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BROBS

Lifer
Nov 13, 2019
11,765
40,044
IA
My wife does stand up occasionally, and I love working with her to develop her routines. Every joke has a "butt" that receives the condemnation of the laughs. Easy jokes, make fun of someone else. Better jokes make fun of ideas, but the ones we try to write always have to center on the speaker as the "butt" of the jokes. Steve Martin was a genius at being able to make fun of the whole world by turning the jokes on himself.
self-deprecation is the heart of true comedy. ?
 

BROBS

Lifer
Nov 13, 2019
11,765
40,044
IA
Come to think about it a stand up comedian could garner years of great material just reading some of the posts in this place. Some of the things said on here are just priceless even if they were not intended to be funny by the writer.
contemporary-toilet-paper-holders.jpg
 
Jun 9, 2018
4,582
14,802
England
Bill Burr is one of the greatest stand up comedians ever. Anthony Jeselnik is great as are Ricky Gervais, Russell Brand, Eddie Izzard and Stuart Lee.
Some of my favourite comedy shows are The Larry Sanders Show, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Arrested Development, The Office (UK original), Peep Show, The League Of Gentlemen, I'm Alan Partridge and Fawlty Towers.
 
Jun 9, 2018
4,582
14,802
England
I am always reminded of the children's program from the 1970s called 'Rainbow' and then Jim Davidson did his own take on it incorporating a popular car show.......


Hahaha! I loved Rainbow as a kid.?
I think George the pink hippopotamus had undiagnosed aspergers. And Zippy had undiagnosed ADHD. Or maybe a crack cocaine problem or something.
 

mso489

Lifer
Feb 21, 2013
41,211
60,649
Discussions of humor tend to be humorless, but that's okay. I like a fairly wide spectrum of humor. The Three Stooges looks so tacky, but when you pay attention, the physical aspect and quickness becomes funny fast. Likewise, Soupy Sales does his broad physical comedy with such assumed innocence and energy, it is a good laugh. On the other end of the spectrum, Oscar Wilde's "The Importance of Being Ernest," where the humor is almost entirely conveyed through the dialogue, is hugely witty. The plays of Moliere in good translation, or if you read French, are wise and droll. Seinfeld is a comedy of manners and snappy and insightful, if you can look past it being facile and glib; I admit, I'm a fan. The funniest moments in life, that make me gasp with laughter, when it is difficult to stop laughing, are mostly live, in person, not staged or televised, when a remark just opens up the absurdity of life. When I can unleash one of those jokes, it is infinitely pleasing. The Marx Brothers have it all, from corniest physical comedy to intricate word play, the Einsteins of performed comedy.
 

ophiuchus

Lifer
Mar 25, 2016
1,650
2,501
I love comedy that makes me laugh (Monty Python, The Three Stooges). I also love comedy that makes me think (immediately George Carlin and Richard Pryor come to mind). And ... just about everything in between.

I like comedy that messes with your head. I’m still blown away when I catch the old Jack Benny Show and its show within a show (and sometimes a show within a show within a show) concept. Ernie Kovacs worked wonders with an artistic level of visual comedy I still can’t get enough of. I’m thinking old timers here, since a lot of good comedy have followed these veins since.

I’m also a big fan of epic comedy. I will argue to my last that It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World (mind-blowing cast of legends, gorgeous time-machine cinematography, and exhilarating vehicular stuntwork blended together by Stanley Kramer’s on-point direction) and The Blues Brothers (protagonists as antagonists, some truly magic musical numbers, and shamelessly hilarious property destruction, directed with a virtuosity of comic timing) belong on any long greatest films list.
 

Sonorisis

Part of the Furniture Now
Dec 24, 2019
855
4,588
I'm very fond of slapstick, Buster Keaton and John Ritter style. Stand ups that I get a bang out of are Sarah Silverman, Iliza Schleshinger, and (I know this isn't politically correct, but) Louis C.K. On the Big Screen, it's hard to beat Ken Jeong, Sasha Baron Coen, Steve Buscemi, Catherine O'Hara, Mila Kunis, and Steve Carrell.
 

mso489

Lifer
Feb 21, 2013
41,211
60,649
Interesting how flat humor can fall on an individual basis. "A Fish Called Wanda," with John Cleese, who I usually find truly funny, just struck me as sadistic. I didn't laugh through the whole movie, not once. Yet it was a big hit, and many found it hilarious. I wasn't being stiff; it just didn't reach me as humor. In the Jonathan Winters line, his heir apparent was Robin Williams, another improvisational genius. Though he was full of egotistical bluster, Jackie Gleason was a good performer, with a sense of comic timing, and as a really large guy who could really dance. And Jimmy Durante was another do-it-all vaudevillian. Bob Hope ran out some of his popularity with the generation gap, but he was always an astute comic who did his homework and bravely entertained the troops, no matter where. For two years or so, in my childhood, I wanted to be a stand-up comedian, and my dad had me tell jokes at family gatherings so I wouldn't look so spaced out. He didn't tell me that, but I got the drift.
 
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