Greens have brought much laughter to the world, but most
of it has been at their expense. The British comedian, Marcus Brigstocke, says
he struggles with this problem on a daily basis, more so since he increased his
riffs on global warming in his routines following his 2007 Arctic voyage with
Mr. Brigstocke is one of a small but growing number of
comedians trying to wrestle some humour from climate change. Fellow British
comic Rob Newman has been a committed environmental and political campaigner for
many years. Recently he was at
Briton Mark Watson has gone further. In September 2007, he
was the only stand-up comedian among a group of 150 volunteers in
The idea of education through entertainment is not new,
and the environmental movement — in the
“It’s such a massive subject,” says Tim Britton, director
of the multi-disciplinary comedy troupe Forkbeard Fantasy. “The potential
disaster we face is so huge and there is such an enormous amount of
information.” Mr. Britton and his team had more than three decades of success
behind them when, in 2006, they entered and won the Defra (U.K. govt
environment department) Climate Challenge, an award aimed at changing public
attitudes to tackling climate change.
With this funding in place, Forkbeard Fantasy worked with
corporate consciousness-raisers Carbon Sense to create Invisible Bonfires, a
multimedia cabaret night presented as a parody of the Gore-style climate change
conference.
Mr. Brigstocke tells a slightly different story. He is a
comic who thrives on confrontation, he took on all three Abrahamic religions in
a seven-minute rant for BBC radio’s The Now Show last year, bracing himself for
a violent reaction that never came. “I had one or two emails saying, ‘You’re an
idiot, you don’t know what you’re talking about,’ but when I did the piece on
climate change I received lots of very, very angry emails protesting that the
whole thing is a lie and a conspiracy. Now that I’m known as an
environmentalist, the attacks are, if anything, getting angrier and more
personal.”
A gentler kind of self-deprecating humour pervades both The
Transition Handbook and the approach of its author Rob Hopkins, the founder
of the
Perhaps the toughest challenge facing the climate comedian
is public wariness of humour with a message, which Mr. Brigstocke finds even
among other comedians he works with. So what is a comic to do?
“With my Arctic trip I tell it as a story, really
focussing on my complete inability to cope with life at sea,” he says. “So I’ll
be talking about being seasick and throwing up all over the place, and then
while people are laughing I’ll shove a bit of science under their chair. I’ll
describe what it was like falling out of my bunk because of the motion of the
ship, and then mention that, ‘Oh, by the way, the salinity levels in the Arctic
are far worse than we had imagined. And the temperatures are much higher’.”
— © Guardian Newspapers Limited, 2008
http://www.hindu.com/2008/05/09/stories/2008050955111100.htm