In audio from one of his sets that leaked in December, the comedian mocked Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School students for testifying before Congress about gun control.
"You're not interesting because you went to a high school where kids got shot," Louis C.K. can be heard saying. "Why does that make you interesting? You didn't get shot. You pushed some fat kid in the way and now I gotta listen to you talking?"
Now a father whose son was killed in the shooting is taking the comedian to task by recording a standup routine of his own.
The "comedy set" is a promotional campaign for Change the Ref, a nonprofit organization started by Manuel Oliver and his wife, Patricia, to help young people fight for gun control.
The sobering video starts out with a shot of Oliver putting up posters to promote his set.
"Murdering Innocent Children Comedy Night," one of the posters reads. "It will be a gun barrel of laughs."
"Shooting near a city near you," reads another line on the poster.
Oliver opens his standup with a reference to Louis C.K., who tried to mitigate the Parkland joke in a later set by joking that it was a distraction from the sexual misconduct allegations against him.
"Recently I heard this great line from a comedian. He said, 'If you want people to forget that you were jerking off, just make a joke about kids getting shot.'" Oliver begins.
"And I thought, jokes about kids getting shot ... I can do that."
He goes on to describe what happened to his son, Joaquin Oliver, who was among the 17 people killed in the shooting in Parkland, Florida, last year.
"Hear the one about the kid that walks into the school on Valentine's Day? Skinny kid, wearing headphones. Gets dropped by his dad. And he says, 'I love you,' and gets out of the car and walks into the school. And then gets shot to death a couple of hours later."
A drummer punctuates the line by playing the classic comedy riff.
"You guys ever heard dead baby jokes? I got a dead baby. His name was Joaquin Oliver. He was gonna be 18. But now he's dead."
Oliver pauses.
"And that's not a joke," he says before walking off the stage.
The video ends with a call for people to stand up to gun violence.
When Louis C.K. initially joked about Parkland, the survivors and others were quick to speak out.
"It's a shame when you sink so low that your comeback plan is to make fun of school shooting survivors for speaking out," Stoneman Douglas graduate Ryan Deitsch said on Twitter in December.
"LEAVE LOUIS CK IN 2018. WE'RE NOT TAKING THIS ENERGY INTO 2019. thank u." Delaney Tarr, a survivor of the shooting wrote.
The set with the Parkland joke came a few months after Louis C.K. returned to the stage, a year after he was accused of sexual misconduct and inappropriate behavior, including masturbating in front of women without their consent. The comedian confirmed that their stories were true.
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