After a clip of her Dylan Mulvaney jokes triggering audience members went viral last week, comedian Chrissie Mayr is defending her right to say offensive jokes at her stand-up shows, claiming that “comedy clubs are one of the last few places of freedom” left in society.
During an interview with Fox News Digital this week, Mayr defended offensive comedy, ripped the transgender community for acting like the “protected class du jour,” and declared that “true equality is being able to joke about everybody.”
In the interview, Mayr talked about the jokes that infuriated several audience members at her stand-up performance earlier this month. During her set, Mayr joked Mulvaney should have a pair of “t–s” after identifying as a woman for some time now.
“Why has it been a year of girlhood and still no t–s? That’s day one,” Mayr joked at her show in Dallas, Texas. “Why no t–s for Dylan? I don’t understand.”
A man in the crowd could be heard off-screen yelling, “Because he’s a man!” Mayr agreed, repeating “Because he’s a man.” The claim was met with scorn from multiple females in the audience, one of whom yelled back, “No! She’s a woman.”
Mayr responded, “No, it’s all good. We can all have different beliefs, it’s OK. Some of us can believe in reality and some of us can’t,” as the majority of the audience laughed.
Several LGBTQ jokes later, the female hecklers got up and left, yelling, “F— you, transphobe!” Mayr claimed they then proceeded to knock over her merchandise table near the entrance to the venue for good measure.
Mayr, who says she used to be a feminist and leftist prior to becoming a Donald Trump fan and eventual Trump voter in 2020, claimed that her hecklers are just “easily offended,” which speaks to a larger cultural problem.
“I don’t know if they were looking to be offended, but they could have been people that are just easily offended, and they didn’t realize it ’til they were at the show because a lot of people live in a bubble, and they aren’t challenged,” she said. “And it sometimes takes being at a comedy show for these feelings to come out.”
Mayr continued that the hecklers are just products of a mainstream narrative that is rarely, if ever challenged.
“Their friends aren’t challenging them, their family [isn’t] challenging them, their work, their school – everything’s in line with the mainstream,” Mayr said. “I just don’t think they’re very self-aware, and they’re so used to their feelings being validated everywhere they go, and their reality being, I guess, reflected back to them.”
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