comedy

First shows of 2011

The Magic Meathands have announced their first two shows of the New Year and I’ll be in both of them! These are live comedy shows, completely improvised (no script!) based off suggestions from you, the audience. We do a combination of games (short form) and long form scenarios that build unpredictable characters and worlds.

Friday, January 7, 8 PM, $10: MI’s Westside Comedy Theater
Also featuring The Waterbrains and Mission IMPROVable!
1323-A Santa Monica Promenade, Santa Monica, CA 90401
(In the alley between 3rd and 4th Streets)

Saturday, January 8, 8 PM, $7: Family Friendly Comedy Night at The Spot
Also featuring Jump Start!
4455 Overland Ave., Culver City, CA 90230

See you there!

Double dose of holiday meat

The holidays are here! If you’re going to survive all the fruit cake, you best stock up on some laughter. Fortunately, the Magic Meathands have you covered with a show-packed finale to 2010!

This weekend, we’re performing twice! Get out your daily planners and make your notes. Here are the details:

And then just like that, the Meathands’ 2010 shows will be over! So don’t miss your chance to see us live in person. (Sheesh, I’m only just now getting used to writing the year on my checks.)

We’ll also post a few more videos, so keep your eyes peeled!

Pants: A Nightmare

Magic Meathands sketch comedy video #3!

This one has a whole lot of me in it. I wrote it, I co-directed it (with fellow Meathand Kevin Callahan who was a great help in breaking this sucker down so we had a super-efficient shoot), I starred in it, I wrote the music (or as I like to call it, sonic enhancement), I edited it. So there’s me all over. But it would simply not exist at all without the Magic Meathands. The fantastic camera work is by Wendy J.N. Lee (she also provided invaluable technical consulting). I absolutely love the freaky taunting by Shane Boroomand, Lara Sterling, Travis McElroy, Kevin Callahan and Mary Benedict. And of course Nikki Turner as Mom. Getting her costuming to work was way harder than I expected but it came out way better than I expected so it was way worth it. Way.

I hope you enjoy it. If so, please comment, give it thumbs up at YouTube, favorite it, forward it on, and all those other things people do on the Interwebs.

Check back next week for the fourth and final video from our first batch of videos.

And there’s more to come! Yesterday, we shot another batch, and again one of them is written by me. So it’s off to the land of editing with me once again. You’ll probably start seeing the second wave in December or January.

Archives:
Magic Meathands Video #2: Fun and Games
Magic Meathands Video #1: Eddie the Enforcer

Everybody’s laughing for the weekend

This Saturday night is the Magic Meathands‘ popular Family Friendly Night, and I’ll be there performing with my fellow hands of meat. Opening for us will be Jump Start, an improv group based in Redondo Beach.

$7 gets you in for the whole night! Only $3 if you’re 12 or under!

The show starts at 8 PM at The Spot Cafe & Lounge in Culver City! See you there!

Also be sure to check out our new sketch comedy videos, the Magic Meathands Originals at the group’s YouTube channel!

The Drive Home

A little actor/improviser shop talk for you, in preparation for tonight’s show.

Reminder to self: Thinking of funnier/cleverer/betterer things I should’ve said on the drive home from a show or shoot is a waste of time.

This is fairly common among performers. I’ve done it plenty of times. I hear others talking about doing it themselves. It can feel like constructive analysis, and to a point it might be helpful for the future. But it’s very easy to get carried away and the truth of it is that it comes from a place of insecurity. Because this only happens when I feel like I wasn’t good enough.

Let me be clear, I’m not advocating blind self-congratulations devoid of the reality of how a show or shoot actually went. It’s important and helpful to look at choices made and see how they effected performances.

But when a funnier line pops into your head on the drive home, and your mind plays over and over how you should’ve said that line instead of what you actually said, that doesn’t really serve any purpose beyond heading to crazy town. For improvisation, when every show is completely different and the odds of the exact same situation presenting itself again is incredibly small, it’s basically a useless activity.

For example: OK, the next time I’m playing Hannibal Lecter who has to babysit a monkey’s carrot garden, when the baby carrots scream for more ice cream, I will say “I’ll make carrot cake out of you!” because it references that earlier scene about the carrot cake maker. Huh? That scene is never ever going to happen again! Why am I wasting my time dissecting it line by line? Unless I’m going to adapt it into something scripted like a sketch or short film, re-writing or punching up dialogue to something so temporary doesn’t help me become a stronger performer.

So how to shut off the loop in my head? Instead I focus on slightly broader questions. Was I listening? Was I open to the first opportunity to explore something potentially funny or interesting? Did I make strong choices? How were my characters? When did the laughs happen? Was I able to heighten or at least repeat what I was doing when laughs happened? This line of thinking is much more constructive as long as I answer honestly for myself.

If that doesn’t work, turn on the radio real loud and sing along even louder as a weird character with a strange but very specific voice – but make sure you get the words exactly right. Maybe you’ll find a new character you can use, and it breaks you out of that cyclical thinking. And maybe you’ll make the person in the next car laugh.

Let me know if you have any tricks for this. I’d love to hear them.

Laughter for Post-Election Blues

Depending on how today’s elections go, you might need to soothe the pain of loss. Or to celebrate the victories. Laughter is kind of a multi-purpose cure-all.

This Friday, I’m performing with the improv comedy group the Magic Meathands at the Westside Comedy Theater in Santa Monica! Following us will be the very funny Waterbrains and the theater’s own Mission IMPROVable. You can get in to see all 3 groups for just $10.

Click on the Hand o’ Meat for the Facebook event listing!

Time: Friday, November 5, 8:00pm – 11:00pm
Location: Westside Comedy Theater, 1323-A 3rd Street Promenade, Santa Monica, 90401
Price: $10.00

Zzzzz…

Can’t blog…

Sleeping…

But I’ll see you tonight ready and rarin’ to go for the Magic Meathands show with Jump Start at Culver City’s The Spot Café!

Our monthly Family Friendly show starts at 8 PM and is only $7!

2 Magic Meathands shows – Thursday and Saturday

Double your pleasure with… two Magic Meathands shows this week! Both with me!

November 12, Thursday night at 8 PM, it’s our weekly Comedy Cafe at The Spot, 4455 Overland Ave., Culver City 90230. Only $5, and you get lots of laughs in return. There’s also yummy food available for your consumption.

Then on Saturday, November 14, at 8 PM, it’s our brand new family friendly show! We’ll be teaming up with the improv troupe Jumpstart for a special all-ages show. So bring the kids! Bring the senior citizens! Bring everyone in between! That’s also at The Spot, 4455 Overland Ave., Culver City 90230. Admission: $7.

Hope to see you at one or both of the shows!