Speaking on a podcast this week, Normand described a call he received roughly two weeks ago after submitting clips from his new special for promotional use. The special, None Too Pleased, dropped March 17 on Netflix, but when it came time to push clips on social media, things took a turn.
According to Normand, the company came back with a problem: one of his jokes about Muslims had to go.
“They said, ‘We gotta do a conference call,’” Normand recalled. “Then they told me, ‘We reviewed the special again… we’d like to take out the Muslim joke.’”
The reason? Not creative differences—fear.
Normand says executives told him that a previous incident involving similar material triggered bomb threats and death threats against the company. The concern wasn’t theoretical. It was operational.
“They said they were gonna kill us, ruin the whole studio, blow the place up,” Normand recounted.
But Normand didn’t back down. He made it clear the joke worked with audiences and pushed to keep it. The compromise offered by the company was to leave the joke in the special itself—but strip it from social media promotion.
That’s when Normand says he flipped the script.
“I said I’ll take it down on one condition,” he explained. “I want you to admit… that they’re a dangerous people.”
The response was immediate rejection.
“They were like, ‘What, no, are you crazy?’”
Normand pressed further, pointing out what he framed as a contradiction—fear driving decisions, but an unwillingness to say why out loud.
He described the moment as revealing, calling it an example of public posturing colliding with private concern.
The reference to “getting Hebdo’d”—a nod to the 2015 Charlie Hebdo terror attack in Paris that left 12 dead—underscored the stakes being discussed on the call. That attack followed the publication of cartoons depicting Muhammad and remains one of the most cited flashpoints in debates over comedy, religion, and free expression.
Normand claims the standoff ended with the company relenting, at least verbally.
“I got them to admit it,” he said, adding that the exchange was partly tongue-in-cheek but pointed.














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