Excerpted from Tony Davis, “Stop clapping, this is serious,” The Sydney Morning Herald, March 1, 2003.

Lehrer is of the opinion that while satire may attract attention to an issue, it doesn’t achieve a lot else.

“The audience usually has to be with you, I’m afraid. I always regarded myself as not even preaching to the converted; I was titillating the converted.”

“The audiences like to think that satire is doing something. But, in fact, it is mostly to leave themselves satisfied. Satisfied rather than angry, which is what they should be.”

His favourite quote on the subject is from British comedian Peter Cook, who, in founding the Establishment Club in 1961, said it was to be a satirical venue modelled on “those wonderful Berlin cabarets which did so much to stop the rise of Hitler and prevent the outbreak of the Second World War”.