Summary
Still, [Jeremy Williams] has his limits. If it's something you can't change, he says, it just ain't funny. Religion, digestive processes, and sex is fair game. "I try not to alienate anyone and make them feel bad for anything they can't choose to do," he says. "If someone's a racist, I'll make fun of them for it. I find it's better to give everyone something they could all be equally offended by, and see which ones are offended."
Don't tangle with the smart ones. For all the stupid songs, Williams, 31, was recently working on a master's degree in philosophy. He's probably read more books than you. And he doesn't even try to keep those worlds separate. "My [faculty] adviser came to a show about a month ago," Williams recalls. "He had heard a couple of songs one time, and he had written me saying 'Jeremy, you're a lot better than this.' But once he saw the entire show, he totally approved."See the full content of this document
Extract
If You're Not Offended, You Can Be in His Club
The last time I saw the mysterious, mustachioed man known as J. Williamez, he was sitting in the corner of an Osborne Village pub, nursing a coffee and reading the Bible....
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