>>937331591 (OP)>>937331596>>937331605>>937331608I don't care much for Nick or Shane. Nick is a "white supremacist" but all it takes is asking "hey, why do black people commit more crime? Is it a "systemic issue" or are there cultural factors at play?" To instantly get permabanned into oblivion by social media and portrayed as some deliverance hick who only knows guns, hunting, and racism. Shane is "dude bro" frat boy comedian whose comedy style is saying things slowly and half conservatively but not making any hard stances, just a "pulling your leg" kind of style. Nick might have a hard on for Shane, could be some behind the scenes beef where it isn't about the comedy but about something Shane did that got Nick all upset, but I agree with Nick.
Comedy, as with any other art form, changes over time. Enough to where even 5 years is enough to notice a change in what is popular and what isn't. I can't expect comedy to be Richard Pryor, George Carlin, Chris Rock, Norm Macdonald, etc. Forever but it doesn't seem like comedians actually say anything worthwhile these days, there are hardly any jokes that you can recite off the top of your head that make your stomach hurt from laughing. Just ribbing and little nothingburgers here and there. Cheap laughs but no jokes being told that leave an impression beyond the joke being told in the moment and leaving as soon as it is done. There are different styles for different folks, maybe I don't enjoy Shane's stuff the way other people clearly do. He's the new thing, part of the current comedy scene overall, but is he one of those legendary comics that has jokes you'll remember 20 years from now? He's like a frat boy dane cook. Says a lot of nothing and is popping right now, but who will say shane was what got them into comedy?