People Are Praising Ali Wong For "Taking No Sh*t" After This Interview Went Viral: "You Get All Of This Attention Because You're Both A Female And A Minority"
This week, The Daily Show posted a clip of Ali Wong speaking to Trevor Noah about an experience she had with a white male comedian while she was pregnant titled "Ali Wong Takes No S**t" on TikTok. Within a day, the clip racked up nearly 1 million views, 122,000 likes, and 700 comments.
In the original interview, which aired in 2019, Ali talked about the challenges women face in stand-up, particularly sharing an anecdote she had regarding a white male comedian whom, though she wouldn't name names, she described as not very successful. "I don't even know if you would know who he was," she added to Trevor.
"He came up to me while I was pregnant the second time," Ali, who filmed her first Netflix special, Baby Cobra, while seven months pregnant with her first child in 2016 and her second special, Hard Knock Wife, while seven months pregnant with her second in 2018, began to describe.
"He touched my belly with his fat, sweaty hand, which is so gross to begin with," she said, "It's like, 'Why don't you finger me while you're at it?' This is so not okay. Just because I'm pregnant doesn't mean it's okay for you to touch my belly."
As an aside, this "phenomenon," if you will, of people touching pregnant people's stomachs without permission is obviously but unfortunately common. As PureWow's senior food editor Katherine Gillen wrote while 30 weeks pregnant:
"Even when well-meaning, this argument is spoiled by the implication that there’s an attitude of entitlement toward other people’s bodies that we can’t seem to shake. ... Why does having another body growing inside of me reduce my own bodily autonomy to nothing?"
The comedian then said to her, "Oh, so this is your schtick. This is, like, your thing now, right?" After raising her hands to hold her face in frustrated shock, Ali told Trevor. "Getting pregnant is not rainbow suspenders. It's not a schtick."
He followed that, Ali continued, by telling her that she's "so lucky" because she "[gets] all of this attention because [she's] both a female and a minority." As Trevor began to laugh at the absurdity of the notion, Ali commented, "Yeah, because, you know, historically, that's always been the winning combo for recognition and success."
Of course, the story doesn't end there (because there's always some justification given, an attempt to "level" with you, after these kinds of statements). "He was like, 'You know what I mean,'" Ali said. "'Like me, I'm just another white guy.' And I was like, 'Be a better white guy.'"
To reinforce her point, Ali then named a few successful white male comedians, including Jimmy Kimmel, Will Ferrell, and Nick Kroll, before joking that she could fill over a month's worth of episodes on The Daily Show just by naming them all.