Frank Skinner reveals his opinion on cancel culture after as he weighs in on ... trends now Frank Skinner has revealed what he thinks of cancel culture as he discussed what it is like being a comedian in today's society. The broadcaster, 67, has enjoyed an impressive 40 year long career in comedy, and during an appearance on Loose Women on Wednesday he confessed he doesn't believe cancel culture has negatively effected the industry. As panellist Coleen Nolan asked whether he finds it more difficult making jokes in the age we are in now, he admitted: 'The things that we are supposedly not allowed to say I don't want to say anyway.' Fellow comic Ricky Gervais has been incredibly vocal about his disapproval of the woke phenomenon and more recently Jimmy Car said he will never apologise for his comedy. However Frank had a less outspoken approach as he joked: 'It's not like I am sitting and thinking "Oh I can't use my 40 minutes of racist material" I just want to go out and people have a good time.' Frank Skinner has revealed what he thinks of cancel culture as he discussed what it is like being a comedian in today's society during Wednesday's episode of Loose Women Fellow comic Ricky Gervais has been incredibly vocal about his disapproval of the woke phenomenon and more recently Jimmy Car said he will never apologise for his comedy He continued: 'So I don't really want to hurt anyone's feelings in the audience, I don't want to shock anybody.' Coleen replied: 'You get a lot of comics saying it's not the same, so it is refreshing to hear that'. Frank added: 'Yeah well you know, if I am going to shock them it will just be the shock that I'm still alive.' Back in 2021, Ricky slammed cancel culture and described 'wokeness' as 'a weird sort of fascism' amid calls for 'the free exchange of information and ideas.' He said: 'There's this new weird sort of fascism of people thinking they know what you can say and what you can't and it's a really weird thing. Just because you're offended it doesn't mean you're right.' The Afterlife star previously said on talkRadio: 'There's this new trendy myth that people who want free speech want to say awful things all the time. 'It's just isn't true, it protects everyone. If you're mildly left-wing on Twitter, you're suddenly Trotsky, right? 'If you're mildly conservative, you're Hitler and if you're centrist and you look at both arguments, you're a coward. Just because you're offended it doesn't mean you're right.' As panellist Coleen Nolan asked whether he finds it more difficult making jokes in the age we are now in, he admitted: 'The things that we are supposedly not allowed to say I don't want to say anyway'