‘Not a joke’: SNL Tourette syndrome skit slammed following BAFTA racial slur

4 days ago 2

Nell Geraets

Comedy program Saturday Night Live (SNL) has been slammed for a recent skit about Tourette syndrome, with a leading charity group describing it as unacceptable.

The American late-night sketch comedy show recorded the skit last week, depicting several controversial celebrities, including Mel Gibson, J. K. Rowling, Armie Hammer and Bill Cosby, blaming their past problematic behaviour on Tourette’s. Notably, the sketch did not air on the official Saturday night show, but it was uploaded to social media shortly after.

“I’m Mel Gibson, and as I probably should have pointed out decades ago, I too suffer from Tourette’s, which explains a lot of the things I’ve said or yelled through the years,” said comedian Andrew Dismukes, who was dressed as the Braveheart star.

Tourette syndrome is a condition that causes people to make involuntary, sudden and repetitive sounds or movements known as tics, which can sometimes include swearing.

The sketch explicitly referenced an incident at the BAFTA Film Awards last week in which Tourette’s campaigner John Davidson involuntarily shouted racial slurs while Sinners stars Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo were presenting on-stage.

Michael B. Jordan (left) and Delroy Lindo on stage at the BAFTA awards on February 22.Getty Images

Several black actors and a production designer said there should have been a more comprehensive apology at the time, and the slur was not initially edited out of the BBC’s broadcast. The BBC and the British Academy of Film and Television Arts have since apologised. Davidson also issued his own statement, emphasising that his tics are not a reflection of his personal beliefs.

Emma McNally, chief executive of the UK’s leading Tourette’s charity Tourette’s Action, said the Saturday Night Live skit was not acceptable.

“Mocking a disability is never acceptable. It would not be tolerated for any other condition, and it should not be tolerated by people with Tourette’s,” McNally said in a statement posted to the charity website on Monday.

“Tourette’s is a complex neurological condition, of which there is no cure. It is not a joke. It is not a personality trait. It is not a source of entertainment. It is a condition that can be extremely debilitating, causing pain, isolation and huge amounts of discrimination.

Saturday Night Live’s skit about Tourette syndrome featured a cast member depicting Mel Gibson.Screenshot of SNL video

“Videos and posts that deliberately misrepresent or sensationalise tics set us back years. A single video can undo the progress our community has spent years building toward greater awareness.”

Members of the Tourette’s community had faced “horrific” trolling and harassment since the incident at the BAFTAs, McNally said. “People have been targeted with threats and humiliation simply for having a condition they did not choose. No one should ever be treated that way,” she said.

McNally ended the statement calling for both compassion and further education around Tourette syndrome.

NBCUniversal, SNL’s broadcaster, has been contacted for comment, as well as The Tourette Syndrome Association of Australia.

Is this the first time SNL has come under fire?

The sketch show is known to push boundaries, but it has faced ire several times for arguably going a step too far.

In 1975, it came under fire when cast member Chevy Chase said a racial slur during a “word association” sketch.

In 1994, a skit about a scout being propositioned by his scoutmaster was accused of making light of paedophilia.

And in 2022, Dave Chappelle was criticised for performing an antisemitic opening monologue.

House of the Dragon star James Dreyfus also criticised the skit, calling the SNL comedians cringeworthy and unamusing.

“Good grief,” the British actor wrote on X. “Only goes to show that ‘regime comedians’ are as desperately unamusing, cringeworthy, pig-ignorant & prejudiced as they are over here.”

A Different Man star Adam Pearson described himself as a long-time lover of SNL, but said he was “truly disappointed” by the sketch.

“The media elites who often advocate for kindness and acceptance (a camp I very much put myself in) are failing to do so here. This isn’t satire, it’s punching down. SNL can be, should be and are better than this.”

British comedian Al Murray, largely known for his alter-ego “The Pub Landlord”, echoed Pearson’s sentiment and took to social media to call out the SNL sketch for not only “punching down”, but for simply being “upside down”.

Other users on X, including those who live with Tourette’s themselves, slammed the skit as insensitive and vowed to boycott SNL.

A comment by Deon Cole while he hosted the NAACP Image Awards has also been criticised. During the ceremony over the weekend – which celebrated outstanding performances by people of colour in film, television, music and literature – the actor and comedian referenced the BAFTA incident during a mock prayer.

“If there are any white men out here in the audience, Lord, with Tourette’s – I advise you to tell them they’d better read the room tonight, Lord … Whatever medicine they on, they better double up on it,” he said.

British media personality Piers Morgan said the comment was despicable.

“Hollywood continuing to mock John Davidson over his Tourette’s condition is one of the most despicable things I’ve witnessed in a long time,” Morgan wrote on X. “Shame on [Cole] and all those in the audience who laughed at his vile ‘jokes’.”

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Nell GeraetsNell Geraets is a Culture and Lifestyle reporter at The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald.Connect via X or email.

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