Forgetting to Laugh

Diary of a mad law professor

By Patricia J. Williams

This article appeared in the June 9, 2003 edition of The Nation.

May 22, 2003

Of all the columns I've written, never have I gotten more mail than for the following sentence: "It will not matter that the Dixie Chicks play to full, cheering houses, while their current album soars to number one on the country and bluegrass charts--The Daily Show's Mo Rocca on CNN, sounding a bit like the Iraqi information minister, will continue to call them the 'Dixie whores' whose 'hate speech' should consign them to 'refuge' in Canada."

Readers were exercised that I did not adequately acknowledge Rocca as a satirist. I do know he is a comedian. Indeed, a trusty Nation fact-checker, Elinore Longobardi, underscored this before it went to press, worried that my wording might leave a misimpression; I thought not. I was mistaken. So here's more context: Rocca made his comments not on The Daily Show, but in a CNN news interview. When asked if viewers ever complained about his satire, he said: "They scold us if we're not funny. And then we deserve it...a real good ass-whooping, the kind that Natalie deserves from the President, because...literally and figuratively...the Dixie Chicks cell is one of those obstacles that need be overcome. I think they're Dixie whores."

Funny or not, I am intrigued by the vehemence of the response. People wrote that my failure to appreciate Rocca's humor was "tragic" and "stupid" and "sobering." It was a "betrayal," an "ignorance," an actual "breach of faith" that made the entire editorial staff look like "fools." "Shame" on behalf of all lighthearted liberals was invoked, as in having to hang one's head while the right wing laughs at such lockjawed Stalinist stoniness. Whew! Is all this just Mo Ronic irony--or did someone mix me up with Jayson Blair? Here's how I see it: In times when you hear students routinely denouncing their professors as "whores to political correctness," there's an awfully thin membrane between Mo Rocca as political spoof and the Iraqi information minister talking doll as realpolitik. But I am rattled by the degree to which many of the letters echoed the intense vocabulary of condemnation flying around the Blair case. My humorless inflection was taken as lack of "intelligence" and as evidence of a systemic failure of oversight that impugned the "integrity" of the magazine. No one accused me of outright fraud, but I did have to take a few deep breaths and wonder about the possibility of spillover in the collective unconscious.

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About Patricia J. Williams

Patricia J. Williams, a professor of law at Columbia University and a member of the State Bar of California, writes The Nation column "Diary of a Mad Law Professor." Her books include The Rooster's Egg (1995), Seeing a Color-Blind Future: The Paradox of Race (1997) and, most recently, Open House: On Family Food, Friends, Piano Lessons and The Search for a Room of My Own (Farrar Straus and Giroux, 2004.) more...
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