Did TED disaster set the stage?
Sayonara: Sarah Silverman suddenly has a lot of time for Matt Damon
Sarah Silverman will soon be taking a bow from her self-titled sitcom. Comedy Central announced its cancellation. In The Sarah Silverman Show, the actress, 39, portrayed a flighty, self-involved idler, who drew upon the title-character's repertoire of caustic comedy concerning ethnic, religious and sexual taboos.
In one episode, the character claimed to have a one-night stand with God.
The cancellation closely follows a Twitter-based debacle concerning Silverman's participation in a TED 2010 conference due to her frequent use of the word "retard."
Speculation abounds over the reasoning behind the show's cancellation: While the AP cites "audience erosion" as the main reason, The New York Times purports that the program became too expensive to produce. The show was barely renewed for a third season after Comedy Central sought to lower its budget — ultimately Logo, the gay-themed cable channel, assisted with production costs.
Tellingly, the recently-wrapped third season was placed at a midnight time slot.
Sarah's adieu comes on the heels of the release of her new autobiography, The Bedwetter: Stories of Courage, Redemption, and Pee, a humorous memoir that has garnered attention for its revealing chapters on the subject's struggles with depression.
"Sarah Silverman has written a memoir that's sweet, funny, real and, dare I say it, occasionally even touching," wrote book critic Jim Higgins in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, a publication catering to the Middle America Midwest that Silverman typically relishes upsetting.
Like other comedians who enjoy poking fun at their fame, Silverman explains her MO in the book: "I am writing this book because I am a famous comedian, which is how it works. If you're famous, you get to write a book, and not the other way around."
At least now, Silverman will have more ... er, snuggle time for Matt Damon.