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Please Enjoy the “Don’t Look Up” Trailer (and Start Heeding the Very Clear Message Adam McKay Is Trying to Send)

November 16, 2021
News
adam mckay, don't look up, jennifer lawrence, leonardo dicaprio, netflix

Adam McKay’s devastatingly searing Vice took on the life and times of one Dick Cheney. Before that, McKay put the world on notice of his new leaf as a satirist auteur and a brutally effective one at that with The Big Short, focusing on the few that profited off of knowing the 2008 housing market crash was going to happen.

So much science has pointed out how clearly climate change is being caused by man made choices and the world as a whole, at this point, seems to be doing very little other than lip service. That’s where McKay is positing his lens on this go around with Don’t Look Up, a cautionary tale about ignoring all the signs of trouble that are very clear to see, but just so much easier to ignore and go on living life as you were (hence the film’s title).

Just from the trailer, you can see this might even be more biting than either Vice or The Big Short to the point that having a gigantic cast that features the big and brightest stars in Hollywood seems secondary to the message at stake when the nations and countries of the world aren’t addressing very clear and present danger.

Odds are you’ve probably seen this trailer already (DiCaprio and Lawrence are the stars of it after all and Meryl Streep plays POTUS), but for the sake of the point Adam McKay is trying to make, watch it again here, then watch it on Dec. 10th in theaters or Dec. 24th on Netflix.

Get Your First Look at Adam McKay’s Latest Damning Satire “Don’t Look Up”

September 8, 2021
News
adam mckay, don't look up, jennifer lawrence, leonardo dicaprio, netflix

In the time that Adam McKay has left Gary Sanchez on to more hard hitting, satirical pastures with The Big Short and Vice, it’s clear that McKay has carved out an auteur niche and is very likely going to continue to put out high profile satires that go to the very core of our worst demons (McKay is also at work on a project about the profiteering coming from COVID-19).

The latest work he’s offering up is Don’t Look Up, which is a timely look at people disregarding scientists in lieu of comforting ignorance. Jennifer Lawrence and Leonardo DiCaprio lead off an ensemble cast as scientists desperately trying to warn the powers that be about an incoming asteroid. If you love that razor sharp style of McKay’s last two films and were wanting to see a, perhaps, funnier version of Melancholia, this will very likely be the movie for you this year.

Best of all, we’re getting this cautionary tale as a gift as it will stream on Netflix on Christmas Eve this year. Get a look for what we’re in for with Don’t Look Up in this teaser here.

Ms. Pat Gets Very First Hour Special at Netflix

August 31, 2021
News
comedy special, hour special, ms. pat, netflix, stand up comedy

(via Variety)

Ms. Pat has lived through so much life that she could probably do several hours/solo shows/etc. and they’d all be captivating. Yet, it’s 2021 that’s proving to be a banner year for Ms. Pat as she has already gotten a lot more radars with The Ms. Pat Show and Netflix just announced today that she will be given her hour long stand-up special by the streaming giant.

If you’ve seen her do stand-up, listened to The Patdown, or heard/seen any sort of public appearance of hers, you’d know that an hour long Ms. Pat special was overdue. Her effortlessly unflinching and hilarious honesty about her past life dealing drugs and current life with all of that behind her make for some of the best stories we’ve ever heard on stage.

The hour long special ought to be chock full of such tales that will very likely feel tall, but are, most probably, very, very true.

The taping of Ms. Pat’s first hour special will tape at Atlanta Comedy Theater on Sept. 25 in case you’re in GA at the end of next month.

Netflix’s Latest Series Worth Diving Into Might Be “The Chair”

July 21, 2021
News
jay duplass, netflix, sandra oh, the chair, trailer

With going back indoors seeming more and more to be the operative move as the pandemic continues, you might be wondering, “What else is there to watch?” Even if you thought you reached the end of Netflix or whatever your streaming service of choice is, we’re betting that you didn’t even get close.

That said, we’re sure it’ll take something of real quality or, at the very least, looks damn promising to invest yourself in another round of binge watching. One of Netflix’s latest series, The Chair from Amanda Peet & Annie Wyman, might be just the thing you’re looking for as a dissection of the non-sense and oft-unchecked privilege of higher education faculty. Sandra Oh leads what is a very impressive ensemble cast and also has to tangle with, from the looks of the trailer, a pretty perfectly cast problematic professor in Jay Duplass.

Just from our first impression, The Chair seems to be a little on the same wavelength as the classic 90s sharp satire Election, but just a bit more grown-up, perhaps for university. We certainly hope it’s up to that level.

We shall see if it makes that grade when it drops on Netflix on Fri. Aug. 20th.

The Comedy Bureau Field Report Ep. 67: Sarah Squirm & The Craft of Absurdity

July 7, 2021
News, The Comedy Bureau Field Report
i think you should leave, la comedy, netflix, new venues, the standups, tim robinson

Sarah Squirm, a trailblazer in meshing the grotesque into comedy, joins us for this week’s TCB Field Report to not only break down the shift from quarantine life back into in-person life that’s somewhat like the before times, but also get into the nitty gritty of absurdist comedy. We actually dissect several parts of the absolute must-see season 2 of I Think You Should Leave in breaking down how to come up with absurdist humor. Also, “hot” takes on Netflix’s latest line-up of half hour specials and new comedy venues that opened in LA as we’re coming out of lockdown.

Follow Sarah @sarahsquirm and watch The Sarah Vaccine on Means.TV

The Comedy Bureau @thecomedybureau across platforms and please, please support TCB via GoFundMe, Patreon, or on Venmo (@jakekroeger).

Produced by Jake Kroeger
Music by Brian Granillo
Artwork by Andrew Delman and KT

Here’s Your First Look at ‘I Think You Should Leave’ Season 2

June 22, 2021
News
i think you should leave, netflix, season 2, tim robinson, trailer

It has been our stance since season that I Think You Should Leave has given us many of the best, most iconic, most downright hysterical sketches that we needed at such an absurd time to live. Thus, the prospect of season 2 has been weighing us ever since we’ve sped binged through season 1 more than a few times.

Thankfully, season 2 is just around the corner, past the Fourth of July, due out on July 6th on Netflix. More of Tim Robinson’s daft brilliance will be served up and, yet again, very likely be the very thing we need to see on TV, in comedy, and definitely in sketch comedy.

For now, you can get your very first dose of season 2 with the official trailer and watch it on repeat until 7/6. Please get a ridiculous taste of what’s to come here.

I Think You Should Leave Season 2 Is Coming Less Than a Month From Now

June 8, 2021
News
i think you should leave, netflix

Whether you think 2020 was ten years long or not, it has been way too long since one of the best sketch shows in recent memory, I Think You Should Leave, has been away. Sure, the season 1 sketches are timeless and, for our money, the nachos sketch will be something will be telling folks about for years, but we very much need unabashed absurdity from Tim Robinson and company that ties into insufferable characters needing to leave a given situation.

Fortunately, we won’t have to wait too much (depending on your sense of time these days) longer as it has just been announced that season 2 is premiering on July 6th on Netflix. Make sure you clear out your schedule and are recovered from whatever the hell you’re planning on doing on July 4th, so you can get ready for what, we believe, will be the most quoted sketches of 2021.

I Think You Should Leave Season 2 is coming to Netflix on July 6! Until then? Here's some of the GREATEST HITS from Season 1.@samrichardson pic.twitter.com/4D8PpK5df3

— Netflix Is A Joke (@NetflixIsAJoke) June 8, 2021

Netflix Is a Joke Festival Is Happening in 2022

June 7, 2021
News
comedy festival, netflix, netflix is a joke fest

One of the first major comedy festivals to get taken away by COVID-19 was what was supposed to be LA’s next big comedy festival, Netflix Is a Joke Festival. They had all sorts of big time headliners and plenty of their handpicked talent lined up for dozens and dozens of shows set for spring 2020.

Of course, that didn’t happen and seemingly, we were unsure of the fate of the festival when it the whole thing was scrapped as lockdown took hold in America.

Now, Netflix is aiming for Apr. 29th-May 8th of 2022, ostensibly just over two years from the original date for the actual, inaugural Netflix Is a Joke Festival. No line-up is announced as of yet, but trust that with several months time and it being Netflix footing the bill, it’s will very likely big and, by then, you might not even need a mask to watch a comedy show indoors.

Get more info at netflixisajokefest.com

Bo Burnham Rises to the Challenge of Making a Pandemic Era Comedy Special with “Inside”

June 1, 2021
News
bo burnham, comedy special, netflix

At the beginning of lockdown, the live in-person element of comedy that is so vital to the art form disappeared leaving no clue as to when or if it would ever come back. Immediately, the absurdist questioning of what live comedy could even be without it had to not only be entertained, but faced and dealt with by every comedic performer everywhere in the world.

Many comedians took to Zoom, IG Live, Twitch, drive-in theaters/pop-ups, etc. to try and salvage/reimagine what the form could be to several varying degrees of success. There was undoubtedly a feeling that live comedy had to figure out what it would do in 2035 right on the spot of March/April 2020. Despite the misanthropic and existential protestations of comedians declaring that “comedy is dead”, live comedy lived on through trailblazers, pioneers, and the super clever.

Bo Burnham encapsulates all three of those distinctions.

He reaffirmed that with his latest comedy special, Inside. Off the top, it’s a staggeringly magnificent work just from how it has an undeniably epic expanse both in aesthetic and content while all coming from Bo’s mind and his physical limitations as the sole person on the production to going through a Campbell-esque hero’s journey all within a single room.

The irony of Bo’s humble beginnings of doing a bunch of songs by himself in a room over several months and then returning to them, albeit with a cinematic scope and a global pandemic and reckoning at hand, isn’t lost on us. Perhaps, that’s an overarching, thematic bit in of itself? If anything, the evolution of Bo’s journey as a comedian, a content creator, a director, and, most importantly, as a person all coalesce here in what is such a thoroughly human meditation on what 2020/2021 has been like through Bo’s lens of super clever songs, transitions, and gorgeous lighting.

Bo’s collection of tunes and asides cover so many facets of what we all went through last year. He goes from a personal level in regards to his own anxiety and depression to the global anxieties of what COVID-19 hath wrought and the shaking of the world’s soul in regards to its systemic problems regarding race, precarity, and the unprecedented levels of isolation. There’s a rawness and vulnerability that comes with Inside too, both literally and figuratively, with moments of very personal confessions of his mental state and in a shaggy Bo dancing and posing in just his underwear.

Bo Burnham’s Inside is very much what a comedy special as a performance art exhibit in art museum could be at it’s very best and we deeply love it for that.

We know you’re sick of being inside, but please do watch this as Bo Burnham: Inside is streaming on Netflix right now right here.

Bo Burnham Is Coming Out With His Own DIY Special, Made During COVID-19

April 28, 2021
News
bo burnham, comedy special, netflix

When it comes to conceptual comedy, especially when it comes to doing it in a comedy special, Bo Burnham is one of the most imaginative and skilled comedians around today in that regard. what. still stands, even now, as one of the more innovative works of comedy in the entire history of comedy.

So, with the obvious challenges that the COVID-19 has presented with people having to be distanced and masked and gathering, especially in the way that live comedy is traditionally presented, Burnham, we think, could probably dream something up that would work.

Thus, he is just wrapping up such a special called Inside that he made entirely by himself without a crew or audience (as opposed to most other comedy specials that have been made in this time including Sam Morrill, Nate Bargatze, Colin Quinn, Tiffany Haddish’s They Ready). There’s a bit of a teaser that reveals Bo solo at a piano in a real dramatic light, but nothing much else.

Burnham’s last special was in 2016, so this small tidbit is more than enough to look forward to seeing billboards around town leading up to, possibly, another trailer, to, eventually, the release of the special (which will be a date TBD). Also, it will be his the first special since Eighth Grade, directing Chris Rock’s Tamborine, and his great role in the Oscar nominated A Promising Young Woman, and that wondering where Bo’s creativity is now even makes Inside even more enticing.

hi. i made a new special. it was filmed by me, alone, without a crew or an audience, over the course of the past year. it is almost finished. i hope you like it. pic.twitter.com/5a59IUrzVj

— Bo Burnham (@boburnham) April 28, 2021

Master of None Season 3 Is Apparently Centered on Lena Waithe and Called “Moments in Love”

April 26, 2021
News
Lena waithe, master of none, naomi ackie, netflix, season 3

An entire four years will have passed since the arrival of season 2 of Master of None and this impending third. In that time, Aziz Ansari, co-creator and the show’s star (up until now) got embroiled in #MeToo controversy, released a very strategic response and apology in the form of his last stand-up special, and has opted to not be the center of the third season.

This teaser, just released today, just offers a bit of demystification to a recent announcement that new episodes of Master of None were coming soon and they were going to focus on a story co-written and co-starring Lena Waithe, who has played Denise in past seasons of the show. More specifically, this new batch would come under the banner of Master of None presents “Moments in Love”. From the teaser, we see that it follows a relationship, not unlike the very first season, between Lena and Naomi Ackie and all the moments, little and big, that comprise a deeply connected relationship in these times.

This is an undeniably unexpected turn for the show, but it’s also undeniably intriguing. There is a rise in lesbian love stories in the zeitgeist (Portrait of a Lady on Fire, The World to Come, Mythic Quest), but ones that involve two women of color are definitely not as present as their white or partially white counterparts. Aziz and Lena wrote this new Moments in Love portion of Master of None that will fill in said void. The deliciously cinematic showcase of such a rarely-seen-on-TV couple, especially with Lena’s award winning pen, is perhaps the right move for the show now that we’re in even deeper into a global reckoning than we were in 2017.

We shall see what Aziz and Lena hath wrought with all episodes of Master of None presents Moments In Love on May 23rd.

Watch Trailer for Nate Bargatze’s Latest Special Made During COVID Era “The Greatest Average American”

March 5, 2021
News
comedy special, nate bargatze, netflix, stand up comedy

The attempts at doing stand-up during COVID-19 have tried all sorts of things with varying levels of recklessness and/or safety. The prospect of making a comedy special or shooting any sort of comedy to be streamed or aired has forced all sorts of experiments with drive-in shows or performing in front of a wall of TVs or doing stand-up in an open field.

To imagine, a year ago, as COVID-19 took grasp, it was hard for any of us to imagine what live comedy in person would ever look like, much less what a Netflix special might look like.

Now, with the impending arrival of Nate Bargatze’s latest hour, which is always worth watching because of Nate’s charming, subtle, yet so sharply observed comedy, you can see a full on hour special with the entire audience masked and distanced from each other. It’s almost like we’re seeing a parallel universe or one from one of those alternative history series.

Go see for yourself in this trailer for Nate Bargatze: The Greatest Average American here.

Nate Bargatze’s “The Greatest Average American Special” to Drop on Netflix on Mar. 18th

February 17, 2021
News
comedy special, nate bargatze, netflix, stand up comedy

The flow of comedy specials that would come out isn’t where it used to be, especially at Netflix. Yet, just because they’re not kicking out two or even three specials a week doesn’t mean they’re out of the goods.

Nate Bargatze’s latest hour The Greatest Average American is set to come out before too long. Well, specifically, it’s about a month away with a premiere date of Thurs. Mar. 18th. The soothing, slow burn delivery of Bargatze coupled with his fascinating, out-of-left-field observations have always busted us up and it’s been really a treat to see Nate become one of the go-to comics at The Tonight Show and having his first hour on Netflix really raise Nate’s profile more so than it already have been.

Again, look for The Greatest Average American on Mar. 18th on Netflix at netflix.com/NateBargatzeTheGreatestAverageAmerican

Noah Baumbach Signs Deal to Exclusively Write/Direct Films at Netflix for Awhile

January 29, 2021
News
netflix, noah baumbach

(via Deadline)

Count this as both a sign of the times and a big win in favor of Netflix. Getting lauded filmmaker Noah Baumbach (Frances Ha, Greenberg, Mistress America) to exclusively have his talents at the streaming giant and nowhere else bumps up Netflix’s profile in the critical eye for original movies and means that you’ll very likely get to see any and all of Baumbach’s upcoming work on Netflix in tandem with seeing it in a theater (whenever that’ll be happen in 2021).

Baumbach’s last film, Marriage Story, rolled out in limited release (so it can be considered for the Oscars and other awards) and on Netflix and it would seem that will be the plan for Baumbach going forward for awhile. We wouldn’t be surprised to see other beloved indie filmmakers signing such deals at other streaming services since the fate of movie theaters remains uncertain (save for the now-Netflix-owned Egyptian Theatre).

There is such a backlog of big studio releases that will very likely dominate the multiplexes, even the ones that have dozens of screens, that will leave room for those critically acclaimed dramedies that are, usually, the only way comedy gets any sort of artistic reception these days.

All of that said, we do have a guarantee that Baumbach will be churning out movies in the not so distant future and that’s just one more little thing to look forward amidst the din of everything else right now.

Watch Rosamund Pike Tap Into Her Dark Side Again in Trailer for Dark Comedy “I Care A Lot”

January 18, 2021
News
i care a lot, netflix, rosamund pike, trailer

The level and speed of greed that we’ve been subjected to over the last five years is at such a degree that it’s going to take awhile before we get to measure the full extent of the damage done by those profiteering off of the inequality of the majority of the world.

Accordingly, we have and we shall get more stories, movies, etc. of these times as we will be getting in the upcoming dark comedy I Care A Lot starring the sort of Rosamund Pike that you saw in her breakout role in Gone Girl. From writer/director J Blakeson, Pike goes to a whole new level of cunning by bilking invalid geriatrics out of their assets and, of course, that doesn’t come without eventually running into very severe consequences (delightfully in the form of Peter Dinklage).

See for yourself in the first trailer for I Care a Lot here, then look for it to stream on Netflix on Fri. Feb. 19th.

 

Netflix to Release Extended/Remixed Version of Chris Rock’s Tamborine (Because Maybe They Don’t Have Very Many New Specials on Deck?)

January 4, 2021
News
chris rock, netflix, tamborine

Next Tuesday, we’ll get a new Netflix stand-up special.

Well, we will kind of get a new one.

Announced today, Chris Rock’s great 2018 special Tamborine will be getting a special extended cut to be released on Netflix. It’ll be called TOTAL BLACKOUT: The Tamborine Extended Cut and it’ll indeed feature jokes that were cut from the original special. For that alone, we are indeed looking forward to it (though it’s release is a curious case).

In fact, Rock himself describes it as a first-of-its-kind remixed special. That somewhat begs the question as to why Netflix and Rock are doing an extended version of a special from over two years ago. Tamborine was pretty well received (we loved it and kudos to Bo Burnham giving it a cinematic flair), but we suspect a “remixed” release is one of many tactics that streaming services and networks will be employing to keep producing content while having production on new specials/shows cancelled/paused/etc.

Also, as the pandemic rages on, the pace at which Netflix has been releasing comedy specials has ticked down very noticeably. At one point, you could almost count on two new comedy specials a week to drop on Netflix versus Natalie Palamides: NATE and London Hughes: To Catch a D*ck being the two that we remember coming out last month. Netflix did chop up their specials and churned out “Best of Stand Up 2020”, but there’s nothing new in there.

So, we can all look forward to TOTAL BLACKOUT: The Tamborine Extended Cut on Jan. 12th on Netflix and you can potentially look to more reimagining by Netflix and others on how they’ll keeping their place in stand-up comedy secure.

TOTAL BLACK OUT: The Tamborine Extended Cut is coming to Netflix on January 12th. @NetflixIsAJoke pic.twitter.com/QKsYtKCAZD

— Chris Rock (@chrisrock) January 4, 2021

Martin Scorsese and Fran Lebowitz Made “Pretend It’s A City”, a Comedy Special(?) for Netflix

December 28, 2020
News
fran lebowitz, martin scorsese, netflix

What makes a comedy special? Is it just simply having the network or streaming service behind it label it as such? Does it actually gaining critical acclaim for its humor count? Maybe the Golden Globes sticking in its comedy and/or musical category counts?

In any case, the boundaries of comedy specials get more and more blurred and comedy, as an art form, is getting all the better because of it.

Cue Netflix’s latest special(?) on deck, Pretend It’s A City. Directed and presented by legendary filmmaker Martin Scorsese, it features an on-going conversation between celebrated author and luminary Fran Lebowitz and Scorsese. One might not think that reads “comedy special” in the traditional sense on paper, but the trailer suggests a very humorous “in conversation” special that plays on the satirical philosophizing of Lebowitz and the metaphorical and literal lens of Martin Scorsese.

It’s not traditional stand-up or improv or sketch/characters, but the verve of Fran is admittedly enticing. Besides, Netflix’s last special was NATE, so they are definitely doing more than dipping their toes into deeper, uncharted waters with comedy.

See this all for yourself in the trailer for Pretend It’s A City here. Then, catch it next year/next week on Jan. 8th on Netflix.

History of Swear Words Trailer Shows Nic Cage to Be Joined by Sarah Silverman, Nikki Glaser, Jim Jeffries & More

December 22, 2020
News
elvis mitchell, history of sweaar words, jim jefferies, joel kim booster, netflix, nicolas cage, nikki glaser, patti harrison, sarah silverman

History of Swear Words will be the latest bit of edutainment from Netflix and, today, we got a little bit of a better sense what the split between the education and entertainment will be.

Certainly, tapping Nic Cage hosting a program about swearing is the spot on fun choice. Having an extensive panel that stretches from such luminaries as Elvis Mitchell to a whole row of comedians including Sarah Silverman, Jim Jefferies, Nikki Glaser, Joel Kim Booster, and Patti Harrison to linguistics experts does suggest a pretty good edutainment balance (i.e. this won’t entirely be Nicolas Cage screaming obscenities, but that’s certainly in there).

Get a look of what’s in store for History of Swear Words with this trailer, then look for it to start streaming on Tues. Jan. 5th, 2021 on Netflix.

Get Your First Look at the “Nicolas Cage’s History of Swear Words”

December 9, 2020
News
history of swear words, netflix, nicolas cage

There is something special to the exclamations of Nicolas Cage in any role he’s in. Even in one of the quieter movies he took on in his career, The Weather Man, there are some pretty perfect bits of cursing by Cage. The unhinged level that Cage can achieve is singular to his acting and is pretty much, as far as we can figure, the whole reason Mandy exists as a movie.

As this is the case, Netflix has ordered up an edutainment series on the history of swearing/cursing and has very logically tapped Nic Cage to be the host. Called Nicolas Cage’s History of Swear Words, you can see in this first look that he’s pretty perfect for this gig.

You’re already in, aren’t you? If so, look for Nic Cage’s History of Swear Words to stream starting Jan. 5th, 2021.

Black Mirror Creator Charlie Brooker Is Making a Netflix Mockumentary Comedy Special, “Death to 2020”

December 7, 2020
News
charlie brooker, Cristin Milioti, death to 2020, Diane Morgan, Hugh Grant, Joe Keery, leslie jones, lisa kudrow, netflix, samuel l jackson, teaser, tracey ullman

Without question, 2020 has been one of the worst years that anyone alive has been living. It will very likely be the worst year that many of us (who have many years of living ahead of them) will have lived through in our lifetime. COVID-19, Trump, climate change, and the uprisings from systemic/racial/misogynistic/classist/transphobic oppression have made 2020 a terribly tragic year on a historic level.

With that in mind, master of dystopia Charlie Brooker, creator of Black Mirror, is going to do a very special mockumentary style comedy special dedicated to how especially awful this year has been. Brooker is very aptly calling it Death to 2020.

Outside of it being a mockumentary Netflix “comedy event” and the cast including Samuel L. Jackson, Hugh Grant, Lisa Kudrow, Tracey Ullman, Leslie Jones, Diane Morgan, Cristin Milioti, and Joe Keery, there’s not very many other details to be had at this time as you can see in this teaser here.

As far as 2020 goes, it makes total sense that someone who is responsible for giving you nightmares about robotic dogs hunting humans to extinction would be doing a comedy special about this year.

 

Amy Poehler Primes You for Watching NATE

December 3, 2020
News
amy poehler, natalie palamides, nate, netflix, netflix is a joke

So, not all of us were lucky enough to catch Natalie Palamides‘ groundbreaking solo show NATE (read our thoughts on it here) develop in and around LA (mostly at the Lyric Hyperion, sometimes UCB) or catch it’s award winning runs at comedy festivals around the globe. Thankfully, NATE was made into a comedy special for Netflix for all the world to see, bust up laughing, and reckon with.

NATE is very likely unlike any comedy special you’ve ever seen or, if you’re a solo show aficionado, unlike any solo show you’ve seen. The complexities it presents and entangles itself in also get imbued on anyone watching and that’s a major facet of why it will be an artistic work to be remembered, especially in the annals of comedy history.

If you don’t what you’re in for, perhaps let executive producer Amy Poehler try and give you a bit of hint without really giving too much away (at the behest of the star of NATE).

Oh, in case you didn’t know, NATE is streaming now on Netflix.

Natalie Palamides’ Nate Is The Perfect Comedy Special to End 2020 With

December 1, 2020
News
comedy special, natalie palamides, nate, netflix

In terms of comedy specials, what would be an apt way to close out this year, this awful, insane, seemingly never-ending year? There may not be a consensus answer to that question, but we personally feel that the proper comedy special to end on would be something that’s equal parts absurd, cathartic, experimental, self-reflexive, hilarious, and poignant.

There is a plethora more of adjectives that can be thrown at Natalie Palamides’ solo show comedy special Nate-A One Man Show, but it’s a rare lightning rod of a comedy special that is very much the perfect cap, comedy wise, to put on 2020.

For several years, Palamides has brought some of the most innovative, bonkers, and delightfully disturbing characters to the stage and gaining more acclaim and become a perennial international comedy festival darling (both at Melbourne International Comedy Festival and Edinburgh Fringe Festival specifically). That includes this solo show developed with director Phil Burgers, Nate, where Palamides takes on the personage of “Nate”, a man wrestling with his toxic masculinity in a world that’s slowly kicking toxic masculinity to the curb. In this regard, Natalie really revels, in a legitimately edgy way (and not just because of the playful nudity), with presenting such a thing both critically and comedically in a solo show.

Palamides jovially runs towards discomfort and tension that comes from her thorough audience interaction during this “one-man” show, a rarity in any sort of comedy special. In fact, maybe only Todd Barry’s Crowd Work Tour had more play with the audience and even Todd didn’t physically wrestle an audience member or went through the most ridiculous demonstration of consent with the crowd.

Palamides’ dissection of the toxic male ego matched with her mischievousness from her background in clowning for this solo show is more than a just a holding up a mirror to society. Palamides forces the viewer to step into the world of this metaphorical mirror to see how insane it is, which is compounded by the fact that it is pretty much the very world we live in. Nate’s quest to find love and acceptance and lack of acknowledgement to his own pain feels both very starkly real and as ludicrous as Nate’s fake body hair that’s prominently displayed throughout the whole show.

As the audience for the taping is physically part of Nate’s quest to “express” himself as a man, there is a palpable engagement, both at the hysterical moments and the heavy moments (especially in regards to the concept of consent throughout the whole show) that hasn’t been seen in any comedy special that we can think of. Also, Natalie hilariously juxtaposes it with a pretty grand dick joke thanks to a very, very pliable, stretch dildo.

Executive producer Amy Poehler has a talking head clip before Nate starts explaining that some audiences have left confused and even mad, but also remarking, “that’s art, baby.” Though comedy has been a legitimate art form for decades now, the idea of it having art mentioned in the same breath seems to be still foreign. Thanks to specials like Nate and fearless, wild, imaginative performers like Natalie Palamides, such a notion won’t be strange for much longer. If that doesn’t give you a certain hope that we need at the end of this year, we don’t know what else to tell you.

Nate-A One Man Show is now streaming on Netflix.

The Comedy Bureau Field Report Ep. 35: Chris Gethard & Community Building

November 25, 2020
News, The Comedy Bureau Field Report
beautiful anonymous, best comedy album, chappelle's show, chris gethard, dave chappelle, grammys, netflix, planet scum

Chris Gethard has not only built his career in comedy on his own terms, but Gethard has also built beautiful communities around so much of his work. From his public access days to the cable days of The Chris Gethard Show all the way to his current podcast, Beautiful Anonymous, there is something special about the folks that rally around Gethard and his endeavors. This includes devoted fans as well as other comedians that Chris wants to shine a light on.

Gethard zooms with TCB’s Jake Kroeger for a deep conversation about the crucial importance of community during 2020 in comedy and especially with Beautiful Anonymous, a show uniquely equipped to offer connection at a time in history where we’re more isolated from each other than ever. Also, they dish out “hot” takes on 2021 Grammy nominees for Best Comedy Album and Dave Chappelle not getting paid over streaming of Chappelle’s Show.

Follow Chris at ChrisGeth.com, listen/subscribe to Beautiful Anonymous wherever you get your podcasts, check out Planet Scum here, and get tickets to Chris Gethard’s Live Improvised Special on 12/4 here.

The Comedy Bureau @thecomedybureau across platforms and please, please support TCB via GoFundMe, Patreon, or on Venmo (@jakekroeger).
Produced by Jake Kroeger
Music by Brian Granillo
Artwork by Andrew Delman and KT

Natalie Palamides’ “Nate” Special Gets First Teaser

November 23, 2020
News
amy poehler, comedy special, natalie palamides, nate, netflix, solo show

One of the most groundbreaking, revolutionary shows we’ve ever seen (and we do not throw around such a claim lightly or frequently at all) was Natalie Palamides’ Nate. Her critical acclaimed, award winning solo show had Natalie taking on the role of a toxic masculine guy, Nate, reckoning with his toxic masculinity.

As always with the case with Palamides, it’s a wild journey that really goes deep, pushes boundaries, and is a rare comedy solo show that can genuinely be described as breathtaking (and it was that way for the several times we saw Nate while it was being developed).

Thankfully, Amy Poehler took a liking to Natalie and Nate and brought it to Netflix to be made into special for the world to see and we have no doubt that it will be a lightning rod of a comedy special. We truly cannot wait for it.

You can just a tiny, but very enticing taste of what’s to come with Nate in this teaser here, then look forward it to stream on Netflix on Tues. Dec. 1st.

If You Still Need an Absurdist Break from Reality, Enjoy Aunty Donna’s “Everything’s a Drum” (and Their “Big Ol’ House of Fun” Sketch Show)

November 12, 2020
News
absurdist comedy, aunty donna, broden kelly, mark bonanno, netflix, sam lingham, sketch comedy, zachary ruane

Though we all knew that Trump would deny that he lost and seemingly refuse to leave The White House if that were the case, the horrifically taut tension of 2020 is still very much straining the entire world.

So, we’d like to suggest a nice little break for some self-care in the form of the peak absurdist musical/sketch comedy of the fantastic Australian sketch group Aunty Donna comprised of Mark Bonanno, Broden Kelly, Zachary Ruane, and Sam Lingham. Specifically, this song “Everything’s a Drum” offers up one of the more sensationally ridiculous sketches we’ve seen in some time.

If you dig that, you might want to hop on over to Netflix to catch their entire six episode run of Aunty Donna’s Big Ol House of Fun that just started streaming this week. Just like they’ve done in any of their internationally touring live stage shows in the past, Aunty Donna is pretty fearless in how silly and daft they go and really reap the rewards for doing so.

Also, Ed Helms is actually is on camera in the show as an EP if you need more convincing for some reason to go binge it right now.

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