Chris Rock’s latest comedy special, “Tamborine,” dropped on Netflix in
February. I’d rate it as his best standup special and one of the best I’ve
seen, up there with Pryor, Chapelle, Bill Hicks and Eddie Murphy.
He starts out dissecting society’s problems and has great insight. They’re
one liners but they’re often deep. Chris Rock offers more insight in 30
seconds than you get from 20 minutes of talking heads on cable TV news. I
wonder how serious he is about his pro-bullying jokes. Is he just going for
laughs?
He turns inward, talking about his divorce and his philandering. In reading
articles about the special, Rock was quoted as saying he had three affairs,
one with a celebrity, one with someone semi-famous and one with someone in
the retail class. I never heard that joke in the show. Maybe I missed it or
maybe it got edited out. The famous one is supposed to be Kerry Washington.
The retail class might be a joke about banging a prostitute. I was
listening to the Howard Stern Show on Sirius when Howard pried details out
of Rock about an affair he had with a nude model. Rock said she was white
but had a mixed race baby. Rock said he knew it wasn’t him who was the
father. But he said her pimp, who was black, got her pregnant and they
tried to extort money out of him. The nude model claimed Rock broke their
non-disclosure agreement and sued him. She was pretty hot by the way.
Rock said he is lonely as a single man and is through with cheating. But
this is the same Rock who once observed that man is only as faithful as his
options. He also described himself as addicted to porn and aid it made him
sexual autistic and he started missing sexual cues.
I guess I’m not 100 percent sure his apparent candor was actually honest. I
wonder if he was a skilled comedian looking for a laugh.

A second Netflix comedy special is Ricky Gervais’ “Humanity.” It’s about an
hour and 20 minutes and I watched it in chunks over a couple of weeks. I
also follow Andy Kindler on Twitter. Kindler is well known as a Gervais
basher. Kindler Tweeted several links of reviews critical of Gervais’
special. Some were obscure sites and poorly written, but there were some
big names in there, too, including Lindy West in the New York Times.
<https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/28/opinion/ricky-gervais-transgender-netflix.html>
I’m a Gervais fan, although, I stopped following him on Twitter when he
turned into too much of a promotional whore for his last Netflix special. I
think the British “Office” is one of the five best television shows of all
time. Because of all the bad reviews, I expected Gervais’ special to be
horrible. It was nowhere near as good as Rock, but I still enjoyed and it
would recommend it to others.
He does try to push the politically incorrect button and I see how that
would anger some. But it’s clearly a comedy show. Be prepared to laugh. My
primary complaint is that he has a formula, especially early on, where he
talks about something conventional or even sweet and then gives it a
shocking punchline. Sarah Silverman does this, but she doesn’t pound it
into the ground like Gervais.

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