Teja Arboleda,
MEd: Emmy-Award Winner, Comedian/Performer, and Professor of
Media Darby Li Po Price, PhD: Ethnic Studies Professor,
Diversity Specialist & Researcher
Did Seinfeld’s Michael Richards cross a line from comedy to
cruelty when he tried to handle a heckler by simply referring to
the man by the N-word repeatedly? He ostensibly felt very
comfortable venturing there, being a member of the white
majority.
But how does society decide what is appropriate subject-matter for
comics to explore on stage? According to HBO’s Bill Maher,
“Being able to say the worst thing is what America is all
about,” while comedian Carlos Mencia says, “If you can’t tell
the joke in front of the people it’s about, you don’t have a
right to tell the joke.” These two divergent perspectives are
curious juxtaposed at the opening of Crossing the Line, a frank
examination of humor from the point of view of some funny,
insightful and often brutally-honest, multiracial comedians.
This thought-provoking documentary marks the brilliant directorial
debut of Teja Arboleda, who teaches course in Media Production
and Race Relations at the New England Institute for the Arts in
Brookline, Massachusetts. Professor Arboleda, who is himself a
combination of African-American, Native-American,
Filipino-Chinese and German-Danish, started this project the day
Michael Richards had his aforementioned meltdown.
Teja began by offering a platform to dozens of entertainers from
backgrounds about as diverse as his own. Make no mistake,
American culture looks very different when filtered through the
lens of these folks, such as the amusing Kevin Barber, whose
maternal grandfather was a Ku Klux Klansman while his father was
a Black Panther. Then there’s Tessie Chu, who’s Irish, Chinese
and Filipino, and is determined to break the mold of the
submissive Asian woman.
Kate Rigg, who refers to herself as a “Rice Cracker” because she’s
half- white and half-Asian, complains that people expect her to
identify with everything but being mixed. Ironically,
Japanese-Yugoslavian Mike Moto says that neither of his ethnic
groups seems particularly interested in embracing him.
Among the experts consulted is Professor Reginald Daniel of UC
Santa Barbara. He observes that, “When people articulate multi-raciality
in comedy, it adds a new voice that has never been available
before.” Narrator Arboleda sees “multi-racial humor” as a
“powerful tool” because of its untapped potential to “tackle and
tickle the unlimited spectrum of our imagination.”
What makes Crossing the Line so valuable is its refreshingly novel
takes on everything from reparations (How about we get to
enslave white people for the next 100 years?) to bigotry
(“Racism is built on the fiction of racial superiority.”) to the
source of humor (“I think funny comes from pain, and there’s a
level of pain that comes from being mixed.”) A cinematic treat
likely to leave you eager to see what Professor Arboleda cooks
up next.
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A Trailer for Crossing the Line: Multiracial Comedians: