Sunday, August 16, 2020
Columbia Magazine Leave Them Laughing COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY - SIPA Admissions Blog
Columbia Magazine Leave Them Laughing COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY - SIPA Admissions Blog They say a spoonful of sugar makes the medicine go down,â says comedian Negin Farsad â02GSAS, â04SIPA. âFor me, the medicine is challenging stereotypes. And the sugar is a really sophisticated poop joke.â Farsad admits that scatological humor is the last thing that people expect from her â" a relentlessly cheerful, Iranian-American, Muslim comedian with two masterâs degrees. But she thinks that means sheâs doing something right. âThereâs always an assumption that Iâm going to be clean or safe, because Iâm an ethnic woman,â she says. âSo thereâs a particular moment in every show when people realize that Iâm different. Thatâs what Iâm after.â Farsad is what she likes to call a âsocial-justice comedian,â which means that she wants to start a larger conversation about social issues, but in a way that âdoesnât feel like an afterschool special.â This dialogue takes many forms: in addition to performing stand-up, she is a filmmaker, a TED fellow, and, most recently, the author of a memoir, How to Make White People Laugh. âIf youâre trying to take on the dominant culture about how they treat outsiders, you have to speak to that culture directly,â Farsad says. âIâm not interested in preaching to the choir. Iâm interested in changing minds.â Farsad is intimately familiar with being treated differently. Growing up, she felt like the only Muslim kid in Palm Springs, California (âone of the top five gay cities and one of the top five retirement communities â" so itâs basically people listening to Lady Gaga while adjusting their cathetersâ). After studying theater at Cornell, she wanted to explore the sense of otherness that she experienced as an ethnic minority, so she enrolled at Columbia for a masterâs in African-American studies. âI knew that the Black struggle wasnât my struggle, but I wanted to fight it anyway. It felt Iranian-adjacent,â she says. âIâm not interested in preaching to the choir. Iâm interested in changing minds.â But in the post-9/11 world, the rhetoric around Muslims in America was changing, dangerously. âI thought, how could people associate this kind of violence with a whole religion and an entire region â" thatâs just crazy. Thatâs like stereotyping 1.6 billion people. Who does that? Americans.â Farsad was particularly frustrated with the lack of Muslims in pop culture. The less visible Muslims were, she felt, the more feared and misunderstood they became. After leaving a public-policy job in 2008, she organized a group of fellow Muslim comics to tour the country. (Film from the tour became Farsadâs 2013 documentary The Muslims Are Coming!) Now, Farsad also hosts a podcast called Fake the Nation, a political roundtable with a rotating cast of comedians. And she stars in the new movie 3rd Street Blackout, a romantic comedy that takes place in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy. âThat one isnât so political,â Farsad says. âThough when youâre Iranian, people seem to think everything is political.â Some of the reactions to Farsadâs work have been heartbreaking: âIâve heard every racist, sexist, hate-filled slur you can imagine.â Sheâs also had pushback from some fellow Muslims, who have objected to her unorthodox methods. But she says that there are certainly enough positive reactions to keep propelling her forward. âI always think about the ex-Marine who had been stationed in Afghanistan,â she says. âHe came in angry and left laughing.â [Photo by Ryan Lash] This article originally appeared in Columbia Magazine.
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