly, baldly, and unfunnily agrees with us. We love it when Lewis Black just stands up there and stage and screams about how much he hates Republicans--without a single laugh line--but we can't tolerate it when someone pushes the boundaries and explores an issue in a more subtle, nuanced way.

I don't think what Tracy said was particularly funny, but I also don't know the context. And I do know that we, as a culture, would accept this much more readily if Tracy Jordan, the 30 Rock character, was the one who had said it. And that's not cool with me. Standup comedy, like baseball and jazz, is in many ways a great American art form. It's time for Americans to act like they get that.
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Coloradem
Christian, Gay, Democrat
12:48 PM on 06/13/2011
In one sentance you tout "freedom of speech" for Tracy Morgan and then a few sentances later you tell others to stop utilizing our "freedom of speech" to condemn Tracy Morgan. That is more than just interesting...that is ironic....
04:55 PM on 06/13/2011
What does freedom of speech have to do with either side of this argument? The First Amendment doesn't apply to disagreements between private parties. Talking about free speech in the context of a disagreement between two people is like dividing by zero.
12:12 PM on 06/13/2011
Ron, You are so off base. How can you compare Morgan's violent, hate-filled statement with Obama and Hillary's stand on Gay Marriage? There is no correlation between the two! My dear 20 year old gay friend, Steen Feinrich of Queens, NY, was murdered by his father 10 years ago because of his sexual orientation. Not condoning gay marriage and suggesting murder of one's gay son aren't remotely in the same ballpark. If Morgan was raised in a violent atmosphere, then he should be all the MORE sensitive to the plight of gay youth, not LESS sensitive. I spend every day of my life fighting against bullying because I was a victim. I have no sympathy for one making statements like Morgan's. I'm an actor who has done background work for "30 Rock", but will do no more as long as Morgan is retained. Won't YOU take a stand, instead of using lame reasoning to defend this kind of behavior?
01:46 PM on 06/13/2011
You're right, they're not in the same ballpark. One is just a guy standing on stage riffing, saying something that probably nobody would remember a week later if it hadn't been for an angry audience member posting on Facebook. And the other is politicians helping perpetuate a policy problem that hurts people in a very real way.

You're right. Not in the same damn ballpark.
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Giovanni Vitacolonna
02:48 PM on 06/13/2011
No, Jonathan, he wasn't "riffing" he was condoning violence against gay children as a joke. You're very wrong, my man.
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11:54 AM on 06/13/2011
"more outrageous versions of homophobic beliefs that all of us live with -- and silently accept -- every day."

Silently accept---every day? The gay community silently accepts the rants of its opposition?
10:40 AM on 06/13/2011
Thank you. This is the most thoughtful, intelligent, constructive response to this controversy that I have read.
10:34 AM on 06/13/2011
Insightful, lovely, heartful, and right on. Thank you for this. I wish every American - and everyone I know - could read what you've written here. As a lesbian, it's taken me a long time to even understand this for myself.
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ReasonIsMyReligion
Don't know much micro-bio-logy
09:36 AM on 06/13/2011
Fercrissakes.
I cried my eyes out at "Philadelphia."
And reading this poignant essay... well... more o the same.

It never ceases to amaze that we humans can be so hurtful (by accident or intent), and still others, like RN, have the gift to lead others to feel their fellow beings' pain.

As to Morgan, even comedy has boundaries. Unfortunately, they're electric fences.

Huzzahs.