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Review
For his ambitious Edinburgh debut, Pete Cain has set himself
quite an obstacle of irony to overcome.
He opens with a formidable barrage of abuse at the world in
general. The reason we're on the brink of ecological disaster,
and that everything in Britain is so knackered, is because there
are simply too many of us.
It's then only a small step till you think about killing people,
Cain muses in his downbeat grump. Genocide's had a bad press,
but if we slaughter the right people idiots, traffic wardens,
officious jobsworths who hide behind unbending petty rules
then we can thin the numbers
OK, so we get that he probably isn't really advocating large-scale
slaughter. But he still paints an unremittingly bleak picture
of the world. Everybody else, in his eyes, is 'one more person
in the queue before you'. He might be picking on people who deserve
scorn, but that overarching philosophy is the sort of selfish,
insular, negative attitude that makes the Daily Mail such a hit.
That's where the obstacle of irony comes in. Does he really
mean it, or he using his stand-up in some kind of detached Alf
Garnett way to make us analyse our own thinking? It's never quite
resolved.
I suspect the latter, mind, as Cain's stance later emerges
as a dissenter and libertarian who you'd expect to exhibit more
tolerance for his fellow humans - but maybe he's just as contradictory
as we all are.
It makes for an absorbing hour, mind, if not always laugh-out-loud
funny. Cain's an intelligent wordsmith and a decent storyteller;
as he recounts his little acts of rebellion against rip-off airport
car parks or obstinate bus drivers, we all root for him.
He's provocative, too, on the war on terror. Deaths for such
attacks are statistically insignificant compared to road accidents,
so he puts forward some controversial, but strangely logical,
solutions that might find a compromise without the loss of our
civil liberties.
Well, we were warned. At the very start of the show, he told
us: 'I'll be doing some fairly dark material at times, so hopefully
I'll offend some of you.'
It's possible, but more likely he'll make you think. And sometimes
laugh.