It’s a retake on an old Peep Show joke. Which has a very different context and dynamic so is actually funny in a dark way. But then Jesse Armstrong is a much better writer than Frankie Boyle.
The Peep Show joke is a line from Mark’s internal monologue, Mark obviously being a fictional character unlike Holly Willoughby, and also where he’s positioned as the victim, which gives the entire joke a different power dynamic and isn’t punching down. The scenario is Mark is wildly afraid of teenagers in hoodies and is convinced he, a middle aged man, will be the victim of gang violence. He is anxiously ruminating on this and internally remakes “They’ll probably rape and kill me. I hope they kill me before they rape me, though. That way, I sort of win”.
Recontextualised as FB has, the joke starts tacking much closer to the infamous “Girls Scream Aloud” case and becomes greatly distasteful.
There are very few genuinely funny jokes about this subject, and all of them are very dark and require a certain dynamic and frankly a very bitter recognition to work. There’s Sarah Silverman’s notorious lines on the subject: “Tell rape jokes if you want. Who’s going to complain? The rape victims in the audience? Rape victims don’t even report their rapes.” Which, by inverting the trope about the “easily offended” and in the context of the drastically poor rape reporting rate with which we are all familiar, suddenly punches up as a joke. It’s very dark but the rape victims are not the target of the joke; the clueless clowns telling them are.
There’s also the legendary Its Always Sunny In Philadelphia scene, “The Implication”, which is probably the best explanation of sexually coercive behaviour ever committed to television. The genius of the joke is that Dennis, like all the men who use sexually coercive behaviour, is fully and intentionally aware that the behaviour is coercive, and also that that threat of potential violence is what makes the coercion work. “She could say no. But she’s not gonna say no, because of The Implication.” It’s a scene much used to explain to the (intentionally?) clueless about how and why sexual coercion works so often on women. Mac pushes back, only to realise that yep, Dennis actually means everything he says. Dark as hell, but…. Everyone knows a Dennis. Dennis in the show is just completely open about it. Amazing trope inversion.
youtu.be/-yUafzOXHPE