Learning C and Assembly programming are both worthwhile experiences--that much is easy to establish. But C is also easy to learn, because it is a small language that hardly does anything to get between the programmer and the underlying machine. I can understand how one might be hesitant to take the mental leap required to program in, say, Lisp, but understanding C seems like a relatively small deal.
Certainly there are many programming styles and problem domains that make C programming difficult, but that has more to do with the inherent difficulty of programming than with the C language itself. I find that C is one language (perhaps the only language) in which I've nearly always understood exactly what it is doing. That is to say that I find myself confident in knowing precisely what the various C data types and operators do.
Assembly programming is not difficult either, but it is highly arbitrary. With assembly, one tends to have a set of very precisely defined operators to deal with, and it requires some imagination to see how they can be combined to achieve something useful. What one is learning with assembly is how the machine architecture works rather than the language, because assembly really isn't much of a "language." It's just a set of macros for the raw machine code.
If you've done any low-level programming, such as in assembly, and you've done any high-level programming, such as in Python or JavaScript, then you pretty much get C for free. Given that, why not "learn" it? :) The real obstacle here is understanding computer architecture, not learning a language.