I haven't looked at this yet, but I read about it in the Hollywood Reporter. It supposedly teaches comedy lessons to hopefuls i.e. us.
http://www.comedycentral.com/shows/cras ... ndex.jhtml
tell me if it's lame
Comedy Central offers comedy lessons on line
Discussion of the art and craft of improvisation.
Moderators: arclight, happywaffle, bradisntclever
- TheMailroom Offline
- Posts: 15
- Joined: February 8th, 2007, 10:26 am
- Location: Austin
- Contact:
So far, it's lame. It's only for standups, first of all. Second, they feel the need to try and make it funny, and it's just not.
But hidden within the one I watched was one good lesson, which was "write what you know, and write a lot." But you have to wade through a lot to pick that up.
But hidden within the one I watched was one good lesson, which was "write what you know, and write a lot." But you have to wade through a lot to pick that up.
PGraph plays every Thursday at 8pm! https://www.hideouttheatre.com/shows/pgraph/
- DollarBill Offline
- Posts: 1282
- Joined: March 7th, 2006, 12:57 pm
- Location: Chicago, IL
- Contact:
Last night on HBO they gave Seinfeld a stand-up comedian award. But before they gave it to him they basically had a panel discussion with him and chris rock and gary shandling and robert klein. It was hosted by Anderson Cooper.
Anyway, you could probably learn a lot about stand-up from watching that, but I think the only real way to learn would be to do it. A LOT.
Anyway, you could probably learn a lot about stand-up from watching that, but I think the only real way to learn would be to do it. A LOT.
They call me Dollar Bill 'cause I always make sense.
- TheMailroom Offline
- Posts: 15
- Joined: February 8th, 2007, 10:26 am
- Location: Austin
- Contact:
Write Alot
Yeah, that's exactly what I picked up too. It definitly is all about practicing though.
- Asaf Offline
- Posts: 2770
- Joined: October 23rd, 2006, 4:45 pm
- Location: somewhere without a car
- Contact:
The guy who hosts this thing does not have enough charisma, especially when he tries to be funny. I think also the whole classroom atmosphere detracts. They should have a guy in front of a screen talking directly to the camera and intercutting clips of comedians doing those bits as case studies, rather than having him act it out.
He is better when he is serious but there is a lot of "no, duh" kind of information in there combined with information that does not help on a vague, non-interactive level.
He is better when he is serious but there is a lot of "no, duh" kind of information in there combined with information that does not help on a vague, non-interactive level.