The comedy author was arrested at Heathrow Airport earlier this month over social media posts sharing his views on trans rights.
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Jimmy Kimmel has been taken off air within the US. Pic: Alex J Berliner/ABImages through AP
Talking about his personal work, Linehan mentioned: “It would be impossible to do a comedy like Father Ted or The IT Crowd now. The feeling of a thousand people looking over your shoulder as you write would be intolerable, and the thousand people looking over your shoulder are the various supposed minority groups that TV executives think need protecting.”
In comedy, everybody ought to be a goal, Linehan mentioned. “It’s how you show someone’s humanity, you show that they’re not perfect, that they’re funny, that they make mistakes.
“However all these, I’ve to say, white, center class TV executives, they appear down on all people. So that they suppose that once you make a joke, you are punching down. It is unattainable to create comedy in that form of ambiance.
“The only people who can survive in that kind of atmosphere are people who simply never say anything interesting.”
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Graham Linehan. Pic: PA
‘We’re going backwards’
Requested if satire is lifeless, Linehan mentioned it’s “dying” – and likewise highlighted Chris Morris’s “boundary breaking” Brass Eye, one other satirical present from the Nineteen Nineties and early 2000s.
“It is impossible to imagine it being made now. And so we’re going backwards. We’re not moving forwards, we’re going backwards.”
Linehan mentioned he now lives within the US as he couldn’t keep within the UK. He was arrested after touchdown at Heathrow in the beginning of September.
In one of many posts he says he was questioned about, Linehan wrote: “If a trans-identified male is in a female-only space, he is committing a violent, abusive act. Make a scene, call the cops and if all else fails, punch him in the balls.”
After his arrest drew criticism of the police and authorities from some politicians and supporters, Met Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley mentioned his officers have been in an “impossible position” and shouldn’t be “policing toxic culture wars debates”.
Linehan mentioned he was “surprised” to be arrested over “tweets that were mostly harmless”.
He continued: “One which was good safeguarding advice for any woman. And two silly things that I just kind of you know, conversationally threw online. I never thought that anyone would be so offended by them.”
Linehan was interviewed as different comedians and writers have been talking out about Kimmel being taken off air within the US.
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Tom Walker as Jonathan Pie. Pic: YouTube/Jonathan Pie
“I certainly don’t think that the Trump administration should be influencing decisions made by TV companies, that’s definitely not on,” Linehan mentioned when requested by Phillips in regards to the subject.
“But I do find it quite ironic, or I’m not sure what the word is, that nine or 10 days after a man was shot through the neck for literally trying to speak – you know, the symbol of Charlie Kirk’s life is the microphone, not only in the sense that he used it himself, but he handed it to others and allowed them to make their points, without interrupting, without being superior or arrogant or argumentative – and he was silenced forever.
“So the concept that Jimmy Kimmel is a few form of hero of free speech is sort of absurd after that occurred.”