Category: Articles

  • Short Takes: Man Charged in Kinison Incident

    Short Takes: Man Charged in Kinison Incident

    From Times Wire Services
    Originally printed in The Los Angeles Times
    Monday, June 25, 1990

    A man who allegedly attacked comedian Sam Kinison’s girlfriend in the comic’s Hollywood Hills home was charged today with three counts of rape and two other related felonies.

    The district attorney’s office charged Unway L. Carter, 22, with three counts of rape and one count each of rape with a foreign object and forcible oral copulation.

    Carter was to be arraigned later today in Los Angeles Municipal Court. He is charged with raping Kinison’s girlfriend last Thursday in the comic’s Hollywood Hills home. After the alleged sexual assault, the victim picked up a .44-caliber revolver and fired four shots at her attacker, but missed.

    Kinison was home asleep during the incident, police said.

    Carter, who is 6 feet, 5 inches tall and weighs 300 pounds, met Kinison the night before and was possibly acting as a bodyguard for the comic, police said.

  • Gay Activists Protest Kinison Show in Anaheim

    Gay Activists Protest Kinison Show in Anaheim

    By Davan Maharaj
    Times Staff Writer
    Originally printed in The Los Angeles Times
    Sunday, June 24, 1990

    ANAHEIM — About 25 gay activists Saturday night protested in front of the Celebrity Theatre before the start of a concert featuring controversial comedian Sam Kinison.

    The protesters, mainly members of the Orange County chapter of AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACTUP), said they opposed Kinison’s “bashing of gays, people with AIDS, women and other minorities.”

    The activists held up signs reading “Words Kill” and “Where does the hatred start? Kinison,” and they handed out flyers to concert-goers. The flyers contained recently released statistics on hate crimes against gays and women.

    “What’s so funny? What’s the joke?” ACTUP spokeswoman Victoria Maddock said, noting that 7,000 hate crimes against homosexuals were reported last year in the United States.

    Some theater patrons jeered the protesters, while others accepted the flyers as they walked into the sold-out concert.

    “This world needs to be a little lighter,” said Kathy McSeveney of Stanton, who identified herself as a “die-hard” Kinison fan. “These people have a right to protest, and he has a right to make his jokes. That’s how he makes his living. That’s why we live in America . . . freedom of speech and freedom of protest.”

    Kinison, who is known for his sharp insults, says of AIDS: “Heterosexuals die of it too? Name one!”

    After gay activists protested the remarks made in a Kinison album released in 1988, Warner Bros. agreed to insert an AIDS “information sheet” into Kinison’s album.

  • Short Takes: Sanitized Video Upsets Kinison

    Short Takes: Sanitized Video Upsets Kinison

    From Times Staff and Wire Service Reports
    Originally printed in The Los Angeles Times
    Wednesday, May 30, 1990

    NEW YORK — Foul-mouthed comedian Sam Kinison is demanding that MTV stop showing the sanitized version of his “Under My Thumb” video. The music network originally had rejected Kinison’s first version, which featured seductively clad women.

    The revised video, sans women, is just too purebred for Kinison. ” . . . I definitely feel there’s a double standard going on. I can turn on MTV and see Cher or Madonna (in seductive situations) and you have me revise my video?” Kinison said in a statement released by his publicity firm.

  • Comedy Review: This Time Around, Kinison Isn’t Just All Bite and Bash

    Comedy Review: This Time Around, Kinison Isn’t Just All Bite and Bash

    By Mark Chalon Smith
    Originally printed in The Los Angeles Times
    Wednesday, April 25, 1990

    NEWPORT BEACH — Sam Kinison has long been assailed for his unyieldingly provocative material. Homosexuals say he’s anti-gay, women say he’s anti-female, some people say he’s anti-human. Lots of people just say he’s crude, rude and lewd.

    His detractors wouldn’t have been disappointed with his show at the Laff Stop Monday night. There was plenty of the stuff that gets him in trouble, and the close-up nature of the 280-seat club (Kinison usually plays to rock concert-size crowds) put his defiantly caustic side right in your face.

    But Kinison wasn’t all bite and bash at everybody else’s expense. You couldn’t call his 50-minute set charitable, by any means (for one thing, tickets were a stiff $25 a pop). But by Kinison standards, it was almost humane. He didn’t even scream that much.

    Dig this. Kinison at one point suggested that men be more tolerant of women and their distaste for certain sex acts (say what?). He also made something of an environmentalist’s plea for the dolphins (they should have an 800 telephone number, he said, to call for advice on how to avoid tuna), and he blasted drug-taking several times.

    Then he drew in on the Orange County angle with a bit about Walt Disney that began affectionately and touched on the values of “family entertainment.”

    Too much for you to assimilate? Actually, Kinison went on to describe himself as “family entertainment” (come again?) and ultimately confessed that he thinks Walt was a pretty weird dude. Any guy who made “Old Yeller” (“a very sick movie about a dog who has to be shot”) couldn’t be all good, Kinison opined.

    Some of his most accessible riffs had an impromptu edge. He dwelled on the National Enquirer and its many stories about his escapades. His favorite was the one linking him romantically with Lenny Bruce’s 83-year-old mother. Forget the print media, though. What really unnerves him is television, especially shopping channels and the new phenomenon of 30-minute commercials masquerading as news programs, usually hosted by “burnt-out actors like Robert Vaughn and John Davidson.” He used that as a springboard to condemn the invidious nature of TV, a recurring theme of the evening.

    As usual, though, gays had to endure the majority of his abuse, all of it unprintable. It’s this particular obsession of Kinison’s that has created his biggest problem: It raises the question of his comedy’s validity, certainly when it relates to sensitive issues, not just affecting gays but all groups of people.

    The thinking man’s defense of shock comedy, of course, is that by striking a subject with brutal humor, we remove the barriers of propriety and politeness that separate us from it. Once the topic is pounded home, there’s no avoiding it: The shock we’ll experience will be that of self-recognition.

    It’s hard to tell if that’s Kinison’s intent, or even if that’s what he accomplishes. What’s clear, though, is that he works up a catharsis in his fans (any guy who’s been done wrong by his girlfriend, for example, certainly can identify with Kinison’s rants).

    Does the linkage reinforce or defuse the negative feelings? That’s the conundrum of Sam Kinison.

  • Hate-Mongers Are a Sad Chapter in the History of Comedy

    Hate-Mongers Are a Sad Chapter in the History of Comedy

    By Randy Lewis
    Originally printed in The Los Angeles Times
    Sunday, April 22, 1990

    The most important comedians have always been those who helped knock down the social, racial, economic and/or cultural barriers that keep people apart.

    In the ’30s, Charlie Chaplin and the Marx Brothers made sure that society’s little tramps didn’t get steamrolled in America’s desperate quest for the better life. Though they worked from greatly different vantage points, Lenny Bruce and Bill Cosby contributed during the 1960s to the condemnation of culturally ingrained racism. And Woody Allen has built a career on giving hope to nerds throughout the world.

    Along the way, comedians often have assumed the role that the sage assigned to journalists–“to comfort the afflicted and to afflict the comfortable.”

    Unfortunately, some new-generation descendants of the greats have begun to worship the tools some of their forefathers used–stinging insults, graphic language, sexually explicit situations–without understanding the job for which those tools were employed. I refer to two of the today’s hottest stand-up comics, performers who have reached rock ‘n’ roll-star status capable of filling huge concert halls and arenas: Sam Kinison and Andrew (Dice) Clay.

    Each is scheduled to play Orange County this week: Kinison in a club date at the Laff Stop in Newport Beach and Clay at the 18,765-capacity Pacific Amphitheatre in Costa Mesa. (Sam usually does larger facilities, but he booked this one himself, reportedly to help pay his considerable alimony bills.)

    Both have captured the attention (I would have said “imagination,” but that’s far too complimentary) of the MTV-generation audience. Both appeal primarily to teen-aged males–no surprise, considering the heavily misogynist content of both their acts. If I were a woman and a date took me to see either of these wild boors, I’d ask for his money back–then hail a cab.

    Though I’m at a loss to explain the popularity of either, Clay is the bigger mystery. (By the way, if you’re looking for lots of examples of their “jokes” here, forget it. The amount of each man’s material that can be quoted in a family newspaper probably weighs less than a stegosaurus’s brain.)

    With Kinison, it’s easier to identify (if not identify with) the primal catharsis in some of his routines. On his first album, there was an underlying sense of true frustration at the hypocrisy he experienced in the life he led as a preacher before turning his back on the church and becoming the antichrist of stand-up.

    Also, Kinison, unlike Clay, knows how to structure a joke that is created out of a unique (albeit generally base) perspective. And Kinison knows how to deliver a punch line.

    One old routine about how difficult Jesus might have found it to explain his Crucifixion and Resurrection to a wife displayed originality, intellect and absurd juxtaposition of the real and the far-fetched. Sound comic principals, all.

    But since then, Kinison has been caught up in his own fame: He spends nearly as much time on his latest album responding to Rolling Stone comments about his reputed wild lifestyle as he does creating “new” material. And that consists of inflaming racist attitudes toward Iranians, gays, women, the physically disabled and just about anyone in the world who’s not Sam Kinison.

    Dice Clay, however, doesn’t even have that much going for him. How he has so quickly become a national phenomenon is a mystery that ranks up there with how TV execs ever thought Pat Sajak would one day unseat Johnny Carson.

    If there’s more than meets the eye to Clay’s act–a leather-jacketed New Yawk street thug who brags about every bizarre twist on intercourse he knows–I can’t find it. Clay substitutes unbridled repugnance for viewpoint, odious epithets for insight. He’s as funny as a gang rape, as clever as a midnight mugging.

    Lenny Bruce showed that comedy can be tough, brutal and sometimes even ugly in skewering the objects of his scorn. But those targets were small-mindedness, bigotry and hate–traits that Clay and Kinison would rather lionize. Their loathsome attacks on women, homosexuals, ethnic minorities and others aren’t pointed or thought-provoking. They are simply imbecilic. Perhaps Clay doesn’t make jokes about the chronically stupid because they would hit too close to home.

    If there’s any rationalization for Clay’s moronic-punk persona, it could only be that he really is a brilliant performance artist whose very presence exposes how easily America can fall in line behind a crude, unthinking, spectacularly unfunny delinquent.

    Could it be that both are so hugely popular for the simple reason that they accurately reflect, and give voice to, the values of their audience? That a young generation bred on the senseless brutality of slasher movies like “Friday the 13th” and “Nightmare on Elm Street” have become (to borrow Hunter S. Thompson’s pet phrase) a nation of swine?

    Is it possible that, because celebrity worship has been elevated to the rank of religious experience, we have surrendered the ability to think critically when in the presence of a “star”? Otherwise, why would audiences grant not just their approval but their delight at attitudes and behavior that, if expressed by a child or a stranger at the supermarket, they would greet with the back of a hand?

    More disturbing yet is the realization is that Kinison and Clay, because they are at the top of the stand-up comedy heap right now if only in terms of their ticket-selling potential, undoubtedly are spawning dozens, maybe hundreds of imitators who are dying to step into their dung-encrusted jackboots.

    Remember the scene in Woody Allen’s “Manhattan,” when a question–how does one respond to neo-Nazis–pops up at a posh party of left-wing intellectuals? “We should go down there,” Woody suggests, “get some bricks and some baseball bats and really explain things to them.” When one haughty woman opines: “Really biting satire is always better than physical force,” Woody retorts: “No, physical force is always better with Nazis.”

    But the best course of action simply may be the one you’d take with bratty children who misbehave just for the attention they can draw: ignore them and hope–no, pray–they’ll go away.

  • Short Takes: Kinison Dry but Still Raunchy

    Short Takes: Kinison Dry but Still Raunchy

    From Times Wire Service
    Originally printed in The Los Angeles Times
    Tuesday, March 27, 1990

    CINCINNATI — Raunchy rock ‘n’ roll comedian Sam Kinison says he quit drinking because he is getting too old to keep ignoring his health.

    “Yeah, I’ve cleaned up my act a little bit,” Kinison told The Cincinnati Enquirer in an interview published today. “Turning 36, partying too much and grabbing my heart made me think, it’s time to be good.

    “I wanted to hold out at least until the turn of the century.”

    But tempering his alcohol intake isn’t part of a mellowing trend for the heavyset comic known for his manic, screeching style and often explicit commentary.

    He plans to belt out his remake version of “Wild Thing” with the band L.A. Guns here Thursday night.