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August 15, 2024 2:57 pm

American Comedian Proclaims He’s ‘Anti-Bully’ After Israeli Couple Heckled Out of Venue Following Anti-Israel Joke

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    avatar by Shiryn Ghermezian

    Reginald D. Hunter. Photo: Screenshot

    American stand-up comedian Reginald D. Hunter apologized on Thursday for an “unfortunate” incident that took place at his show this week during the 2024 Edinburgh Fringe Festival in Scotland after the comedian made an anti-Israel joke.

    “As a comedian, I do push boundaries in creating humor; it’s part of my job,” the comedian, 55, said in a post shared across his various social media accounts. “This inevitably creates divided opinions but I am staunchly anti-war and anti-bully. I regret any stress caused to the audience and venue staff members.”

    Hunter also re-posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, messages of support, including one that said in part: “Stop saying ‘antisemitism’ to shut down criticism of the actions of [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu/Israel.”

    During his Sunday night stand-up comedy show “Fluffy Fluffy Beavers” at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, Hunter joked that having an abusive wife who complains about being abused herself is “like being married to Israel.” While most of the audience laughed at the joke, a couple in the front row shouted “Not funny.”

    The Daily Telegraph‘s chief theater critic Domenic Cavendish, who was in the audience reviewing the show, reported that when the couple said they were from Israel, other audience members began shouting expletives at them like “f—k off,” told them to leave the gig, made booing sounds, and verbally targeted them with barbs such as “genocidal maniac,” “you’re not welcome,” and “free Palestine.” The incident took place five minutes midway into the show and the “theater full of people erupted in vocal animosity at an Israeli couple who had briefly heckled Hunter,” according to Cavendish.

    Hunter doubled down by telling the Israeli couple, one of whom is disabled: “I’ve been waiting for you all summer, where the f—k you been? You can say it’s not funny to you, but if you say it to a room full of people who laughed, you look foolish.” After the Israeli women “remonstrated with the audience,” according to Cavendish, Hunter responded, “Look at you making everyone love Israel even more.”

    The Israeli couple were still being heckled by audience members as they left the venue. “That tells me that I still got voltage,” Hunter told spectators after the couple left the venue, seemingly satisfied with the outcome.

    Hunter afterwards made a joke about needing a subscription to access the website of The Jewish Chronicle, which is not true. “Typical f—king Jews, they won’t tell you anything unless you subscribe,” he said before adding, “It’s just a joke.”

    Police in Scotland told the BBC that it is “reviewing the circumstances” of the incident.

    Campaign Against Antisemitism (CAA), a British charity, said Hunter’s comments were “extremely concerning” and although comedians are “rightly given broad latitude, they also have a responsibility to their audience.”

    “Watching on and cracking jokes as Jews are hounded out of your show is a sickening low that cannot be disguised as comedy,” CAA added.

    At the 2006 Edinburgh Fringe Festival, Hunter made a joke during his show about it being illegal to deny the Holocaust in Austria. Hunter joked that he had “a good mind to go to Austria, stand in the street, and say the Holocaust didn’t happen,” only to end up getting arrested and then telling a judge in court that he was talking about the Rwandan holocaust.

    In a separate incident that took place at the festival this year, Jewish actress Miriam Margolyes stirred controversy when she described the fictional Charles Dickens character Fagin as “Jewish and vile.”

    Update: Sky News reported on Friday that a spokesperson for Police Scotland said: “We were made aware of a hate incident, which reportedly took place at an event in Edinburgh on Sunday 11 August 2024. All information gathered was fully reviewed and no crime was established. Hunter brought this update to The Algemeiner’s attention by tagging the publication and its reporter in a post on X that also says “Zionists truly are the forever victims in their own deranged minds but constant perpetrators in reality.”

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