NYAspie wrote:
First off, I'm a guy who enjoys comedy as much as the next person. In recent times, given the ascension of Asperger's and other inherent disorders, there have been some comics who have mentioned it in their act or other places. Simple question here: does this offend you or make you embarassed? In general, how does this make you feel?
Depends on how it's portrayed. Personally, I'll accept it if it falls under the following requirements:
1) The person doing the portrayal/telling the jokes is on the spectrum to some degree (as opposed to someone who simply knows another person with it)
2) The character is written so well that the symptoms come out of the actor (and to an extent, the audience) having dealt with the character a great deal of time
3) Society's evolved to a point where they understand it enough for the parodies to put a humorous spin without being degrading or offensive.
Taking the example of Sheldon mentioned earlier in the thread, I think the actor portrays him really well, but the character's writing from an AS perspective is abysmal. The audience is expected to laugh and suspend their disbelief in thinking that Sheldon's mannerisms are so far-fetched they couldn't possibly exist in real life. However, what the general viewing audience doesn't realize is some (not all necessarily) of the mannerisms of Sheldon could appear in someone on the spectrum in real life, even if the manifestations are completely different. So that "comedy" comes off offensively for me because it uses the audiences' ignorance as leverage.
Conversely, what I've seen of Abed from Community (and I'll admit it's only a season or two) is that, even though his writing is much more stereotypical, the actor can only go so far with what's given without going to the point where the role is unbelievable. Despite that, I wouldn't call it a bad writing, but here, I think the comedy comes out of a more realistic side, which I see as much more enjoyable.
TL;DR - Portrayal is everything. It can work, but only in certain circumstances.
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