It took “only” 15 years of Asian American organizations’ calling out Jay Leno’s anti-Asian jokes for the comedian to offer an apology for the pain he caused to the community. While his apology last month was long overdue, it feels somewhat encouraging that he worked with Asian American groups in issuing it. Perhaps it was even a step toward moving cultural norms in the right direction.
Some people might think: What’s the big deal about a joke? I can assure you most of those people thinking that are not minorities.
Some people might think: What’s the big deal about a joke? I can assure you most of those people thinking that are not minorities. The unfunny truth is that primarily white comedians have long employed stereotypes about historically marginalized communities as comedic fodder to make other white people laugh at the expense of these minority groups.
We often chalk past transgressions like Leno’s up to the times or to people’s not knowing better. But most of the time, that’s a myth. When he offered his apology, Leno said that when he was making jokes that mocked Asians, “in my heart I knew it was wrong.” But still, he told them.
Of course Leno knew the jokes were wrong. I’ve performed standup for over 20 years — over 10 of them as a full-time comic touring the U.S. and the Middle East. Every comic knows that telling a joke that perpetuates stereotypes about any minority community is wrong.
In the best case, a comic telling these types of jokes is simply being lazy, counting on the likelihood that tired cliches about minority groups will get laughs at the comedy clubs. (And, sadly, they still do.)
The worst-case scenario, though, is when a comedian is truly bigoted and the jokes are designed not just to get a laugh, but also to share the comedian’s sincere disdain for certain people. From my experience, that’s rare, but I did see it happen in the immediate years after 9/11, when plenty of comedians spread dangerous stereotypes about my community — Arabs and Muslims — because, as I learned firsthand in speaking to some of them, they didn’t like us.
The unfunny truth is that primarily white comedians have long employed stereotypes about historically marginalized communities as comedic fodder to make other white people laugh.
Lately, more comedians seem to be coming forward to issue apologies for past racist jokes and behavior. I believe most of them when they say they were simply going for the laughs, without any malice. But this still means they performed them with little to no concern whether they caused pain.
As a society, we’re going through something of a reckoning when it comes to how our culture portrays race — even comedians. This means some comics are finally addressing past jokes that not only furthered negative stereotypes, but also helped fuel systemic racism.
In Leno’s case, the Media Action Network for Asian Americans had called out Leno’s repeated jokes that furthered stereotypes that Asians, especially Koreans, ate dogs. In 2019, when he was a guest judge on NBC’s “America’s Got Talent,” Leno joked that a painting depicting pets belonging to the show’s executive producer resembled items “on the menu at a Korean restaurant.”
First of all, can you get any lazier as professional comedian than that type of joke? Seriously!
While the joke didn’t make it to broadcast, Asian Americans working on “America’s Got Talent” and other staff members voiced complaints.
In response, the Media Action Network called for NBC to sever ties with Leno, while the Council of Korean Americans released a powerful statement noting that Leno’s jokes about Asians “are offensive and propagate false perceptions of Asian Americans as suspicious, uncivilized foreigners engaging in repugnant practices.”
First of all, can you get any lazier as professional comedian than that type of joke?
In the past year, other well-known comedians have apologized for bits they delivered that at the time didn’t raise an uproar — or even eyebrows in the media. Many say that in retrospect they understand they were wrong. In June, ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel apologized for having appeared in blackface while doing impressions of Black celebrities, including Oprah Winfrey and Karl Malone, on his Comedy Central show from 1999 to 2003.








