Snapchat has a fat filter.
You take a selfie and you whack the filter on and, Voila! You are now a fattie mcfat pants and all the world can laugh with you in your Story.
Because there’s nothing funnier than making a mockery of fat people. Right?
Wrong.
There is a lot that is funnier than making a mockery of fat people.
Dad jokes. Dad jokes are heaps funnier.
Punny church signs.
Very British Problems is also quite funny.
Donald Trump is very funny, though I admit in somewhat terrifying way.
But is it Snapchat who have engaged in institutionalised fat-shaming, or is there something broader at play here?
Comedy, when done well and done right, has incredible power to prompt social change.
The way acclaimed Australian comedians Nazeem Hussain and Aamer Rahman use race in their jokes to expose the racism that runs rampant in the undercurrent of Australian life is a great example.
Rahman joked, in a routine aired during a 2014 episode of Australian Story, “Just because I’m at the petrol station doesn’t mean that I work here. White people, pay special attention: if there is no one behind the counter, don’t start looking at me sideways like it’s my job to jump over and start serving you. It’s not.”