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Opinion

There's a lot of truth in the stereotype that all Jews are funny

Why are so many Jews comedians, given how relatively few of us there are?

August 25, 2022 10:50
Mel Brooks GettyImages-1138175443
2 min read

The controversy last week over an Edinburgh theatre cancelling Jerry Sadowitz’s show because audience members felt “unsafe” allows me to write today about one of my pet subjects.

No, not about Sadowitz himself; never having seen a single show by him, I have no knowledge of that subject whatsoever (although when has that ever stopped a columnist from sharing their opinion about something?).

No, about comedians. Specifically, Jewish comedians. Even more specifically, why are so many comedians Jewish?

Discussions about the disproportionate numbers of Jewish comedians risk falling into the same essentialist trap as Donald Trump, who once said: “The only kind of people I want counting my money are short guys who wear yarmulkes all day.”

Although I’ll be honest: as unfashionable as it is to say right now, there are a fair few stereotypes about Jews that I really don’t mind. OK, sure, the ones about us being evil and drinking babies’ blood and taking over the world, those aren’t so good.

But the ones about us being smart, funny and always going to a therapist? I can live with those. Oh God, is that wrong? Am I another self-loathing Jew, capitulating to the antisemites? I need to talk about this with my therapist urgently.

Still, I don’t think even the most neurotic Jew, with the sensitivity levels of Alvy Singer in Annie Hall, can get too wound up about the “all Jews are funny” schtick, because you only need to list some stand-up comedians to hear the truth in it.