Preface Ever since Politically Incorrect went on the air, people have been asking me what the phrase means, and where it puts me politically. The simple answer is that it sounded like a good title, and Murder, She Wrote was already taken. The slightly more complicated answer is that the name struck me as a convenient shorthand for my particular take on the world. To me, the notion of politically incorrect is neither liberal nor conservative, but an attitude of disgust toward unthinking, dogmatic politics of every stripe. I thought when the show began that what I considered political correctness would shrink as a target, because people were coming to their senses. So many people came up to me, and still do, to say, "You know, I''m politically incorrect, too." It made me feel good, and still does, that we''re on the same wavelength. It also worried me, because as a comedian targeting political correctness, its demise would mean less grist for my mill.
I should not have worried. My mill has plenty of grist. Political correctness has not gone away. In fact, the hypersensitivity to anything that could possibly offend anyone anywhere has gotten worse. Like voters who say they want to balance the budget but are unwilling to take anything away from their favorite government programs, there are people who say they''re politically incorrect and want raw truth and edgy humor, but not about their point of sensitivity--everything''s funny except bulimia, or everything''s funny except sexual harassment, or everything''s funny except drug abuse. But hey, everybody''s got something. If I took out of this book all the jokes that could offend somebody, it would be a thin book indeed. We have gone from a hard-skinned pioneering nation to a very delicate flower, one that is so easily bruised.
And always having to play around something that fragile is getting to be, for most of us, a huge bore. Ironically, as we packed up our little cable show to move it to ABC last winter, the question most asked by our fans was: "Will the show change when it goes to network?" My response was always the same: "No, the show won''t change at all. Except for the cooking segment which wasn''t my idea but that of my new cohost Kathie Lee." (Just kidding.) Actually, I think our fans can tell that since our debut on January 6 we haven''t pulled any punches on ABC. And I''m sure they''ll let us know if we ever do. --Bill Maher Are People Getting Stupider? First aired 10*10*93 Mark Kostabi, Merrill Markoe, John Lawton, Marvin Kitman SAT scores are plummeting, college graduates can''t read, and Americans are paying good money for bell-bottoms again. Let''s face it, there is an education crisis in this country.
In a math and science test among students from fifteen countries last year, the United States came in fourteenth. Slovenia, which has been a country since Tuesday, kicked our ass, and, sadly, literacy scores are no better. Reading, which gave us Shakespeare and Dostoyevsky, is being replaced by a visual culture that so far has made me so sick of seeing Madonna naked that I might as well be married to her. The question is, are people getting stupider, or is it just an impression I have from every second of every day? * * * "Is the average person stupider today than he was a generation ago? Or do you just run into more stupid people because fewer stupid people are getting eaten by bears?" --Bill Is America Anti-Intellectual? First aired 10*29*93 Jim Morris, Timothy Leary, Sally Kirkland, Rep. Marjorie Margolies-Mezvinsky In America, we often hear the phrase "the best and the brightest," as if we in any remote way consider them to be the same thing. In reality, we always appreciate a president, like Reagan or Bush, who leaves the country a little stupider than he found it, and we never fail to swoon for a smear campaign that labels some poor bastard an egghead, although to be fair, Dwight Eisenhower''s "I Like Ike" was just a catchier slogan than Adlai Stevenson''s "Smarty Pants for President." It''s not that other countries have any more or less intellectuals than we do, it''s just that in other places they seem to be admired instead of despised. After America has broken down so many prejudices based on race, sexism, and religion, isn''t our bias against brains still the most dangerous of all? * * * "If you don''t believe that America is anti-intellectual, then why is it that on Gilligan''s Island the character who had the worst billing was the Professor?" --Bill Beauty Pageants First aired 2*22*94 Joe Queenan, Jonathan Katz, Janeane Garofalo, Jeffrey Lyons What with the Miss America pageant just around the corner in September, we thought it appropriate to head off now any of the usual protests that in recent years routinely accompany any beauty pageant--protests that say it''s sexist to judge women only on their looks.
Hey, the problem with these pageants is that they don''t just judge the looks--they throw in a lot of crap about having a talent and answering essay questions--and that America''s too sexually repressed, and radical feminists too scary, for us to admit there''s nothing wrong with the flagrant flaunting of beauty for beauty''s sake. Every category in that pageant should be about beauty: best legs, best smile, best chest of anyone not on Baywatch. Does anyone have a problem with that? * * * "How is it in this country that, if you pore over that Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue, you''re a pervert, but if you ogle the same babes in alphabetical order by state, you''re patriotic?" --Bill * * * "Beauty pageant women, Sports Illustrated women, and women who work for Aaron Spelling: They are to me as Uncle Tom is to the black man. They are such Stepin Fetchit sell-outs." --Janeane Garofalo * * * "We pretend not to tolerate racism on TV and in movies. Yet we allow sexism and objectification to run rampant every day and every way." --Janeane "You''ve said your piece. Let me ask you this: How would you end world hunger?" --Bill * * * "What I think is so dangerous about the beauty pageants is the very narrow scope of what they regard as beautiful.
Society in general--its idea of beautiful has much too much to do with thin. My feeling is that when you can actually see a woman digesting, then she''s too thin." --Jonathan Katz Beauty over Bell Curve First aired 11*29*94 Chris Rock, Robert B. Parker, Terrie Williams, James Toback A recent bestseller, The Bell Curve, contained the controversial argument that IQ test scores are the most important factor in determining a person''s success, although the book was widely criticized for also containing five hundred of Oprah''s favorite recipes. Sadly, The Bell Curve gets it all wrong: As the O. J. Simpson trial has shown us, it''s not brains that are important in life, its being physically attractive. Stephen Hawking may be a brilliant, groundbreaking physicist, but he makes about one tenth as much as Heather Locklear, even though they''re both at the top of their fields and they''ve both been married to the drummer from Mötley Crüe.
You can always get ahead by further educating yourself, but among humans, it just may be better to be born with a pretty face than a pointy head. * * * "Money is the great equalizer. Money takes away all your faults. Money will turn a bald spot into a part!" --Chris Rock * * * "You don''t hear women described as having rugged good looks." --James Toback Supermodels First aired 11*2*94 Once again, it''s time for our Prince Rogers Nelson "Get Over Yourself" Award, which we give out to the person or persons we feel most in need of getting over themselves. In honor of Fashion Week here in New York, tonight''s award goes to supermodels, who, admittedly through no fault of their own, have been elevated to a status in our society formerly reserved for war heroes and Nobel Prize winners--in other words, people who did something, as opposed to people who just plucked the lucky Pick 6 in the genetic lottery. I don''t begrudge Cindy or Niki or Naomi their fame and fortune, because modeling all day is actually hard work. However, if you think it''s tough spending all day in a trailer, try living in one.
Not to mention how grueling it is cramming into exclusionary restaurants all night and breathing secondhand Mickey Rourke. No, what I object to is the presumption in every disinterested sneer these girls wear that their stardom is somehow something they had coming to them, when in truth they could have just as easily been born with Down syndrome as with flawless features and long legs. So often we see them acting perturbed and put upon by all the adulation and the burden of being hit on by every man, as if for a second they''d change places with a plainer woman. Life''s tough when you have to drink eight glasses of water a day and get paid a lot to, basically, stand there, but when I hear about Claudia Schiffer writing her memoirs at twenty-three, its almost as if she must have been put under a spell by some magician to th.