
How does Mark Normand do it?
The sly stand-up comic traffics in the kind of stereotypes that can get a fella canceled. Or, at the very least, chase mainstream streaming platforms far, far away.
Yet “Mark Normand: None Too Pleased” just bowed on Netflix March 17, and there’s no Cancel Culture-type effort to punish him or the streaming giant.
It helps that Normand has an agreeable nature and cherubic face, both of which defang his incendiary gags. Plus, he expertly toys with stereotypes in ways that are uplifting, even fun.
His intent is always clear. He’s riffing on us without pushing anyone away, and the material is relentlessly first class. Normand works on a level few comedians can touch.
He’s that good.
The comic podcaster has another trick up his sleeve. He understands the power of cultural outrage and corporate cowardice.
He shared as much during the latest “Tuesdays with Stories!” podcast. Normand and co-host Joe List discussed Normand’s new Netflix special and a curious request made about the material..
Mark Normand says Netflix asked him to remove a joke about Muslims from his new special, and he told him he’d only do it on condition they admit Muslims are “a dangerous people”—which he says they did https://t.co/mbSfupIZ62 pic.twitter.com/ljmkLTnvQ8
— Seth Simons (@sasimons) March 24, 2026
The special takes on all comers, tweaking just about every religious or ethnic group possible. Normand shared how Netflix brass suggested a conference call to go over one of those communities.
“That’s not good,” he told co-host List before sharing his story.
The Netflix officials asked him to remove a Muslim joke in the special.
“Why?” he asked.
“The last time a comic did a Muslim joke, we got bomb threats, we got death threats. They said they’re gonna kill us and ruin the whole studio,” he recalled of the conversation.
“I go, ‘well, I like the joke. It kills,’” he responded.
The company agreed to keep the joke as is, but they wouldn’t use the quip in any social media campaigns.
“Socials,” they told him, “is where all the s*** starts,” he recalled of their strategy.
The comedian agreed to that concession under one condition.
“I want you to admit on this call that they’re dangerous people,” he said. The Netflix side recoiled, but Normand threatened to post that Muslim joke on social media personally otherwise. He said he was “half joking,” but the Netflix team refused to admit it initially.
“That’s offensive,” they claimed.
“That’s what the call is. You’re calling about this, and I just need you to say it out loud,” Normand pushed back, noting how liberals push a diversity narrative while ignoring harsh truths.
“We’re all talk. We’re all signaling. We’re all virtuous. But you don’t actually act that way,” said Normand, who considers himself on the Left side of the political aisle. And he knows what they were thinking at the time.
“Hey, we’re scared. We don’t wanna get Hebdo’d. We’re nervous …”
The comic claimed he got the people on the call to admit Muslims can be dangerous, and he was satisfied with that concession.
It wouldn’t be the first time a streamer tried to censor a comedian. Andrew Schulz balked at a streaming giant’s request to water down his material in 2022. He ended up taking the special back from the company and releasing it himself.
TONIGHT. EVERYONE. GETS. THESE. JOKES.#INFAMOUS 9pm EST
Get it now at https://t.co/ESE9SE2nxn pic.twitter.com/dmiCb2SqZN
— Andrew Schulz HEZI (@andrewschulz) July 17, 2022
The Normand-Netflix dustup may have been tied to this exchange in “None Too Pleased.”
“Stereotypes are so dumb. That’s why you gotta make fun of them,” he said in Boulder, Colorado where he recorded the Netflix special.
“Black people love chicken. I love chicken. Irish people are drunks. I’m a drunk. Islamists bomb. I’m … aw, s***,” he said to nervous, but loud laughter.
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