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Jim Geschke's avatar

A lot to digest here, James.

First, comedy is an art form. Essentially, like other art forms, you are touching someone emotionally ... in this case, the "funny bone" trigger. And there are so many types of "funny." There's the laugh-out-loud funny, the bemused funny, the thought-provoking cleverness form, the offensive ("I shouldn't be laughing, but ..." form), etc. Where does, say, Jonathan Swift lie in this taxonomy? The Marx Brothers? Lucille Ball? Bill Hicks? Bill Burr?

2. Linguistic economy. There's gold in this lesson to the comic. In fact, this is something writers of all forms should strive towards. Economy, or "cutting the fat" begets clarity, and clarity is paramount in any kind of communication.

3. Critical thinking ... both on the part of the performer and the audience. Your timing is an essential element in the process. You have a clever twist on a topic, but the distance between your timing and allowing the audience to catch on or catch up is crucial, I'm sure. That moment of silence between your line and the audience response I suppose is the difference between killing and bombing.

4. Failure. Everyone needs to fail before achieving success regardless of what they do.

5. An aside. Can you provide your definition of "fearless?" Because I find a lot of nobility in the comic's courage to take on dangerous topics. To that end, I always admired Patrice O'Neal (R.I.P.)

-- Jim

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