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Ricky Gervais slammed for ‘vile’ joke: ‘Some things are not funny’

The comedian’s upcoming Netflix stand-up special features one of his edgiest jokes ever — and it’s prompting severe backlash from parents.

Ricky Gervais slammed for joking about terminally ill children

Warning: contains sensitive language and content.

They wish he would just go away.

Ricky Gervais, 62, is under fire for labelling terminally ill children “baldies” and calling them “retarded” in his upcoming Netflix stand-up special Armageddon.

In a clip Gervais posted to his social media pages last week, he jokes about making videos for sick children via the Make-A-Wish Foundation, as per the New York Post.

“I’ve been doing a lot of video messages recently for terminally ill children,” Gervais explains.

“Only if they request it, obviously. I don’t burst into hospitals and go, ‘Wake up, baldy. Look at me twerking on TikTok.’”

“I did a lot through the pandemic — presumably because they couldn’t even see their own family,” continued The Office co-creator. “It’s through Make-A-Wish Foundation.”

Gervais said that if a kid requested him, he would “always say yes, and I always start the video the same way.”

“Why didn’t you wish to get better?” the comedian deadpanned, drawing a mixed reaction from the audience. “What, you f – king retarded as well?”

Ricky Gervais is under fire for labelling terminally ill children “baldies” and calling them “retarded” in his upcoming Netflix stand-up special Armageddon. Picture: rickygervais, netflixisajoke
Ricky Gervais is under fire for labelling terminally ill children “baldies” and calling them “retarded” in his upcoming Netflix stand-up special Armageddon. Picture: rickygervais, netflixisajoke
In a clip Gervais posted to his social media pages last week, he jokes about making videos for sick children via the Make-A-Wish Foundation. Picture: rickygervais, netflixisajoke
In a clip Gervais posted to his social media pages last week, he jokes about making videos for sick children via the Make-A-Wish Foundation. Picture: rickygervais, netflixisajoke

The Invention of Lying star told the crowd that he doesn’t “do that either,” adding that “these are all jokes.”

“I don’t even use that word in real life, the R-word,” Gervais stated, telling the audience that he is “playing a role.”

The five-time Golden Globes host claimed he was convincing because he’s “good.”

“You wouldn’t level that accusation at other art forms,” Gervais argued in the clip, using Sir Anthony Hopkins’ role as Hannibal Lecter in The Silence of the Lambs as an example.

“You wouldn’t go up to Sir Anthony Hopkins and go, ‘I saw you in Silence of the Lambs, what, so you’re a cannibal, are you?‘”

Gervais has been slammed by parents. Picture: rickygervais, netflixisajoke
Gervais has been slammed by parents. Picture: rickygervais, netflixisajoke
The Invention of Lying star told the crowd “these are all jokes.” Picture: rickygervais, netflixisajoke
The Invention of Lying star told the crowd “these are all jokes.” Picture: rickygervais, netflixisajoke

The Post reached out to Gervais and Netflix for comment.

Despite his insistence that it was just a joke, several parents of terminally ill kids did not find it funny.

“I was actually a fan of Ricky Gervais but after watching his stand up with my family and hearing multiple jokes about terminally ill children and especially kids with cancer I had to turn it off,” former soccer player Ashley Cain, 33, wrote in the comment section of the Instagram clip.

Katherine Litchen’s four-year-old son, Teddy, suffers from neuroblastoma. Picture: SWNS
Katherine Litchen’s four-year-old son, Teddy, suffers from neuroblastoma. Picture: SWNS

“Some things are not funny, especially to the parents that are left behind. You can get cancelled in this world for so much, yet making a mockery of dying children is OK? I’m so mad at this!”

Cain, who appeared on “Ex On The Beach,” lost his 8-month-old daughter, Azaylia Diamond, in 2021 to leukaemia.

“This is absolutely VILE. How people would ever find this funny is truly beyond me,” another person commented.

One parent told SWNS that Gervais’ remarks felt “like a punch in the gut.”

“The punchline of his joke is the suffering of children and parents whose greatest wish is for them to get better, but nothing in the world can grant it,” she continued. Picture: SWNS
“The punchline of his joke is the suffering of children and parents whose greatest wish is for them to get better, but nothing in the world can grant it,” she continued. Picture: SWNS
“I find it particularly troubling that Gervais used an ableist slur — retarded — to describe terminally ill children,” Litchen added. Picture: SWNS
“I find it particularly troubling that Gervais used an ableist slur — retarded — to describe terminally ill children,” Litchen added. Picture: SWNS

“My throat closed up and tears sprung to my eyes at his words, ‘Why don’t you wish to get better?’ Because that is what we do wish for,” Katherine Litchen, whose 4-year-old son, Teddy, suffers from neuroblastoma, told the outlet.

“The punchline of his joke is the suffering of children and parents whose greatest wish is for them to get better, but nothing in the world can grant it,” she continued. “I find it particularly troubling that Gervais used an ableist slur — retarded — to describe terminally ill children.”

She added: “The word is a weapon of derision towards those who are born with or acquire a disability, and Gervais’ use of it in a globally aired stand-up comedy show is helping to maintain the social acceptability of discrimination against disabled people.”

Gervais’ Armageddon is slated to hit Netflix on Christmas Day.

Litchen hopes Gervais will donate proceeds from the special to charities to fund research into new treatments for pediatric cancer.

This article originally appeared on the New York Post and was reproduced with permission

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Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/entertainment/tv/streaming/ricky-gervais-slammed-for-vile-joke-some-things-are-not-funny/news-story/940195d139034f07ac67bf6c461b5ef1