Royal Canadian House of Cards

Proud by Michael Healey is play about Canadian politcs, and that's not the only joke

Nick Offerman: American Ham

Nick Offerman takes the stage in a one-man showcase of his abilites as a humourist. Watch it for yourself and comment if you agree or disagree with my review!

Louis C.K.

Louis C.K. is arguably the greatest living comedian. Here's why.

Late Night Comedy Round-up

Stand up is starting to be seen on television once again after a decade hiatus. Who should you be laughing at?

Showing posts with label Hilarious. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hilarious. Show all posts

Friday, January 30, 2015

Laugh This Week Away

This week has been a long one and next week I intend to do something a little more introspective, but I really don't have the time to do it justice this week. 

So instead, I leave you with my two all-time favourite bits. If these don't make you laugh, then I don't know what to do. Enjoy!


John Mulaney — The Salt and Pepper Diner


Bert Kreischer — The Machine


Friday, November 21, 2014

Chelsea Peretti: One of the Greats


Chelsea Peretti released her brand-spankin' new comedy special "One of the Greats" last Friday and you should be watching it.

Filmed live at the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco, Peretti manages to turn her hour of stand-up into something much closer to a one-woman show.

One of the Greats does a few things that I've never seen in any other comedy special before. Every special will cut to the crowd between jokes for a few seconds, you know, get the audience reacting.

But in One of the Greats, 90% of the cuts to the crowd are these shots of people - still in the audience - but doing really strange things that are jokes in themselves.

A man pouring salt on a hard-boiled egg, a couple making out aggressively, a cute dog looking off-camera adorably, they are never referenced directly but it shows the amount of effort put into the production of the show.


Some comedians (like John Mulaney) take great pains to write material that is funny regardless of delivery and then tweak the delivery to get the most out of it.

There are a few comedians (Maria Bamford comes to mind) who write material that isn't necessarily funny on paper, but is so soaked in their persona and voice that it's still hilarious.

I don't want to talk to too much about the special, because I really suggest that you watch it. In place of further detail, take some .gifs of Peretti.









Friday, October 3, 2014

Louis C.K.



Every generation, in any medium, someone comes along and changes the way things work.

There’s really nothing I can say about Louis C.K. that hasn’t been said by a slew of comedy bloggers and writers with far more authority on the subject than me.

All I’m going to do is explain exactly why he is deserving of all the praise he receives.

Louis was born in Mexico, not that you’d guess that with his shocking ginger hair and beard.


 “C.K.” was a moniker he adopted early into his career, as his last name was impossible for the average comedy club MC to correctly pronounce (“C.K” is the phonetic pronunciation of his last name).

Louis has a heroic career in writing for late night comedy. Late Show with David Letterman, Late Night with Conan O’Brien, The Dana Carvey Show, and The Chris Rock Show all boast Louis’ singular comedic voice at different times.













He has been nominated for 25 Primetime Emmys. He’s recorded 4 critically acclaimed stand-up specials (and one yet-unreleased one).

He writes, directs, produces, and edits his award-winning sitcom Louie himself.

Mechanic of Comedy: Most stand-ups take 2 or 3 years to cycle through enough new material to make a fresh new hour. Louis takes inspiration from George Carlin, arguably the greatest comic of his time, by recording his special, and then immediately dumping his entire act and starting from scratch.

I can not stress how insanely difficult it is for a comedian, even a professional, to write a full hour of rock-solid material in a year.

Seriously.


In 2007 he recorded his first special, Shameless
In 2008 he released his second, Chewed Up
In 2009, his first independently produced special, Hilarious, setting the format of paying for the production himself, and keeping all the profit. Something comics like Jim Gaffigan and Aziz Ansari would follow suit with in following years.
In 2010 he used the hour he had written as content for the first season of Louie.
In 2011, Live at the Beacon Theater was released for $5.00 DRM-free on his website, further showcasing C.K.’s connection to his fans and the changing media landscape.
2012 was again focused on creating content for Louie, but he released the audio versions of Shameless and Live at the Beacon Theater DRM-free for $5.00.
In 2013 he recorded his fifth special, Oh My God, released in the same format he’d used for the last two years.

Louis C.K. is not for children, his content is often crude, black, and challenging. There are only a handful of comics living today who have the ability to manipulate every angle of a topic into a joke like Louis.


If you like stand-up, you can’t avoid Louis C.K. any more than a hockey lover could avoid Wayne Gretzky or a movie lover could avoid Stanley Kubrick.

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