You make a good point. But what I'm saying at the end of the piece is still crucial -- in an industry that's only 11% female and in a broader society where men have disproportionate access to power and an outsized public voice, it means we're going to hear far more unoriginal and lazy jokes about women than we're going to hear about men. I probably wouldn't laugh if a female comedian were to joke about her husband being a slob (unless done in a way that hasn't been done a million times before), but the reality is that at the end of the day, we, the broader public, are going to hear far more naggy wife jokes than slobby husband jokes. We cannot overlook or downplay this. When men make lazy jokes that punch down, they are shaping a national conversation and perpetuating existing power structures.