The liberal redneck killing stereotypes with humour
- Text by Iris Mansour
- Photography by Jessica Chou
Trae Crowder uses comedy to disarm people on both sides of the Facebook News Feed. Growing up in a small town on the edge of Tennessee, he felt like a blue dot in a sea of red.
Today he plays a character called the Liberal Redneck who rallies against bigotry and hypocrisy in the South, while also challenging liberal stereotypes of the region.
Crowder had been doing standup comedy for six years before he decided to point a camera at himself, branching into porch rants about Southerners – racking up hundreds of thousands, and sometimes millions, of views in the process.
The 30-year-old has exposed double standards in everything from the way ‘rednecks’ view Black Lives Matter – “This has been framed largely as Black Lives Matter versus the police… Rednecks, help me out here. When did we start liking cops?” – to the irony of arguing that the Bible is the official book of Tennessee – “I’ve got a question. Since when do rednecks give a shit about books?”
Crowder started challenging the prevailing wisdom young. He remembers going to church and being told that homosexuality was an abomination. At the time, he was too young for the words to carry any meaning.
Then he learned that his uncle was gay and the term ‘homosexual’ took the form of someone he loved. The preaching had become personal and Crowder stopped going to church.
“I see my uncle every Sunday for football games and fried chicken or whatever,” he says, recalling his thinking at the time. “And I’ve never even emailed Jesus. Why would I take Jesus’ side in this debate?”
He’s been puncturing “stereotypical hick types” ever since. For Crowder, humour isn’t just about being confrontational; it’s a small but powerful way to change minds.
“If you can make something funny, you can disarm people – that’s the first step in changing something,” he says, adding that people have told him his humour has shifted their perspective.
One of Crowder’s biggest strengths is how his outsider status works both ways. He’s a self-described “poor, white-trash redneck from the middle of Tennessee” who loves Dixie – the people, the music, the fried chicken, the football.
But he’s also “a well-educated, well-travelled, godless liberal” which gives him a license and credibility to pierce both bubbles.
Still, he doesn’t hesitate to call out liberals for their own ignorance. “Being prejudiced against poor white people with a twang still counts as prejudice,” he tells audiences in one video.
“It makes it so much easier to demonise other groups of people when you never actually have to interact with them or deal with them,” he says now.
“I don’t care if [rednecks] get offended about my opinions… but that doesn’t mean that I can’t still be friends with them.”
At a time when America is increasingly divided along red and blue fault lines, someone who can translate between the two, challenging both sides while keeping the peace, feels like a welcome change.
“I think we need comedy and laughter – and just a little mirth – now more than ever.”
This article appears in Huck 59 – The Game Changer Issue. Buy it in the Huck Shop now or subscribe today to make sure you never miss another issue.
Check out Trae Crowder on Twitter or read the rest of our Kings of Comedy series.
Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.
Latest on Huck
Ragnar Axelsson’s thawing vision of Arctic life
At the Edge of the World — For over four decades, the Icelandic photographer has been journeying to the tip of the earth and documenting its communities. A new exhibition dives into his archive.
Written by: Cyna Mirzai
ATMs & lion dens: What happens to Christmas trees after the holiday season?
O Tannenbaum — Nikita Teryoshin’s new photobook explores the surreal places that the festive centrepieces find themselves in around Berlin, while winking to the absurdity of capitalism.
Written by: Isaac Muk
Resale tickets in UK to face price cap in touting crackdown
The move, announced today by the British government, will apply across sport, music and the wider live events industry.
Written by: Isaac Muk
Nearly a century ago, denim launched a US fashion revolution
The fabric that built America — From its roots as rugged workwear, the material became a society-wide phenomenon in the 20th century, even democratising womenswear. A new photobook revisits its impact.
Written by: Miss Rosen
A forlorn portrait of a Maine fishing village forced to modernise
Sealskin — Jeff Dworsky’s debut monograph ties his own life on Deer Isle and elegiac family story with ancient Celtic folklore.
Written by: Miss Rosen
Subversive shots of Catholic schoolgirls in ‘80s New York
Catholic Girl — When revisiting her alma mater, Andrea Modica noticed schoolgirls finding forms of self-expression beyond the dress code. Her new photobook documents their intricate styles.
Written by: Isaac Muk