Laughter has a unique power to disarm hateful and self-righteous people by exposing them as ridiculous. For instance, in 1967's "The Producers" -- brought to modern audiences in a hilarious 2005 remake -- Jewish-American Hollywood legend Mel Brooks made audiences laugh with a comedy about two Broadway producers who schemed...
Laughter has a unique power to disarm hateful and self-righteous people by exposing them as ridiculous. For instance, in 1967’s “The Producers” — brought to modern audiences in a hilarious 2005 remake — Jewish-American Hollywood legend Mel Brooks made audiences laugh with a comedy about two Broadway producers who schemed…
Laughter has a unique power to disarm hateful and self-righteous people by exposing them as ridiculous. For instance, in 1967’s “The Producers” — brought to modern audiences in a hilarious 2005 remake — Jewish-American Hollywood legend Mel Brooks made audiences laugh with a comedy about two Broadway producers who schemed…