The Orifice: Why Ricky Gervais Shit-Talks The People Called Dogs While Campaigning for Dogs

A guy worth over a hundred million, sitting posh in his fluffy London mansion, tells a Puerto Rican artist whose community is being called “animals” by government officials that he isn’t allowed to use 30 seconds at a microphone to say “we’re human”. That’s not a joke. That’s not comedy or even commentary. That’s an elitist bully punching down with a smirk to try and refocus attention on himself. It’s the petty jealousy of… Ricky Gervais.

He has built a second career out of telling other people not to do the things that he does constantly. The only coherent principle connecting such behavior is that his own causes apparently deserve all the platform, because he says other people don’t matter. As one of his followers put it:

So you can use your platform against cruelty to animals, but you draw the line on cruelty to people?

It’s not a principle at all, it’s just an old white guy with a big bruised ego riding a Netflix deal. To put it plainly, the man who loudly begs for credit as if he “confronts dogma that oppresses people”, in reality is the man yelling at oppressed people to shut TF up about their oppression.

His hypocrisy is damning, obviously, but he’s actually an even worse human than that. Plenty of people are hypocrites. It’s that he knows it and milks it too. He deleted an Emmys post after being called out for it, and then just reposted the same thing after the Grammys, telling others they don’t listen enough to him.

Principle? No.

After the 2025 Emmys, when Hannah Einbender said “fuck ICE,” Gervais came out storming her with criticism and then deleted it after backlash. His sudden repost now is the opposite to a spontaneous provocation, it’s him A/B testing his chances of reengagement. He knows his clip generates extremist hate group adoration (morally and financially bankrupt Gateway Pundit ran it immediately) and public outrage cycles. The deletion after the Emmys is how he’s been calibrating to help political extremists: not principled enough to leave it up as what he believes, not principled enough to stop doing it and accept accountability as an elitist white male ICE apologist.

He has also in this time systematically replaced creative output with divisive bait for controversy as his product. The SuperNature trans material, the Golden Globes recycling, the Grammy responses, and so forth aren’t comedy because they’re so obviously shallow engagement farming.

He is exactly the kind of disconnected celebrity that his entire 2020 monologue was ostensibly mocking. It’s like he wants to be as popular as Trump calling himself popular. The 2020 bit worked because it targeted everyone else who flew a private jet to accept their environmental awards. Recycling that against anyone condemning deportation operations affecting their own families and communities isn’t the same joke. It’s a totally different political act and the comedy mask falls right off.

If you’re successful in showbiz you aren’t allowed to be political” flies like a lead balloon, especially from this Mr. Showbiz the Politician himself.

Gervais lives in a £14.5 million London mansion when he’s not hobnobbing in his $3.75 million Manhattan apartment. He earns over $100 million from old reruns alone. He claimed a single stand-up show at the Hollywood Bowl made him nearly $2 million. And he boasts of endorsement deals with Microsoft, Audi, and Pepsi.

And what does he do with all that wealth and insulation from humanity?

Politics.

The guy telling Americans they can’t complain about Kristi Noem, who notoriously executed her puppy, was the PETA Person of the Year (2013). He received the Humane Society’s Cecil Award (2018). He wrote letters to the UK government demanding fur import bans. He campaigned against Turkey’s stray animal law. Yet when Trump calls women and non-whites dogs, says their lives don’t matter, and sends his personal stormtroopers to publicly execute them, Gervais is the political mouthpiece who backs these killers.

Square that circle.

His “don’t be political” finger-wagging comes after he overtly campaigned for Jeremy Corbyn in the 2017 UK election. He very flagrantly used award shows, social media, Netflix specials, and every available media channel to push hard on his views on atheism, animal rights, hunting, veganism, and free speech.

His own stated philosophy for the past decade or more has been this:

Source: Twitter

Other celebrities try to use their voice to stop suffering. And Gervais suddenly jumps in front of them as if to say “you listen to me, these non-white people being called dogs and executed don’t get a voice, certainly not yours.”

So his position isn’t “celebrities shouldn’t use platforms for political speech.” His position is “celebrities shouldn’t use platforms for political speech I don’t care about.” When it’s fox hunting or Turkish dog culls, the platform is righteous. When it’s Bad Bunny saying his community isn’t animals, suddenly celebrities “know nothing about the real world.”

Bad Bunny, notably, is actually from the community being targeted. Shaboozey is a child of immigrants. Olivia Dean is a granddaughter of an immigrant. These aren’t Hollywood actors pontificating about supply chains in developing countries they visited once for a photo op. These are people with direct stakes in what they’re talking about.

Gervais delegitimizes non-white people’s speech about their own oppression. He gives his audience, and the right-wing media outlets that amplify his political rhetoric, a framework to dismiss what these artists said without engaging with it, while using his own platform to advocate for whatever he likes. That’s not an accident and it’s not ideologically neutral. His very selective pattern tracks along racial lines when it comes to immigration speech specifically.

His 2011 behavior perhaps predicted who we see now more clearly. He repeatedly tweeted a slur derived from “Mongoloid” — a term rooted in racial pseudoscience applied to people with Down syndrome — while posting photos of himself making mocking faces. Disability groups said the harm was comparable to a racial slur.

He was so indifferent to the origins and impact of the word that he used it casually for laughs, then dismissed critics as jealous of his wealth. Eventually he claimed to mothers of the children he was hurting that his detached and cruel mockery of them was “naïve” and therefore blameless.

…while he tries to avoid poking fun at disadvantaged people nowadays, he doesn’t regret his past. “You’re a product of your time, and you do make things for people of your time. I’d put trigger warnings on things, but I wouldn’t go back and change something,” he said. “Do I regret anything? No.

No regrets. Just following others.

He says he won’t do it again, while he leaves the harmful Tweets up literally doing it again and again now.

Source: Twitter

Or look at the summer of 2020. His response to the torture and public execution of George Floyd was to mock an “I Take Responsibility” anti-racism PSA by tweeting he was upset by “Terrible lack of diversity in this video.” That was it. No statement of his own. No support. No donation. No advocacy. He used the moment to ridicule those who speak out against racism, the identical move he’s doing now to shame protests against oppression.

This cynical playbook of provoke, defend, dismiss, half-concede all the way to the radical right-wing bank, is what he’s doing. He demands the entire platform so he can speak on behalf of dogs, and then uses it to silence the people being called dogs. It’s not a coincidence. Show me any evidence of anti-racism.

Tesla Autopilot Victim’s Family Alleges Deadly Design Flaws

Deadly design defects of Tesla have been a theme on this blog for a decade already. Still no regulation in America? Apparently we just get lawsuits like this one.

This case is not an isolated incident. Last year, the California DMV found Tesla violated state law by using misleading terms like “Autopilot” and “full self-driving capability” in their marketing. Seattle University law professor Steve Tapia, who is not involved in the case, noted there have been similar lawsuits against Tesla nationwide.

Tapia also referenced a case involving a Florida jury’s decision last year to award more than $240 million in damages to victims of a deadly crash involving the Autopilot feature.

“When you see a pattern like this, and especially when it’s involving products, it’s hard to say that the manufacturer is not liable,” Tapia said. “And ultimately, none of this would be happening if it didn’t have the Autopilot feature, so in terms of root cause, it sort of seems to be a Tesla design problem.”

Autopilot is defective by design. Tesla should be liable.

Research: Ultra Processed Food (UPF) Addictive Like Cigarettes

Put your Pringles can down for a minute and read this:

A study by researchers at three United States universities claims to have identified similarities between the addictive characteristics of ultra-processed foods (UPFs) and cigarettes, and has recommended similar levels of regulation.

According to the study, which was published this week in the Milbank Quarterly healthcare journal, UPFs “share key engineering strategies adopted from the tobacco industry” which are designed to drive “compulsive consumption.”

Designed?

UPFs are not just nutrients but [are] intentionally designed, highly engineered and manipulated, hedonically optimized products.

Hedonically? This sounds like something that would be used to target oppressed communities with a dangerous illusion.

Responding to the Milbank Quarterly study, Dr. Githinji Gitahi, the chief executive of Kenya-based NGO Amref Health Africa, warned of a “growing public health alarm” across Africa.

“Corporate [organizations] have found a comfortable, and profitable, nexus: weak government regulation on harmful products and a changing pattern of consumption,” he told The Guardian. “This places new and preventable pressures on already stretched health systems.”

Trump Guts Security of Nuclear Plants to Feed Lust for AI

Grab’em by the fuel rods.

What Pennsylvania officials told residents about Three Mile Island. In the 1970s they at least pretended to inform the public. Now they don’t even do that.
TMI safety for kids. Source: Nuke’em Postcards

Three Mile Island is a lesson apparently lost on the billionaire tech kids riding Trump’s descent into madness.

NPR obtained copies of over a dozen of the new orders, none of which is publicly available. The orders slash hundreds of pages of requirements for security at the reactors. They also loosen protections for groundwater and the environment and eliminate at least one key safety role. The new orders cut back on requirements for keeping records, and they raise the amount of radiation a worker can be exposed to before an official accident investigation is triggered. […] Backers of the reactors, including tech giants Amazon, Google and Meta, have said they want the reactors to one day supply cheap, reliable power for artificial intelligence.

The integrity controls aren’t being circumvented, they’re being rewritten by the entity charged with enforcing them, then shared with the regulated parties while being withheld from the public.

That’s not deregulation, that’s capture.

That’s privatization of the regulatory framework by the regulated to deny safety. The paperwork now follows action, not the other way around, which is how dictatorship works. It’s all fake accountability that tracks to pure corruption.

The nuclear regulator literally has been reorganized as a service provider for the entities it regulates. Like how ICE are just stormtroopers loyal to Trump, refusing to follow law or respect the Constitution. The criminals now are the ones wearing the badges, occupying political spaces to prevent anyone from invoking actual law that would stop crimes.

Got ICE?

Over 500 pages of necessary security directives were slashed and burned down to 23 pages, for reactors that use higher levels of enriched uranium in their cores, which make them targets of theft.

More attractive targets, less security. This batshit threat model logic is by a small group of elites who plan to profit rapidly and hide, regardless of increased and widespread suffering.

Materials security for weapons-grade fuel, gutted so billionaires can shave construction costs?

No wonder the Big Tech boys keep buying their own islands, to isolate themselves from nuclear catastrophe they are rushing everyone else into.

Google Founder Larry Page Would Rather Die Self-Imprisoned on Desert Island Than Pay a Cent for Freedom