because then at least it would have made me feel.
[Context: Colin Jost hosts the “Weekend Update” feature on Saturday Night Live, was a former head writer on that same show, is currently engaged to Scarlett Johannson, and recently published a memoir entitled “A Very Punchable Face.”]
Our society tends to idolize the successful. Thatâs glaringly obvious, not profound, so hereâs the importance: what do you mean when you say âsuccessfulâ? Because looking at his life from the outside, one could accurately say ” Colin Jost is successful” in the standard American way. But dear lord, does he have an inner life at all, let alone a rich one?
Youâre not supposed to speculate about someoneâs inner life based on observed behavior (thanks, Scott Adams (creator of Dilbert)), but a memoir typically dives into the psyche of the author, articulates what itâs like to be them, and helps you come out the other side with some sort of emotional connection. No, not every memoir does that. Some are just stories of amusing anecdotes that the author has strung together for want of an additional platform to be heard… And thatâs the problem.
Here: let me give you an example:
- Letâs say you were dating Timeâs Sexiest Woman Alive 2006 & 2013 (the first woman ever to win the award twice).
- And Jimmy Buffett once saved you from drowning.
- And your mother was a firefighter on the ground when the second tower collapsed on 9/11.
And you strung those stories together. Shouldnât it have emotional appeal?
Itâs like the only emotionality I felt in the whole book was that one specific section about 9/11, because it was sufficiently gory and scary and intense and Big to overcome any blockers that Colin had put up⊠not because it had any human emotion whatsoever.
I teared up during that section for the denotative facts, despite Colinâs method of telling it, not because of it. Iâve overheard conversations on the street that have turned my head with more emotionally-evocative lines. Itâs like Colin wrote the equivalent of a Michael Bay anecdote when he should have written a Woody Allen (i.e. something that Feels).
I donât mean to insult Colin Jost; he seems like a nice person (and may different priorities than me), but to my taste, niceness only gets you so far. Iâd rather someone were an authentic, direct, honest asshole than a pretentious nice dude (Colinâs form of âniceâ seems like the one frequently found in the Catholic church, and one which Iâm not even sure itâs accurate to call âniceâ because itâs closer to âpoliteâ and this politeness very frequently actually leads to the opposite of being âniceâ or âkindâ, such as when heâs about to drown but doesnât want to disturb another groupâs nearby surfing trip so he covers up the fact that heâs nearly drowning, and what if he actually drowned? wouldnât that be like the least nice thing to doâto demolish someoneâs family surfing trip with the sight of your bloated corpse? (a true reference from the book; the family on the surfing trip was Jimmy Buffettâs.)).
Iâm deeply saddened to have read a book that includes a memoir about âParisian teens throwing tomatoes at me, then I throw a bicycle over the fence that surrounds the MusĂ©e dâOrsay, and then I hide from the French cops in my hotel room with Scarlett Johanssonâ (paraphrase) and have the whole thing read precisely as emotionally bland as that summary that I just wrote in this here sentence. Go read that sentence again, then read the relevant section (the antepenultimate chapter, âTomato, Potatoâ), and Iâll be damned if this two-bit summary doesnât have about the same amount of emotional depth, of human connection, of evocative, stomach-pulling impact as the original. And thatâs sad. Thatâs sad. Thatâs really, really sad. Itâs sad in the sort of way I canât share in this review because itâs the sort of sad that you feel when you look at an old person whoâs drunk their life away and ask âwhat if you had learned to cope properly when you were young?â. Itâs sad in the sort of way that itâs sad that such a large section of now and future human populations will never, ever, ever look to the heavens and see the Milky Way or stars. Itâs sad in a profoundly sad way that parallels my sadness at my inability to communicate directly to you just how sad this sadness is, and how it reminds me that we, as individual humans who do not share experiences, are at our cores forever alone.
Listen:
We can train a person to do repeated, fancy tricks at expert levels to satisfy specific societal needs. And thatâs nice. Sure. It’s a pretty cool skill. But it also feels fundamentally disrespectful of what it is to be human. It misses out on really existing in this universe, a universe that has been thusfar insufficiently explored. It ignores what it feels like to have someone lack agency because theyâre so scared they canât look inwardly at themselves to see the fetters that bind.
Colin Jostâs memoir made me first and foremost sad: sad for Catholics, sad for people who grow up to hate their emotions/feelings/explorations of self, sad for people taught to trust some external force instead of their instincts, and sad for myself because Iâm sure there are areas of myself I have insufficiently explored due to some of that good olâ inter-generational trauma. Jostâs memoir isnât even intending to be a sad book; thatâs the sad part: itâs meant to make you laugh.
Thereâs a point in my stomachâto the left and below my sternumâwhere my Emotional Authenticity lives (no joke). Thereâs no special sauce or divinity or whatnot to that place; itâs simply a spot that helps me feel myself. When I notice that spot, I connect with some aspect thatâs much closer to Oneness or Honesty or God or Accuracy or Freedom or Truth than I usually feel. And that specific spot is where I happen to feel it. And I found that spot after going to PTSD therapy for a few months, then finding a specific shamanistic ritual, and then spending hours and hours and hours and hours over years and years feeling Lonely and Grieving and Crying In The Shower (and the like). And that, my friends, is what we call The Work. Itâs The Work of being human, of stripping away what we think is true and getting closer to whatâs actually, truly, truly true. Itâs learning about Me and You and Reality and What Exists and Where We Are and Where Weâre Going and all sorts of other capital activities. Thatâs My Quest and Iâm damn proud of it. And Iâm glad different people are on different quests but I still canât in good conscience read a book like Colinâsâeven one where he implies he likes his lifeâwithout thinking âI donât think you know what Life is.â.
An alternate option: maybe Colin is right. Maybe the Right Job is the one where he laughs every day for fifteen years. Where he fritters away the time in a way that feels satisfying but that (to me, at least) seems sad. Maybe the Right Choice for Colin is having a plurality of his memoir-worthy adult stories start with âI was really drunkâŠâ (paraphrase) and end with the moral âsometimes I do stupid things and am clearly still traumatized by my upbringing, family history/background, (former) religion, etc.â (again, paraphrase, but this moral itâs the basic message of like every story, from the time he almost drowned because he was to unwilling to admit he had gotten himself in a spot of trouble while surfing; to the time when he broke his hand because he was unwilling to admit his own physical inability to punch with proper form; to the time he shit his pants; to the time he was too unwilling to cause a fuss when hosting the Emmyâs and therefore hosted what by all accounts (including his own) was a boring and poorly-done Emmyâs (entitled âWorst Emmys Everâ)). My only respite (glint of hope?) from these morals is that heâs consistently seeing problems in his former behavior and improving them, which is the point and Iâm glad heâs doing it, but heâs also missing the point: the point of all these morals is not the denotative âI made this mistake; look at meâ learning he seems to think it is (and which would prompt some growth), but the underlying principles and structures of behavior/thinking that create the same mistakes over and over and over again. Colin, if youâre reading this: no amount of funny story or chuckle of âOh, Iâm always like thatâ will actually arrive you at the necessary honest self-viewing for you to heal and grow into a bigger, more satisfying and more accurate life. Look at Dennis Rodman and Jim Carrey as examples. Or Patton Oswalt or Dave Chappelle. Itâs the difference between living a life and killing time, and I donât know if you know youâve been killing time.
Thereâs a sadness in the heart of many most comedians, myself included. I just analyze it. I poke it. I approach it and really, truly try to understand it. I use it to ask how society works and why Iâand the worldâam the way I am. I wonder what happened to me and dive in when Iâm afraid. (Except when I donât dive in because Iâm afraid⊠which we all do from time to time, and The Work seeks to minimize.). Thereâs a Scientific Method thatâs respectable from pretty much everybody in this capacity and it seems like Colin Jost has just never done it. Heâs worked and worked and worked to achieve the things he wanted, but can he articulate why? Whatâs the point of having a national desk in front of millions of people if you donât have a purpose to achieve with it? If thereâs no point, why do it at all? For a Harvard dude, heâs shockingly surface-level. Compare him to Conan, another fellow SNL writer and Harvard Lampooner, and you see night and day. Conan cares about Comedy itself, about Making People Laugh, about Entertainment (all Big Things)⊠Colin cared about getting a job, then about getting on SNL, and then about hosting Weekend Update (a bigger, better–his dream job)⊠thatâs the difference: If you care for The Art, youâll find ways to achieve it; if you care for your job, youâll always fall flat. (This comparison is unfortunately a tad reductionist; these are my impressions from reading Colinâs memoir and listening to a huge amount of Conanâs podcast; I believe theyâre accurate, but necessarily lacking nuance (because I, unfortunately, canât observe their inner life).)
Conan still has, to this day, Howard Sternâs favorite interview because itâs one in which Conan speaks about his depression, questions how his comedy functions in relation to his depression, and voices his worries about whether medicating himself would make him less funny. Colin canât do that⊠at least I think he canât, because a memoir is itself like the most emotionally evocative art form (short of nude self-portrait), and Colin 100% completely missed the emotional mark. (If he can do that, it makes me concerned why he didnât here: he would have had to decide that actually honestly opening up in our current age of technology and social movements would be worseâfar worseâthan just publishing a memoir that is the emotional equivalent of eating popcorn. But I donât think that was Colin’s intent: throughout the book Iâm continually berated by the perception that he does really truly keep trying to do Big things; he wants to do Important things that Matter, etc., and that leads me to the conclusion that if he knew how to be emotionally open he would, because heâd see the connection between âgreat memoirâ and âemotional connectionâ thatâs so patently obvious). Iâm reminded of David Foster Wallaceâs review âHow Tracy Austin broke my heartâ for the similarities in what Jostâs memoir implies about the state of both himself and our current world:
Itâs really, truly, profoundly sad that someone who our society dubs âsuccessfulâ can have such a vapid existence. Is this really the best of our generation? A top comedianâthe one hosting SNL Weekend Update and head writing for what is still our nationâs (the worldâs?) biggest comedy broadcastâcompletely lacks in internal substance. Thatâs. Really. Sad. It implies that the vapidity of everyday life has infested comedy, which is itself sad, and then that sadness globs onto comedy itself, so weâre left with comedy now becoming sad, which is sad turtles all the sad way sad down, which is even sadder than the sad fact that me sad-reading this sad guyâs sad memoir about his âcomedyâ life where he âcomedyâ stars on a âsuccessful” show and then âsuccessfullyâ becomes “successfully” engaged to âsuccessfulâ Scarlett Johansson is not successful nor comedy at all but just another terrible and heartbreaking example of how growing up Catholic traumatizes someone.
But itâs not exactly precisely that, because Conan OâBrien also grew up Catholic, and look how he turned out⊠Still traumatized, yes, but so much more self-aware (and so much more emotionally vulnerable). So what it is it? Is it the family stifling? Is it the lack of real, intense world challenges (because the worst that Colin ever had to go through is some time spent unsure how heâll pay rent in New York City? Is it instead that he has actually suffered in real ways (which is probably, statistically true, if only based on his age and the existence of his 9/11 story) and simply lacks the self-examination and Work to articulate them well and/or feels a terrible, crippling fear that honestly sharing real stories with readers (instead of, say, âthe time I pooped my pantsâ (real story; paraphrased title)) will somehow be bad for his life/career, not good?
While the unexamined life may still be worth living, the inauthentic or dishonest or inaccurate or lying life is worse than nothing because weâre social animals and life is a team sport. Whether youâre a cog in your own wheel or youâre a cog in someone elseâs or youâre just some tiny ant carrying a boulder up a Great Big Cosmic Hill every day so you can let it roll down again to repeat your Quest, youâve got to look at the world and say what it is because if you donât, how will we know? (And also because the truth you seek is probably parallel to one you’re withholding from others.)
Thereâs one great moment of self-awareness in this book that jumps out as insightful and clever and aware (and which moment on retrospect is really just an average level of awareness, but its being surrounded by non-awareness makes it seem more aware, much like how one would observe a diamond to be shinier if said diamond were surrounded by horse poop). (Not that the book is horse poop; the book is merely awareness horse poop.):
Itâs the moment when Colin says, in a footnote, âI want to make it very clear that this list of notes [requests for changes to upcoming sketches] provided to the SNL staff by NBC censors is not exclusively notes they gave to me because I donât want people to read this and think Iâm racist/sexist/homophobic/[other similar categories] and therefore to âcancelâ me.â (paraphrase). Thatâs it. Thatâs our big olâ nugget of self-awareness, and itâs not even self awareness qua self awareness per se; itâs only self-awareness because you read it and think âthereâs a guy who sees where he fits with respect to one specific national trend that clearly (and justifiably) frightens himâ, but we don’t think, âthereâs a guy who knows something about Himself or Society or Profundity or Existenceâ; it’s merely âthis guy sees a thing and is afraidâ, which might be the single simplest emotional state for a human an animal of any kind. Thatâs the only emotion that comes across in this book: Fear. *Sigh*. Fear of authenticity, fear of emotion, fear of society, fear of loss… The big one-two punch, blockbuster ending (the epilogue; the last pages of the book; the final point Colin leaves the reader withâŠ) is Colin saying âMaybe Iâll leave SNL someday because I want to dive deep into one topic instead of staying shallow in many by doing standup/sketches/movies all at once⊠and maybe I wonâtâ (paraphrase). Wow. *Sigh Again*. That’s not an ending; that’s a waffle. Thatâs worse than the fact that your last chapter is “this one time bugs planted eggs in my leg” (paraphrase) instead of, say, something that matters.
Look, kid, Colin, dude: could you please just lock yourself in a room and think? Maybe draw a bath and talk to yourself aloud. Try sitting alone and being uncomfortable. (Not the punish-yourself Catholic Church uncomfortable, but the explore-yourself uncomfortable of recovering from the Catholic Church.) Set aside a day to be just with yourself: no internet, no food, no people, no alcohol. (Fasting helps most people introspect: Iâd suggest only drinking water on this Colin-Internal day.) Ask questions. Wait for answers. Ask more questions. Keep wondering. And if you start crying, let yourself cry (because thatâs what you seriously, clearly, really need). Feel man, just feel, and grieve for your past. Because reading your book made me so, so sad for the lack of grieving youâve done. Iâve thought a few times about Steve Martin while writing this review; his memoir Born Standing Up clearly shows self-reflection: thereâs one section where he says âIâm going to give you the juicy bits that you want now, because thatâs something that has to happen in a memoirâ (paraphrase), and then he gives us some juicy bits, and then he says âIâm not going to tell you any more because those are mineâ (paraphrase). Itâs a beautiful understanding of The Memoir, of its Art and Function and Place and Form, and it clearly shows Steve knows how he wants to go about the world. This is a man who performed to sold out stadia, then dropped it entirely to become a top-billing actor, and then dropped that to, to switch to the⊠banjo? Because playing the banjo is right for him.
Colin, homie, ol’ buddy ol pal: I donât get the impression that you know what you want. And knowing what youâyes, you, Colin Jostâwant is the single most important question you will ever answer. And not knowing itânot giving it the depth and curiosity it deservesâwill leave you and your descendants as hollow shells. Youâll drink on special occasions âbecause thatâs what people doâ. Youâll constantly wonder if thereâs More. (There is.) Youâll blip into the comedy sphere before fading away, never to Matter because you werenât relatable, because: To be relatable an audience must connect emotionally with you, and for us to connect with you, you must be available, and to become available, you must first feel your emotions, and thenâonly thenâcan you open yourself up to the world. Emotional awareness is nigh step #1 to Seeing The World and Communicating Whatâs True. (At least it was for me: Emotional Awareness, and, well, duh, Logic. (Also Introspection and Patience and Slowness and speed. And Science and Experiment and…)
I feel drained after writing that bit. This whole review feels really intense, like itâs a Great Big Commentary on more than my feelings about one book: itâs A Great Big Commentary on America and Religion and Isolation and Loneliness and Trust and Censorship and Fear and Shame as seen through American Comedy. Also because Scarlett Johannsen is apparently engaged to Colin Jost (of which interesting details are impressively avoided in a shockingly un-self aware wayâso impressively-poorly-avoided that I was curious for a moment whether it was intended as a satire but I donât think anyone could pull off that level of satire except for, say, Steve Martin if his choice to devote his life to the banjo was itself a big Andy Kaufman-esque practical joke on the world, but I donât think people actually do that in the world, well except for Andy Kaufman and heâs almost certainly dead) and I find that relationship between ScarJo and ColJo particularly jarring because she was one of the first women I ever swooned for (and therefore the woman after whom I named my highschool tennis rackets), and to see my perception of her (emotionally accessible, malleable, and aware) with my perception of him (basically, like, the opposite…) is like watching clay feet stand on top of feet that I didnât know were clay because I thought they were just like normal feet but it turns out theyâre some sort of leprosied clay, and now both of their pair of deformed, taloned hands try to touch the sky but donât realize theyâre in the middle of a film shoot in the desert thatâs actually just a series of bright lights oven-baking clay, and when those lights turn off the pair crumbles to dust.
Perhaps Iâm reading too much into this, but damn it Colin, your book makes me sad. Iâm sad for you, Colin, and I want to help.
[Actually, though: after a half-decade of suffering through an old PTSD, I found two specific modes of therapy that finally helped. Iâd be happy to share them with anyone who wants; reach out anytime: letâs heal the wound world.]