Paul F. Tompkins American Idol Recap
Paul F. Tompkins American Idol Recap
Perhaps something good came from American Idol after all…
Paul F. Tompkins American Idol Recap
Perhaps something good came from American Idol after all…
http://media.mtvnservices.com/mgid:hcx:content:atom.com:1a7ab156-07dd-40db-868d-b2ae86f2e022
New Episode of E-Commando with Jason Nash. In this episode, frisbees prove to be more than meets the eye.
MitchHedberg.net Relaunch & Charity Comedy Show
This is so out of left field… in the best way possible.
Wits with Patton Oswalt: Paul F. Tompkins
Paul F. Tompkins (@PFTompkins) phones in from Australia.
(by MPRdotOrg)
Paul F. Tompkins on the phone with Patton Oswalt.
Really, my feet hurt. I have seen so much comedy walking back and forth around for the first two days at the Bridgetown Comedy Festival in Portland that my feet like I’ve been dragged on a nature hike that I didn’t want to go on.
Yet, it has all been worth it.
These first two days here have been not only been amazing, but it has been reaffirming that people, real people, genuinely want to go out to see live comedy, be open minded, and, most importantly, laugh.
DAY 1
After walking from the festival sponsored Hotel 50 to the venues for Bridgetown nestled together on the food truck and vintage record store lined Hawthorne Blvd., I realized I took 2 hours to walk just over 3 miles (with breaks for delicious craft beer and chocolate chip cookies with bacon). At this point, I’m really in the mood for more delicious cheap beer and some fantastic comedy from all around the country.
The first show on my docket was Jimmy Dore’s Pop and Politics at the Mt. Tabor Theatre Main Room. Though the Tabor main room is primarily a venue for many of the indie bands in/passing through Portland, a capacity crowd seemed more than willing to laugh. Interspersing straight stand-up, playing multimedia clips with humorous commentary a la the Daily Show, Jimmy Dore gave Bridgetown a running start right out the gate. The 150+ audience laughed it up the whole way through despite a few minor technical difficulties. Dore also brought up Paul Gilmartin as a republican representative who hilariously tried to reach out to the liberals of Portland with his patriotism and an star studded panel of comedians Kyle Kinane, Auggie Smith, and the festival founder and curator Andy Wood to join in riffing on the news clips. As great as Pop and Politics was to start the festival off, time was running short before the start of the next show I had planned to catch.
NOTE: Between 8 venues, 18 shows had been planned for the first day of Bridgetown.
Despite my left foot kind of being numb, I headed over to the Hawthorne Theatre Main Room for Snob Theater, a show routinely run in San Francisco by comedian Shawn Robbins. With another capacity crowd at hand, perhaps bigger than the one at the Tabor Main room, highlights for this show included a drunken dyslexic audience member fumbling pre-written heckles by and for Robbins, a delightful Emily Heller hysterically defending her feminism, Portland’s own Ron Funches killing it (softly) with his unique timing and delivery that seems like it’s from another reality, but in the most friendly way imaginable, awesome Portland based band Aesthetic Junkies that’s a bouncier, more fun filled version of Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes, LA’s own Moshe Kasher also killing it, and Brent Weinbach showing a side I’ve never seen before as he played original songs about love with a few hilarious asides about how he looks like one of the characters from Deliverance after he plays a love song with his stoic facial expressions.
Perhaps some of you readers are unaware of this, but I am a stand up comedian as a well and after all of these amazing shows, I was jonesing to get up somewhere. Luckily, the Bridgetown Comedy Festival has it’s own open mic that runs at the Tanker Bar, which is almost an appropriate name for an open mic. Despite a loud, boisterous, drunken crowd, the likes of Ron Lynch, Andy Peters, Hampton Yount, and Eric Andre, some of my favorite comics all performed. Interestingly enough, most of the comics opted to do material despite the circumstances of the crowd’s vastly wavering attention and almost incessant talking. I was mad as I ended up not getting up and my feet hurt in such a way as I ordered a few more tasty IPAs, but my time at the first night of the Tanker evened out after Yount using a plant in the audience to get into a shouting match with fellow comedian Grant Lyon.
Needless to say, I didn’t walk home, but was already feverish in excitement for Day 2 as I could hardly sleep (not the greatest move after several miles of walking).
DAY 2
Taking lessons learned from Day 1, I caught a ride with delightful Seattle comedienne Barbara Holm, who, even as a scheduled performer at Bridgetown, was star struck by some of the other comedians performing at the festival. This sentiment of awe and amazement at this festival for comedy here in Portland, despite comedy being something that I see everywhere, every night, from clubs to bars to garages and apartment living rooms back home in LA, was refreshing to witness.
With energy reserved from not walking, I stopped in at the Hawthorne Lounge, which is a much smaller, more intimate venue, better suited for comedy, than some of these massive theaters. Unfortunately, due to daylight savings time, 7PM still had plenty of daylight shining through the windows, which can be troublesome to deal with, but Jesse Case, Ron Babcock, James Adomian, who all have appeared on Last Comic Standing, dealt with it just fine. Case, in particular, “broke in” the audience after he simply stepped off the stage and went through his brilliant bit comparing Christian rock band to a hypothetical Italian Food rock band and was subsequently met with applause breaks.
Still desperate to get up, I headed back to the Tanker, which had flipped it’s atmosphere almost with an attentive crowd and a reasonable sign-up list. As this was the situation, I felt thankful I could actually do material, which ended up working because, as I’ve mentioned several times, all of these people genuinely here at the Bridgetown Comedy Festival want to have a great time.
Shortly after this, I hopped on over next door to the Tabor Main Room for the always amazing Tony Sam and his show Persona. It’s an all character showcase that has been doing quite well for itself back in LA and had a great showing here up in Portland. James Adomian playing Jesse Ventura was welcomed to the stage with shouts much like that of a headlining rock band taking the spotlight to play their set. Johnny Pemberton, host of MTV’s Megadrive, as a Tea Bagger, Ron Lynch as Mezmerizo, a pseudo-hypnotist, who you might have seen as a scientist in recent Burger King ads, Brett Gelman of Adult Swim’s Eagleheart and Jon Daly, a frequent star of Funny or Die videos, as a couple of “Jersey Shore” types were all uproarious to yet another packed house at the Tabor. Tony Sam hosted the show with a whole slew of his own characters including a “Fun Police Officer” who cited people for “boring”, which really brought the concept of Persona, where everyone plays a characters, to its fullest potential. Though Andy Dick went up last and flubbed his own planned wardrobe malfunction as Daphne Aguilera that ended up in unabashedly flashing the audience, the cutting edge comedy of Persona was great and received quite well at Bridgetown.
It would seem fitting that at the end of this particular evening, after having had such a rollicking, sincerely fun filled time, that I walk all the way back to the Hotel, which I did. Fortunately, I just had to cross a bridge this time instead of walking three miles, but I found, however, where the homeless sleep in Portland (underneath bridges).
I’d like to think that Bridgetown is a once in a lifetime experience, but I’m already looking forward to next year, so I’ll hold off on saying that. Two more days to go here in Portland for Bureau Director Jake Kroeger and it’s only going to get better even though I can’t really imagine how it could and my feet still hurting.
What you’re missing at Cartoon Dump… Go this Monday at 8PM to the Steve Allen Theater to see the next edition of this fantastic show with Jimmy Dore, Paul Gilmartin, and more. Buy tix right here.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0A5v0Sfpk-8
Talking Funny with Ricky Gervais, Jerry Seinfeld, Chris Rock and Louis CK.
I didn’t really know what to expect from this, but it’s really amazing. Chris Rock and Louis CK come from a slightly different place than Seinfeld, and seeing them interact and talk about their approaches is incredibly informative.
Just in case you missed Talking Funny…
The prize festival packages so often offered on the radio or in promotions that promise an all expense paid, behind-the-scenes, once-in-a-lifetime, in-the-thick-of-it experience usually never live up to any such description. How good can a week hanging out with Black Eyed Peas honestly be, especially if you can even partially think for yourself?
Though, I, Comedy Bureau Director Jake Kroeger, didn’t win a prize of any sorts, Day 3 at the Bridgetown Comedy Festival certainly surpassed any expectation that winning back stage tickets off the radio could ever promise.
First off, I stumbled into comedians Pete Holmes, Nick Thune, and Jay Larson and had one of the most entertaining breakfasts I can ever remember. Normally, eating with comedians can be trying as I’ve had the fact that I ordered breakfast at 3AM riffed on like it was some bad improv sketch that will never end. Yet, sitting and eating at one of Portland’s one of finest dining establishments, Mother’s Bistro, I laughed so hard at Holmes trying to do crowd work while we were waiting to order, Thune trying to figure out loopholes and inconsistencies in the menu pricing, and Larson cleverly commenting the whole time. It was top notch back and forth banter between all three of them, especially when everyone at the table including Holmes himself was critiquing his riffing and crowd work throughout the meal.
Even more intriguing than hearing Holmes, who is about to record his CD next month, Thune, whose album Thick Noon was widely praised, and Larson who just recorded his album a few weeks ago at the Hollywood Improv, shoot the shit was hearing about their very first shows. Some people might think of this as the alt-comedy version of Talking Funny, which is really just a “big name” version of Paul Provenza’s Green Room on Showtime, but it was really remarkable to hear about Holmes just going up and doing a long set for his very first show, which was in private with family and friends, Thune talk about developing his delivery, and Larson talk about how he wrote a brand new 5 minutes every week, doing well right from the start, performing at a club in Boston, and getting up to 45 minutes of material before he realized he should probably start repeating some of it.
This was just breakfast. I hadn’t even gone to a show for the festival yet and the day is already at one of those “good night, then drop the mic” moments.
Later, I walked in late on Victor Varnado’s comedy concert film Tell Your Friends at the Bagdad Theatre that a trailer that surfaced briefly online hyping the movie as an alternative comedy documentary. Though only getting to see a portion of the film, I found it immensely interesting that in between full performances between Reggie Watts and the duo of Kurt Braunholer and Kristen Schaal, there several interspersed talking head clips of Jim Gaffigan, Marc Maron, and several others in the comedy world, without regard to their status as an alternative or mainstream comic, try to discern what alternative comedy is and who qualifies or doesn’t qualify as an “alt comic”.
Ultimately, whether any of the interviewees were criticizing alt comedy for bordering too close to performance art or considered to be a part of the movement, everyone sort of agreed that the label “alternative” was pushed on them by the industry and was not self-styled, insisting that they’re just a bunch of people trying to be funny in their own different, unique way. At one point, Reggie Watts commented that he thinks something he did on stage is really good when someone tells him, “That was so stupid.” Though no real answer or explanation really came about for Tell Your Friend’s query, I’d definitely see it again.
Staying at the Bagdad Theatre, I caught “This Is Not Happening”, a monthly storytelling showcase back in LA featuring some of the country’s best comedians stripping off whatever stage persona they usually have and telling an honest story based on a theme, which, on this edition, was shame. At this particular show, there were so many technical difficulties to deal with, it was truly surprising and endearing how the humanity of an audience showed itself.
Starting off, host Ari Shaffir took the stage in complete darkness. No stage lights were on for a good 7 minutes, but that didn’t matter as about 20 people seated in the vast 500 seat Bagdad Theatre lit Shaffir with their flashlight apps on their smart phones. Everyone wanted to see comedy that badly. Once the lights finally lit up, cheers abounded and Shaffir moved onto a story about shame, but was, again, held back by background music continuing to play throughout his set. Still, people laughed the whole way through because they pretty much invested their entire evening in laughing and weren’t going to be hindered by any sort of technical nightmare.
Even when comedian Mike Burns took the stage to the sound of an accidentally tripped fire alarm, no one left their seats and Burns riffed off of the incessant buzzing for a big portion of his set to wild applause. Andy Dick went way over his time and struggled to stay focused on telling his story about shame, which people expected to be “juicy”, but Pete Holmes “brought the heat” just like he did at breakfast and destroyed like nothing that came before him had gone wrong with his hysterical story about visiting a massage parlor in Amsterdam. Moshe Kasher also had a magnificent set with a story about becoming a man much in the way that “This Is Not Happening” had intended with being honest to the point of being metaphorically naked on stage, relating to the topic, and the tech, lights and sound all, working. I’m still reveling in how much people were “on board” for whatever happened on the show and how much they wanted to laugh at people’s stories of shame.
A showcase of Last Comic Standing finalists/semi-finalists quickly followed This Is Not Happening at the Bagdad Theatre and showed that live comedy is much better than TV’s recreation of it. Without any sort of language and extremely rigid time restriction, comedians James Adomian, Jesse Case, and NYC’s Claudia Cogan put any doubts of their comedic skills and talents that were repeatedly cut and repackaged for NBC.
Leaving Bagdad after about five hours worth of show, I walked to the Mt. Tabor Theatre Main Room interviewing James Adomian and the Whitest Kids U Know’s very own Trevor Moore on Bridgetown and Adomian’s rock star status in Portland. Transcribed interview to follow soon.
Most people after nearing a full work day of being an audience member would take a break or just stop altogether in watching live shows of any sort, but the prospect of seeing Kurt Braunholer and Kristen Schaal’s Hot Tub kept me going. As a variety show hailing from NYC, Braunholer and Schaal were hilarious from the top of the show with their “Win A Date with Kristen Schaal” game/sketch to when they took their bows along with a stellar line-up of LA based performers (perhaps there comedy wall between NYC and LA is slowing coming down) including Kyle Kinane, Nick Thune, Brett Gelman, Jon Daly, and my third run-in of Pete Holmes. From Kinane’s stories of calling cabs to go to Wendy’s to Daly’s uproariously absurd character, Drunken English Roller-blading Tree to Gelman doing one of the most “meta” things I’ve ever seen in having an audience member read an “article” written about him in the NY times on stage, Hot Tub proved to be, at the loud resounding laughs of an over-capacity crowd, one of the best shows of Bridgetown.
At this point on this in the evening, I had seen Pete Holmes kill it three times and while walking with him down Hawthorne back to the Bagdad Theatre, I ended up watching him do it again for a fourth time as a drop-in on a show where one audience member had asked if Doug Stanhope was going to perform. After this year’s Bridgetown is over, there should be no doubts about the comedy of Pete Holmes. As one woman told me after seeing Holmes at Comedy Death Ray Live in LA, Pete does some beautiful stand up.
This concludes Day 3 at Bridgetown, which, in reflecting back on it is something that couldn’t be even dreamed up. One more day left here before the LA comedy scene goes back home and I’m feeling legitimately like a kid, strangely enough, for the first time. I hope Portland appreciates this fact and/or the festival in the same way.
This week’s Tiger Lily feature two of our favorite performers Barry Rothbart)and Will Weldon You should really watch them in this hilarious and awesome web series: The After School Club created by Andy Landen. This is episode 2. We can’t wait for episode 3!
Then watch them perform @ Tiger Lily Mon 4/25
Hollywood Studio Bar & Grill 6122 Sunset Blvd
Punchline Magazine: Matt Walsh: High on improv
Improvisation in cinema has been tried a few times over history. The films of auteur Robert Altman were noted to use a script as merely a blueprint from which the actors improvised from. As the sophistication of certain audiences has risen, improvisation on screen has become more…
I/we wrote this.
“The Jen Kirkman Talk Show!” this Thursday April 28th at 9:30pm! UCB Theatre – LA!
Every show has sold out so far – let’s go for it again! But get tickets now – only $5http://losangeles.ucbtheatre.com/shows/2633The topic of discussion that I’ll interview my guests about is this: “I AM AN OUTCAST” – who knows? I might even talk to an audience member!
Special Guests:
Mary Lynn Rajskub (“Chloe” from 24) and Joe Wagner (comedian, Producer on upcoming Zach Galifianakis/Brody Stevens HBO project)Musical Guest: Brendan Hines!
I didn’t have a lot of time to push this show this month – so any help getting the word out – is appreciated! If you’re going and have gone before and have a kind word to say – please do pass it on!
$5 for Jen Kirkman? Yes, it’s true.
Remain Champagne: AN OPEN LETTER TO THAT COUPLE I JUST SAW ON THE SUNSET STRIP
Look at you guys! Nicely dressed, smiling, out on the town. Looks like you just had dinner maybe. This whole Sunset Strip thing just keeps getting brighter and brighter what with all the computerized billboards and new stores and clubs and reflecting windows so everyone can see…
Matt Champagne runs into the weirdest thing on Sunset Blvd. that isn’t Jesus at the Comedy Store.
Doug Stanhope in The Main Room: Tickets Now on Sale
Well, there goes my lunch money (implying I already spent rent on something else).
Puddin’-Eddie Pepitone’s Daily Live Action Comic Strip-“No Pudding”
Despite it’s sound, the title of this article has nothing to do with a coffee shop singer/songwriter struggling to make his way in Portland. It has more to do with the last day of the fantastic Bridgetown Comedy Festival, closing out one of the best comedy experiences in my life/our run here at the Comedy Bureau.
Probably having seen more shows in their entirety than anybody at the festival (I averaged about 4 a day), I was content to stay the entire night for all the shows at the biggest venue of the festival, the Bagdad Theatre. Despite having dozens of shows over the past three days, Portland still came out in droves to the Bagdad catching the three great shows closing out Bridgetown.
Before any of that, I sat in the far reaches of the balcony and had a pleasant word with the many voices/characters of Tony Sam and his efforts behind major Bridgetown sponsor HahaJK.com (transcript to be posted soon). With plenty of buzz coming about from his all-character showcase, Persona!, he wishes he could be up in Portland a whole lot more despite having to work nearly the entire festival.
First off on the Bagdad stage, Eric Martin’s NPR parody podcast This American Wife along with incredibly talented comedian and Bridgetown vet Paul Jay and Jen Goldberg took the stage with a mix of hilarious embarrassing sex stories from Pete Holmes, Moshe Kasher, NYC’s Claudia Cogan, and SF’s Chris Garcia, and great sketches/interviews with Ron Babcock and Nikki Glaser. This particular show was a great sampling of the new format in which comedy is being consumed and how it’s grown. Basically, people paid to be part of a live audience of something that they could have downloaded later for a fraction of the price. People, at least in Portland, apparently, love believe in comedy that much.
Next, Nato Green and Moshe Kasher’s Iron Comic, a multiple topic comedy competition show filled the Bagdad past capacity. Head to head to head and so forth, Kyle Kinane, Hannibal Buress, Emily Heller, Baron Vaughn, and Doug Benson took on each other writing material in 10 min. or less in multiple rounds. Riffing off of lunch, the Importance of Grammar, and NASA, everyone put forth strong efforts. On the topic of lunch, Hannibal opened with “I am not familiar with the concept of lunch. I feel like I am at a disadvantage,” to huge laughter and applause. Still, defending Iron Comic champ Kyle Kinane ended up facing Doug Benson in the final round and “schooled” him with a perfect rapid fire response to topics being thrown at him right on stage.
The Comedy Bureau snagged an interview with Kinane after his win (full transcript to be posted soon) and found that he probably isn’t going to Disneyland.
The final show at the Bagdad Theatre was a straight stand up showcase with some of Bridgetown’s best. There was absolutely no low points at this show, despite this not being some of last night of a festival gala. Strong performances from top to the bottom of the bill came from LA’s own Dave Ross, Brent Weinbach, Ryan Stout, and Jimmy Dore. The aforementioned Claudia Cogan and Chris Garcia, along with Mike Drucker, Billy Wayne Davis, and Portland’s own Auggie Smith put forth quite the show with their top notch stand up wrangled in by host Nick Rutherford and his Portland thrift store purchases, which kept in line with the Portland maxim: Keep Portland Weird. (there are pictures of this that will come later, we promise).
Though there was a cliché moment of sadness as some of the Bagdad Theatre employees took the letters down for Bridgetown off the marquee with a little light rain to punctuate the emotions of the comics, organizers, and audiences, the last day of Bridgetown felt victorious in a way. Perhaps most of America is unaware of it, but at least Portland was just exposed to the forefront of comedy and our “little thing that we have going” back here in LA.
This sentiment was emphasized at the last after party at Paddy’s when Auggie Smith channeled Braveheart, shut up the whole bar, and gave a rousing, yet still funny, dedication to festival curator Andy Wood. Wood was left, as everyone who was a part of the Bridgetown was, speechless in awe at how amazing the last four days, sleepless as they may be, were.
From LA to Portland, the Comedy Bureau, sincerely “tips its hat” (it’s an LA thing), nicely done. 2012 can’t possibly the end of the world as long as the Bridgetown Comedy Festival is around.
We need dogs for a video shoot Saturday; email us at theucbmidnightshow at gmail dot com for more details.
If your dog is on the Midnight Show, it will be famous. Well, at least here on the blogosphere it will be.
Dorksplosion Black and White T-shirt Coming Soon
When I was a little kid I got a “Death Dealer” Frazetta t-shirt with my own allowance money and hid it under my bed. I would take it to school in my back pack and then change into in the bathroom.
I felt so bad ass. I was still at the age where I just naturally assumed everyone would be into the same things I was into because the shit I was into was so awesome. This was not the case.
I grew up in the south. So not only did people think I was a dork, but they also thought I worshiped Satan and told the principal on me. I got called into the principal’s office and they went through my back pack and found a bunch of “Museum Replicas” sword catalogs that I had circled all the swords in that I wanted.
In retrospect, I am sure that the principal thought I was going to go postal really slowly with a sword or something, but the problem was, I was waaaay to young to even really carry a big ass sword, not to mention that this would be the most unrealistic threat to an elementary school ever.
My parents had to come pick me up AND they called the Karate School that I was taking karate it and I had to have a one on one with my sensei about how “real karate masters never use weapons…even if they use them in Ninja Turtles.” Somehow the school had lumped going postal, Dungeons and Dragons, heavy metal, karate and Ninja Turtles into one problem…a fat kid wearing and awesome t-shirt.
I miss those days.
Do you have an embarrassing dork related story?
Dorksplosion T-shirts designed by comedian Andrew DeWitt. Nicely done.
Behold The Nerdist Way by Chris Hardwick | Splitsider
Available now to preorder on Amazon. To be released November 1st.
The Chris Hardwick/Nerdist book “The Nerdist Way”. That is all.
It’s time for the the next BRUNCH: A Comedy Show!
BRUNCH is a new comedy show from Jamie Lee, Jake Weisman and Sam Varela. Located at The Park Restaurant of Echo Park, BRUNCH is happening every other Monday from 9pm-11pm. With a mix of comedy veterans and up-and-comers alike, you can expect an eclectic mix of stand up, characters, and sketch.
Hosted by Jake Weisman and Jamie Lee
With guests:
Moshe Kasher
James Adomian
Johnny Pemberton
Brandie Posey
Reginald Hunter (VISITING FROM THE UK)FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE!
9 PM!
Plus, there will be beer/wine/soda for sale! Drink sales will keep BRUNCH alive so please come ready to drink!!
CASH ONLY
Brunch at 9PM was great the first time, so maybe Brunch should always happen at 9. Point is go to this.
Puddin’-Eddie Pepitone-Daily Live Action Comic Strip-“Mandy Moore”
I have a sneaking suspicion that I used to be like this when I was 13. ugh.