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Is Amy Schumer a problematic fave? An investigation
amyschumer amyschumer
IN 2015, AMY Schumer had the kind of banner year most comedians could only dream about.
She wrote and starred in Trainwreck, which wound up earning $140 million and two Golden Globe nominations. Her show Inside Amy Schumer garnered widespread critical acclaim with sketches achieving viral success every week.
She hosted the MTV Movie Awards. She supported Madonna in Madison Square Garden. She landed her own HBO stand-up special. She secured a whopper multimillion-dollar book deal.
It was, to paraphrase wine snobs, a good year.
But with increased fame and notoriety comes a higher degree of expectation and responsibility. You’re held to a higher standard and everything you say and do is left wide open to criticism.
As Amy Schumer has learned all too well this year.
Since the beginning of the year, Schumer has committed faux pas after faux pas and found herself dogged by controversy. In the space of a year, she has gone from being hailed as a feminist prophet to being deemed “problematic”.
How did she get here? Let’s take a look.
The Glamour Plus Size Controversy
Earlier this year, Amy Schumer was featured in a Glamour issue devoted to plus size fashion. Schumer took umbrage with the fact that she was included in the magazine because, as she saw it, she wasn’t technically plus size.
Glamour Magazine’s editor apologised for the implication, but many felt that Schumer was too quick to distance herself from the label as though being “plus size” was somehow bad or undesirable.
Model Ashley Graham told Cosmopolitan, “I can see both sides, but Amy talks about being a big girl in the industry. You thrive on being a big girl, but when you’re grouped in with us, you’re not happy about it? That, to me, felt like a double standard.”
The Kurt Metzger Rape Comments
Earlier this summer, comedian and Inside Amy Schumer writer Kurt Metzger posted a Facebook status in which he mocked women speaking out about sexual assault and suggested some women lie about it.
(Metzger was responding to a New York comedy theatre‘s decision to ban a comedian after multiple women accused him of sexual assault.)
The tone of the status seemed at odds with Schumer’s brand of feminist comedy and fans called on her to condemn Metzger’s remarks.
So Schumer posted a tweet in which she said she was “saddened and disappointed” by his comments, but maintained that he was her “friend and a great writer”.
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Afterwards, she claimed that Metzger didn’t work for her and she was therefore not obligated to comment on his actions. This led to some confusion. Had Schumer fired Metzger?
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As it turned out, no.
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Many were disappointed that Schumer didn’t take a stronger line on Metzger’s actions, particularly as she has spoken and written extensively about her own sexual assault. (For what it’s worth, Metzger later recanted his earlier statement and came out in support of the alleged victim.)
In an interview with Lena Dunham, Schumer seemed to dismiss the controversy and claimed that Metzger was merely being a “troll”.
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As you can imagine, it didn’t go down too well.
The Racist Jokes
While Schumer’s star was on the ascendancy, fans unearthed jokes she had made at the expense of people of colour in the past. In particular, she caught a lot of flack for this joke about Hispanic men.
In June 2015, she apologised for the joke and said that it was part of a “dumb white girl character” she used to play on stage. She assured fans that she was “evolving as an artist” and vowed to stop telling jokes like that on stage.
Amy Schumer / Twitter Amy Schumer / Twitter / Twitter
Unfortunately this was not an isolated incident. In fact, a quick Twitter search yields lots of similarly problematic jokes on Twitter.
Like this one about black people.
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Or this one about black men.
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Or this one about Asians.
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And this especially tasteless one about South African athlete Caster Semenya.
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Giphy Giphy
And a few months ago, her problematic attitude to race reared its ugly head again…
In September, an interview between Lena Dunham and Amy Schumer was roundly mocked and criticised. During their chat, Lena Dunham accused football player Odell Beckham Jr of ignoring her at the Met Gala.
Dunham was later forced to apologise for “ascribing misogynistic thoughts to someone I don’t know AT ALL” and unintentionally contributing to “a long and often violent history of the over-sexualisation of black male bodies”.
Meanwhile the following tweet was sent from Schumer’s account. The tweet implied that men of colour were statistically more likely to catcall women.
Schumer later claimed that the tweet was sent in jest by a member of her band and deleted it. Needless to say, it did little to rehabilitate her image among those she had previously offended.
White Feminism
‘White feminism’ is a term used to describe feminism that amplifies the voices and experiences of straight white women while excluding women of colour and LGBT women.
Figures like Taylor Swift and Lena Dunham have been accused of promoting white feminism in the past.
Critics say these women use their positions of privilege to speak up on matters like equal pay for women, but rarely speak out on issues affecting other marginalised groups. And when they’re called out for being racist, they either claim ignorance or attack their critics.
As The Mary Sue put it:
As actress Gabrielle Union explained, the likes of Amy Schumer and model Kate Upton — who has been critical of NFL player Colin Kaepernick’s Black Lives Matter protest in the past — often say offensive things without understanding precisely why they’re offensive.
Okay Ladies, Now Let’s Get in Formation
A few weeks ago, Amy Schumer shared a video of her and Goldie Hawn dancing to Formation. The video featured the two actresses dancing in… a jungle? While wearing… dust-covered rags? And Joan Cusack and Wanda Sykes were also in it?
Anyhow, it wasn’t especially funny and inspired the hashtag #AmySchumerGottaGoParty.
The video didn’t sit well with people who felt that it was mocking what was originally intended as a celebration of black womanhood.
In a moving address on panel show The Real, comedian Loni Love explained the significance of Formation to black women and why Schumer’s parody caused offence.
Amy Schumer’s initial response to the furore was lacklustre, to say the least.
She posted a moody black-and-white photo of herself in the nip on Instagram (not the best look for an apology) and wrote, “We had so much fun making this tribute. All love and women inspiring each other.”
She later posted an essay on Medium in which she sort of addressed the criticisms and explained that it wasn’t her intention to minimise the message from the original video.
In spite of her efforts, some people still felt that she had missed the point.
Morgan Jerkins / Twitter Morgan Jerkins / Twitter / Twitter
So can Amy Schumer come back in 2017>
Schumer has alienated many fans with what they see as her refusal to adequately address criticisms or indeed learn from her mistakes. Her apologies are often cloaked in a defensiveness that’s off-putting to some and suggests that she either hasn’t engaged with or doesn’t understand the criticisms. (The fact that she regularly blocks those who call her out on Twitter would suggest the former.)
If she rectifies this in 2017, maybe she can shed her ‘problematic’ label once and for all. Until then, however, she’s a problematic fave.
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