REPORT: Women Officially As Funny As Men, Still Bitches
Magnet Theater recently chatted with Beth Newell, one of the creators of Reductress.com, an online satirical news site thats been called The Onion for women. Beth is also Managing Director of Magnet Theater's Sketch Teams and currently performs in the improv duo Sad Kids. The conversation was mostly about shoes and purses, but Magnet managed to shift the conversation to comedy, the transcript of what followed is below.
[caption id="attachment_3336" align="alignleft" width="300"] Beth Newell seen here at the Reductress headquarters, a giant uterus shaped cave.[/caption]
MT: Reductress.com is a very smart and funny. I loved the ad for Vagina Whitening Tampons. And your coverage of New York Fashion Week.
BN: Thanks. We did some videos that got passed around, which was fun.
[caption id="attachment_3338" align="alignleft" width="300"] The new dick joke?[/caption]
MT: And youve tapped into a lot of talent in the Magnet community to help, which is great.
BN: Thanks. There are a lot of funny women with good ideas and a lot of sharp comedy skills at Magnet.
MT: Is Reductress.com run by mostly women?
BN: Yes, it is. Its run by women. There are some men involved, too. Were not actively avoiding using men, but since our playground is womens media, women have a unique perspective that more directly serves our point of view.
MT: So basically, 'no dudes is what youre saying?
BN: No. But because we make fun of the way the media speaks to women and its presumptions about the way women think, its natural for women to be more equipped at exposing the comedy targets.
MT: So no dudes. I get it. Moving on-
BN: -Thats not at all what Im saying. We are open to good writing and it doesnt matter if that person has breasts. Incidentally, a lot of male comedy writers have breasts.
MT: Good one.
BN: Thanks.
MT: I was being sarcastic. Its not funny. Because all of this smells like anti-male bullshit to me. Are you saying that men arent funny enough?
BN: No.
MT: Do you think women are funnier than men?
BN: I think comedy is about recognizing and disrupting patterns, and that men and women complement each other by often recognizing patterns in different ways. I think that culturally men and women value things differently so their comedy will be informed by that.
MT: Blah blah. Answer the question.
BN: Why are you being an asshole?
MT: Ill make it easier for you: who is funnier, you or Peter? [Peter McNerney is Beths husband, associate artistic director of Story Pirates, a member of the acclaimed improv duo Trike and has been a popular instructor at Magnet Training Center since 2008. Hes very funny.)
[caption id="attachment_3337" align="alignleft" width="200"] Beth Newell's husband.[/caption]
BN: We are funny in different ways. Hes more of a performer than a writer and Im more of a writer, I guess.
MT: But I asked who is funnier, not what your weaknesses are.
BN: Youre a dick.
MT: Peter would have said something funnier, I bet.
BN: I wasnt making a joke.
MT: Peter would have.
BN: This conversation is over.
MT: No its not. And its an interview, not a conversation.
BN: No. I dont mean the interview. I mean the conversation about whether or not women are funny. If you havent noticed, women have pretty much captured the comedy flag in the last decade. Bridesmaids was a moment of triumph. And now, because of Tina Fey and Kristen Wiig and Melissa McCarthy and Ellie Kemper and all the others standing beside them, its not only unsurprising that women are being funny, its the new normal.
[caption id="attachment_3335" align="alignleft" width="300"] FOR [expletive deleted]S SAKE, IM FUNNIER THAN PETER MCNERNEY! Beth Newell of Reductress[/caption]