您现在的位置是:探索 >>正文
Jeff Dye says politics 'interfering' with stand
探索6467人已围观
简介Facebook TwitterThreads FlipboardCommentsPrintEmailAdd Fox News on GoogleJeff ...
- Threads
- Comments
- Add Fox News on Google
Jeff Dye on leaving Los Angeles, Newsom and the politics driving comedy’s new divide
Comedian Jeff Dye sat down with Fox News Digital and explained why he’s leaving California for Texas and how politics have increasingly influenced the stand-up comedy world.
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!After announcing his plans to leave California for Texas last month, comedian Jeff Dye made it clear that this was not a decision he came to overnight. For years, he clung to the belief that the state he loved could still be saved, but eventually that hope ran out.
Dye sat down with Fox News Digital, where he offered insight into his decision to leave Los Angeles for Austin and how politics have carved a growing divide within the stand-up comedy community.
A fixture of the stand-up scene since 2005, Dye is preparing to join the wave of entertainers and everyday Americans who have fled the Golden State in recent years. While he agreed that "there's nothing heroic about leaving" California, the comedian expressed a sense of hopelessness about the state's future under Gov. Gavin Newsom's leadership — especially given his handling of the wildfires that tore through the Palisades earlier this year.
COMEDIAN JEFF DYE JOINS HOLLYWOOD EXODUS, SAYS LA FIRES WERE 'QUITE A WAKE-UP CALL'

Comedian Jeff Dye sat down with Fox News Digital and discussed his recent decision to leave California for Texas. (Photo Courtesy of SA Ent. Group)
"I don't think it's good to leave California because you're upset with the way it's run. We should stay and fight for it," he asserted. "But at a certain point, you just get a little defeated in like, I don't know how to fight for it anymore. I don't know what to do."
On the issues of homelessness and transportation, Dye questioned where taxpayer funds allocated to tackle these problems have gone, aiming his questions at Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass.
Newsom's office had a dismissive reply when reached for comment by Fox News Digital, saying of Dye, "Who is that?" When reached for comment, a representative for Mayor Bass replied with a yawn emoji.
In April of last year, a state audit found California had spent $24 billion on tackling homelessness over five years without consistently tracking how the funds actually aided in the homeless crisis.
"How many things does Mayor Bass and Gavin Newsom, you know, how many things can they just lie to our face or ignore or not do before you go, I'm out of here?" he asked.
PATRICIA HEATON EXPLAINS WHY SHE LEFT LOS ANGELES FOR NASHVILLE, CITES HOMELESSNESS, CRIME
With politics creeping its way into seemingly every facet of life, the stand-up comedy scene has been no exception.

Jeff Dye explained the impact that he felt politics are having on the stand-up comedy world. (Courtesy of SA Ent. Group)
Fox News Digital asked Dye whether he felt that the growing influence of politics in stand-up comedy has had a negative impact on the industry.
"The biggest thing I've noticed in stand-up comedy — and people will accuse me of being a drama queen or being a punk for even saying this — but the biggest thing I've noticed is that the politics is interfering with the comedy," he said.
"It used to be my heroes, at least, were like, 'Dude, don't be politically correct and say what you think and don't be afraid to break any faux pas.' Where it's now, even the most successful comedians are being like, 'Hey, you can't joke about that,' or, 'You can't say that,' which breaks my brain."
JAMES WOODS WARNS NEWSOM'S PRESIDENTIAL APPEAL WON'T LAST LONG AMID 'ATROCIOUS' CALIFORNIA FAILURES
According to Dye, today's stand-up stars tend to follow an unspoken rule: "Say whatever you want, but you better be liberal."
One comedy legend whose words have stayed with Dye over the years is George Carlin, whose anti-establishment, provocative style helped define conscious comedy.
"George Carlin once said our job as comedians is to find that line and then deliberately cross it … I'm not running for office. I'm not doing TED talks. I'm not lecturing people on ethics and morals. I'm just supposed to be funny and point out things in society," he explained.

Comedian George Carlin performs at the Cheyenne Civic Center in Cheyenne, Wyoming on June 1, 1992. (Mark Junge/Getty Images)
Dye contended that a few "brave comics" have shifted the Overton Window in regard to what is or isn't acceptable to speak about as a stand-up.
LENO SAYS TICKETS SALES ARE UP AFTER HE REMOVED POLITICS FROM HIS STAND-UP, SAYS 'NOBODY WANTS TO BE LECTURED'
He credited comedians/hosts like Joe Rogan, Theo Von and Shane Gillis for this shift, praising their willingness to speak their minds with little regard for what others may think.
"Now you see a lot of comics coming along going, 'Oh, it's a little safer now, because these big comics have said a thing.' I was on the front lines of that in a way," he said. "I've always been more conservative than my comedic counterparts. I've always been way more religious as far as like, I'm a Christian, so that's not a huge, popular thing in stand-up comedy. I was on the front lines in that way."

Comedian Jeff Dye performs on "The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon" on Jan. 19, 2018. (Andrew Lipovsky/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal)
Explaining his gradual shift in political ideology, Dye told Fox News Digital, "I was late to the Trump party. I was late to a lot of those things. I thought, because I had gay friends, that I must be liberal, and then becoming liberal became crazier and crazier and more Antifa-ish, and I was like, 'I'm out.'"
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
Dye acknowledged that some may scoff at the idea of comedians being brave for expressing their views, but he pushed back on that perspective — noting the risks that come with challenging the dominant political consensus.
"It is brave to say something that everyone else isn't saying. There is some bravery in that. To say a thing that your peers and the people you work with are going to hate. And if you don't think that's brave, look at what happened to Charlie Kirk," he argued. "It is brave because there are risks when you say things that people don't like."
Tags:
相关文章
报告能互认 就医更便捷
探索“之前您在老家医院做的检查,结果已经上传到云平台,这次就不用重复做了。”前不久,江苏常州的王女士因甲状腺手术后相关问题来到江苏省人民医院就诊。在甲状腺外科副主任医师斯岩的电脑上,“云临床检验平台”医生 ...
【探索】
阅读更多全民领主:从零开始打造不朽仙域
探索【独家签约小说:全民领主:从零开始打造不朽仙域】人人可成仙,人人可成神!这是一个全民领主时代,也是有仙神同行,神话不仅仅是故事的时代!吴池穿越平行世界,一脚迈入了这个诸天争渡,万族喋血的激昂大世!拥有 ...
【探索】
阅读更多传奇SF三大职业全面解析,哪个更适合你?
探索副标题:战士、道士、法师:传奇SF职业选择指南随着1.76传奇SF游戏的持续火爆,玩家们对于游戏中三大职业的讨论也愈发激烈。究竟哪个职业更为强大,更能吸引玩家的喜爱呢?今天,小编就与大家一同深入探讨这 ...
【探索】
阅读更多
热门文章
最新文章
友情链接
- 金安区望城街道正阳社区:敬老善意在邻里流动
- 牙疼分几种及吃什么好
- 头脑发昏 美食之罪
- 高考英语作文:有关“跨文化”
- 南方养老金支援东北?回应:国家正建立中央基金调剂制度
- 高二想象作文:把梦想根植于脚下 19
- 《幻兽帕鲁》“心归之所”重大更新上线 新增PVP功能并开放创意工坊
- 英语素材:和“颜色”有关的英语句子
- 还不下手!英伟达和AMD将对显卡涨价 涨幅不会小
- MBR之路:解码中国水治理现代化的关键密钥
- 影石刘靖康:一个硬件公司的成功,49%的功劳跟供应商有关
- “五一”假期,山西博物院推出两大重磅展览
- 异象回声预抽卡角色怎么选择 异象回声预抽卡角色选择推荐
- 高途CEO回应挖董宇辉:他是用来爱的,高途珍惜每一位人才
- 骏发生物马细管冻精及人工授精技术研讨会召开
- (热门)方文山经典歌词
- 苹果恢复大师安装使用介绍
- 精选足篮专家:周通解球篮彩7连红 七哥足球6连红
- 智能垃圾分类新模式实现试点社区全覆盖
- 孟庭苇没有情人的情人节歌词