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New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny
#26

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

Quote: (09-29-2017 08:14 PM)Roosh Wrote:  

Gina Brillon


The comments on the YouTube page are disturbing, especially from the thirsty guys:

"Damn she is gorgeous! !! I saw her on the queen Latifah show tonight. Once I saw her I had to know about her!!"

"shes thick and fine as fuck GODDDAMN.. how can i be down"

[Image: fuckthat.gif]

"Action still preserves for us a hope that we may stand erect." - Thucydides (from History of the Peloponnesian War)
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#27

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

Bert Kreischer is another fun fucker.


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#28

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

Social Justice and PC was destined to wipe out comedy.

You can hardly do bland comedy nowadays.

Even a guy riffing about his crazy girlfriend that he loves will get attacked by feminists and SJWs.

The new generation is so afraid of insulting anyone that the only targets they have is Trump. Good comedy has to be at least somewhat edgy nowadays. You cannot even do the old Seinfeld standup routines that he used to do in the 1980s and 90s, because those things would be way too bland nowadays. So to be funny they need to make fun of men, of women, of crazy things happening, of religions and crazy political convictions. The social justice crowd is so easy to make fun of, because they are batshit crazy, but no one dares mentioning their name.

Frankly comedy in the US may indeed die and be replaced by Idiocracy kind dumbed-down humor or it will be so lame that hardly anyone will ever watch it.
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#29

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

The stuff I used to watch after school on public TV back in the late 80s/early 90s would never be allowed on TV today!

The Bigot Family (from the show Bizarre): Irish father, Polish wife, Italian son, Jewish daughter and black son-in-law



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#30

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

The last good group of comics was the "Tough Crowd" era of comedians. Patrice O'Neal, Bill Burr, Jim Norton, Doug Stanhope, Corey Holcomb, Jim Florentine, etc.

This new group of "comics" is completely unwatchable.

"A happy man is a happy everybody else in his life."

"Ladies if you want to make your man happy, think about what makes you happy and do exactly the opposite."

"Hey how you doin' and I hope you know that I'm an upgrade for your stupid daughter." - Patrice O'Neal
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#31

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

Totally on point. My favorites are Patrice Oneal and Billl Burr before he got cucked by his wife (She now checks all his jokes if they are ok...)
I guess the only thing we have is hours upon hours of old comedy online but as far as present comedy goes, It really reflect this culture of ours..
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#32

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

I have no idea whether this comedy is dated or not. I still think it is hilarious. During the 80's comedy went crazy, and every pizza parlour had a comedy night, and there were comedy clubs everywhere.

New York, Boston, LA. and San Francisco were ground zero of the comedy renaissance at the time.

I lived in SF in the 80's and saw all the great acts as they came through town. Some of these no one knows anymore, and even some of the ones you do know, you can't imagine being funny. Jay Leno for instance.

I saw Rob Schneider (knew him socially, yeah, he looked like that and did a great Elvis impression. Sweet guy.),
[Image: 2746c0bf92ef923c051d6317e7bd0f2f--rob-schneider-snl.jpg]

Tom Kenny (Voice of Spongebob and excellent comedian. Knew him too, it was a small town.),

[Image: ccsu_tal_01_0157_04.jpg?width=640&height=360&crop=true]

Dana Carvey (Church Lady),

[Image: morgue03_carvey_on_stage.jpg]


Ellen DeGeneres (an excellent comedian back then even though she is a shudderfest now.),

[Image: morgue03-degeneres.jpg]



Dana Gould (Simpsons writer and like Edgar Allen Poe of comedy, a maniac),


[Image: Dana-young-418x500.jpeg]

Margaret Cho came a little later, and was actually funny at first,

[Image: morgue03_cho_headshot.jpg]

and of course Robin Williams, who everyone saw, everyone met at least once, because he was everywhere.

[Image: morgue03_williams_durst.jpg]


His style has spread out into the culture, and many have been influenced by him, and taken it to the next level, so it is hard to understand how totally original he was at the time.

He would come onstage and ask anyone to call out a Shakespeare play, Hamlet!, and then a current issue, Nuclear War!, and then do a fucking improvised version of Hamlet, playing all the parts, on the subject of nuclear war. A genius. "Look, Einstein's ghost!" "What have you done with my formula?"

But ANYWAY, the point is, there were sooo many comedian in San Francisco at the time, people you may never even have heard of, who were as funny or funnier than the ones who ended up being famous, like Bob Goldthwaite or Greg Proops.

Paula Poundstone is one, and is the exception that proves the rule about female comedians. I won't link to her because she deserves a thread, that is how good she was, was, not now, now she is another SJW nightmare. Suffice it to say, I have never seen anyone who was better or more comfortable improvising and talking to the audience, it was almost like her prepared material was holding her back.

So, forget her for now in this regional history lesson, I want to focus on two guys you will never hear of ever in your lives who completely rocked rooms as well or better as any of the stars born in the city by the bay.

First up, Geoff Bolt. This guy made audiences convulse to near riots. I have only found one video of him that is any good, and it is only a shadow of his Boltness. I think the audience was an LA audience, and had no real idea how good he was.

Bolt was an improv actor who made the transition to standup, and had no real jokes and few punchlines. He was your standard 70's guy, mustachioed and looking sensitive, sharing, caring. And his shtick was that he was an absolute psycho. Pretending to be sensitive and New Age, he really hated everyone, his family, his kids, people in general, and Mickey Mouse in particular.

His whole act was a mask of sanity slipping, pretending to be nice but really homicidal, pretending to be a sweet kid's performer, but really hating his wife after a recent breakup.

Could you imagine this type of guy getting traction now? Hateful, misogynistic, whatever. But at the time, there was room for the Bolts of the world in SF. Remember, this vid barely does him justice.







The second guy to introduce is Bob Rubin. He essentially outclassed everyone. He was to comedy what Magritte was to Realism, an absurdist, surrealist of the highest order. I saw him live, I listened to him on radio, and his shtick was that he was a Southern boy who had been driven insane by reality, always trying to get back to his roots (Them hasssshhh browns. Fluffy.)

There is no accounting for Rubin, and he only would have been appreciated and nurtured by a place like SF in the 80's, where they made room for oddballs, and took pleasure in nurturing them and appreciating them, which goes to show, before things turn sour, there is even value in places like the San Francisco Bay Area.

There was a club in 80's SF that used to be a storefront, and the stage was in the corner, so one half of the wall at the back of the stage was a brick wall, and the other was a window onto the street, so you could see what was going on outside. I saw Rubin, in the middle of his act, run offstage, out the door, and out into the street, flag down a bus and almost get run over, jump on the bus, and wave to the audience as the bus went down the street. That was how he ended his act that night.

Mullet, red and white vest, speaking absolute madness that only starts to make sense if you hang in there. Meaningless catch phrases. He might have been the funniest and most characteristically San Francisco comedian of his time.

Many will hate him. You will only like him if you like a line like this:

Quote:Quote:

Ever have a piece of meat in front of you, it's not cooked right, you're not that hungry, you're staring at it, and sooner or later you can't help but daydream, ohh, wonder what it would be like if I took this piece of meat, several other pieces of meat, and I started making my own cows from scratch!

Again, this was filmed in LA, so they have little idea what to make of him. Still, captures the spirit of "The Old Rube." He convulsed audiences, and stimulated them beyond the realm of what they felt they were capable.






Zero social justice, maximum freedom. That is why comedians are having a hard time today, they are living under the opposite conditions.

“The greatest burden a child must bear is the unlived life of its parents.”

Carl Jung
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#33

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

^^^^^
[Image: youtheman.gif]
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#34

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

@debeguiled: awesome summary mate you totally nailed the spirit of that time. When I moved to L.A. in the early 90s I had never really cared about stand up comedy but that quickly changed when I realized the caliber of the local talent. Boy were we spoiled back then and the more out there and abusive the delivery the better!

I haven't watched a stand up comedian for years now, the only exception being Bill Burr who's gone down hill quickly since he got married. Balls safely stored in his wife's purse apparently.

I think every era can be appropriately judged by its comedians, poets, writers, and popular musicians (there are always small active niches in music fortunately). Based solely on that however we are living in very dark times right now.

*******************************************************************
"The sheep pretend the wolf will never come, but the sheepdog lives for that day."
– Lt. Col. Dave Grossman
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#35

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

Vic Dunlop from 1983:



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#36

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

Quote: (11-22-2017 08:27 AM)redpillage Wrote:  

@debeguiled: awesome summary mate you totally nailed the spirit of that time. When I moved to L.A. in the early 90s I had never really cared about stand up comedy but that quickly changed when I realized the caliber of the local talent. Boy were we spoiled back then and the more out there and abusive the delivery the better!

I haven't watched a stand up comedian for years now, the only exception being Bill Burr who's gone down hill quickly since he got married. Balls safely stored in his wife's purse apparently.

I think every era can be appropriately judged by its comedians, poets, writers, and popular musicians (there are always small active niches in music fortunately). Based solely on that however we are living in very dark times right now.

You must have had access to the Comedy Store and the Ice House back then when it was hopping with talent. I'm jealous. Would be interested to hear who you got to see live.

“The greatest burden a child must bear is the unlived life of its parents.”

Carl Jung
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#37

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny





“As long as you are going to be thinking anyway, think big.” - Donald J. Trump

"I don't get all the women I want, I get all the women who want me." - David Lee Roth
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#38

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

Jimmy Carr is pretty good:




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#39

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

I remember in the past having watched some american stand up comedy from guys like Seinfeld, Steve Martin, Chris Rock, Dave Chappelle and thanks to the forum the amazing Patrice O'Neal. All of them are very good. I am not familiar with the new guys, but sure they are a reflex of the kind of humour or lack of it in their sjw, pc and digital generation.

Never a song aged so good as Bad Religions 1990 song "21st century digital boy".






But to anyone who understands Russian, these Ukrainian guys from Kvartal 95 are simply hilarious. This is left and right non nonsense and no political correctness. Nobody escapes from them, whether is Putin or Poroshenko or Klitschko, fascists and communists, Jews and Oligarchs, poors and riches, gopniks and instagram sluts.....



















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#40

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

I find Sebastian Maniscalco pretty funny, wish he did more stand up. Only heard about him recently, if you have netflix one of his shows is on there.




















Quote: (11-15-2014 09:06 AM)Little Dark Wrote:  
This thread is not going in the direction I was hoping for.
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#41

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

Probably the last tome SNL was fuuny, but look here, we have social commentary and clean humor and this clip is still funny. SJWs need to take notes.




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#42

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

Check out Owen Benjamin. Really funny guy

https://youtu.be/FRWTwG6HKzA
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#43

New generation of stand-up comedians are not funny

Trevor Noah is top class
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