Cringe Comedy – Can Cancer Be Humorous?

(photo courtesy of America’s Got Talent Wiki)
The other night, I was watching America’s Got Talent, and there was a comedian auditioning from a wheelchair. What seemed to take the audience by surprise, was that he made “how he got there” a part of his routine. He had been shot. He told of the response he got from a woman what had happened, when he told her that he got shot at a Halloween party, and her response was, “that’s spooky,” to the shock and dark humor look on the judges faces. He quipped that he was dressed up as Spiderman, but clearly his spidey-senses had failed him. He took several shots at himself over the incident, then turned to the next segment of his audition, applying for jobs that he couldn’t do and then just show up to the interview, such as roofing and rock climbing instructor, saying “this is the consequences if you don’t follow my instructions.” He was actually quite funny, and clearly this helps him deal with his disability.

(image from IMDB)
Brad Williams is a great comic of small stature as he describes himself as fun size like the candy bar. And boy does he have the self-deprecating material. Being caught in a major snowstorm dumping a foot of snow, his fear of tripping and falling and dying because no one would find him. Or his father, lifting him onto the kitchen island and leaving him there as punishment (time out) as a child. Even his wife gets in on it, a black belt in jujitsu, gets into an altercation with a man, only to turn to Brad and say, you defend my honor.

(image from Entertainment Weekly)
And finally, there is Josh Blue, a comic born with cerebral palsy. And yes, the majority of his act is about his disability, and he is hilarious. “There’s nothing more entertaining than watching 12 dudes with cerebral palsy getting off an airplane like some sort of zombie parade.” “I mention that I have cerebral palsy because if I don’t, after a while, the audience is sitting there wondering, ‘does he know…that he has that’?” “I went to NYC and tried to hail a taxi and caught a pigeon (because of the curvature of his hand).”
Have you ever heard of the expression, “laughter is the best form of medicine?” It is a centuries old expression with no clear origin, even mentioned in the King James bible (Proverbs 17:22 (King James Version) states, “A merry heart doeth good like a medicine: but a broken spirit drieth the bones”). Laughter triggers profound, measurable physical and mental changes in the body. By naturally resetting your nervous system, a good laugh relieves tension, boosts your immune system, and promotes long-term cardiovascular health. And then I thought, I have never really heard any comedian make cancer part of their act. Sure, plenty comedians have experienced cancer, but I almost think, would there be too much of a risk of bringing down the audience. Clearly the only ones who would be able to tell jokes about cancer, would be those who have had cancer touch their lives. Well, that would be me, a 37 year survivor of Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. How would I create a comedy bit dealing with cancer, without bringing everyone down with what is commonly referred to as “gallows” humor, yes, that kind of gallow? I think the thing to keep in mind, is that most comedians reflect on their lives with their acts, so this actually is theraputic or cathartic when dealing with themselves. Will everyone who has or has had cancer think the jokes are funny? No. Will at least an irony been seen in the routine? Perhaps. So, I thought I would give it a try. Now I’m sure it looks different on paper, than if you were seeing it live or on video. But who knows… So, here goes.

“How’s everybody doing? My name is Paul and I want to let you know, I’m a 37 year survivor of cancer! Thank you, thank you so much. Now I don’t want you to think that this is going to be a bummer set, hardly. I can hit you right from the gate, my favorite Disney movie was “Finding Chemo, and the most expensive haircut I ever got was chemotherapy. I had heard 8 cancer jokes the day I was diagnosed, and if I had heard another, it would benign. I will let that one sit a little.” Or I can just go into a story.
“When people find out that I had cancer, a common comment that comes out, ‘you’re so brave or courageous.’ Now to be clear, I didn’t volunteer to have cancer, though oncologists love to tell certain cancer patients with certain treatable cancers like mine, ‘if you’re going to get a cancer, this is the one you want.’ Want? What the fuck?!? Nobody wants cancer, it doesn’t matter how successful the treatments are.
Like, do you think I would walk into a doctor’s office, like I was looking for some grey poupon and say, ‘excuse me, do you have anything that involves chemotherapy, radiation, and lifelong anxiety?’ Cancer isn’t a gym membership. You don’t sign up because you want to.
The one comment I find somewhat odd hearing is, ‘congratulations on beating cancer.’ ‘Beating cancer?’ I didn’t beat anything, I survived it. Because if I beat cancer, I wouldn’t still be having medical appointments related to my cancer, in the form of late side effects, 37 years later. To give you an idea how this feels, and you don’t have to have cancer to understand this…
Think of someone robbing your house, and every six months the police call and say, ‘we’d just like to check and see if the burglar came back.’
And let’s talk scanxiety for a second. You don’t wait for the results, you rehearse every possible conversation in your head. Five minutes after the scan you’re thinking ‘I wonder if I should start organizing my garage,’ and the tech says, ‘the doctor will call you.’ Really? How about you just give me a thumbs up or down at least, maybe a smile, something to give me hope for the next couple weeks while I wait for the doctor’s call? You are like one of those people who know the ending of a movie and won’t tell me.’
One of my favorite things to hear is, ‘you look great!’ Which is wonderful, because I actually still feel like shit. But at least I got my money’s worth to make me look that great; modern medicine, nurses, doctors, therapists, pharmacists, family and friends who put a lot in to making me look this good.
The hardest question I get is ‘are you cured?’ I have gotten so accustomed to not using the word cured, even my doctor did not like using it, because of the slightest chance of it returning. It’s kind of like asking someone living in Florida, as I do, so…are hurricanes finished after one blows through? While I hope so, I prepare in case another one comes by.
I will tell you one situation that I did not get used to. Remeber the television show Cheers, when the character Norm would walk in and everyone would cheer his name, yeah, I got that everytime I walked into the oncologist office. Only instead of tasty beer, I got the most toxic of chemotherapy cocktails. I would rather run into everyone at a pizza place or bar.
One good thing that came from my experience, was perspective. Before cancer, I would worry about having matching socks. Now, if they’re both socks, I’m having a great day. People think survivors are fearless. We aren’t. We’re just experienced. We know life can change with just one phone call. We laugh harder now. We hug longer and and say “I love you” more often. We don’t save the good dishware for company.
Cancer took a lot from me. But it also gave me more appreciation for boring days, a beer with a friend, sunsets, hearing someone snort they laughed so hard. The moments don’t seem so ordinary anymore. They’re the jackpot.
So if you’re here tonight because you’ve survived cancer – or you’ve walked beside someone who has, give yourself a little credit. You made it through some of the hardest days imaginable. The fact that were here laughing together tonight? That’s not denial. That’s victory.
Thank you…and remember… the best revenge against cancer is living a life that refuses to let it have the last laugh.
Thank you for coming and goodnight.”











