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Comedy Central Series Features Sketch on Disability Rights
Last week on the Comedy Central series Drunk History, an episode centered on civil rights featured a sketch about the disability rights movement. This seven-minute sketch focuses on disability rights activist Judy Heumann, and how her efforts in the 1970s led to the passage of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
This law prohibits “discrimination against people with disabilities in places or programs that receive financial assistance from the government,” and was the first major law in U.S. history to protect the rights of citizens with disabilities. As the narrators in this sketch discuss, people with disabilities at this time were not “second, but third-class citizens.”
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One of the most interesting aspects of this sketch is that Comedy Central actually uses disabled actors and comedians to play disabled characters. Heumann is portrayed here by Glee actress Ali Stroker; while deaf actor Sean Berdy plays Frank Bowe, a deaf activist who founded the American Coalition of Citizens With Disabilities (ACCD). Other notable appearances include Glee alum Lauren Potter, an actress with Down’s syndrome, actor and comedian Zach Anner and actor Ajani “AJ” Murray. Both Anner and Murray have cerebral palsy.
Drunk History is a half-hour series hosted by Derek Waters, in which he and other narrators talk about historical events while sharing a few drinks. These events are then re-enacted by a wide range of performers and celebrities. The show airs Tuesday nights on Comedy Central at 10/9c.
Did you watch the sketch? What did you think of it?
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