I personally feel its the best medium for comedy. I have plenty of comics I really like as well.

  • IWW4@lemmy.zip
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    6 months ago

    I love it. When the comedian gets the room going it is just incredible. I like to do at least three shows a year.

      • IWW4@lemmy.zip
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        6 months ago

        Oh god no. By Do I mean I attend a comedy club as an audience member.

        Hell if you sit close enough too the stage the comic will work you into the act.

        We will do that on occasion just be make it more fun.

    • Hjalmar@feddit.nu
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      6 months ago

      Encouraging. I would love to try doing it sometime, but I realise I’m probably really gonna screw up

      • its_kim_love@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        6 months ago

        You will bomb. Probably more often than not for the first few months. Eventually you’ll feel like you have a rhythm, and then you’ll start bombing again. But every laugh you get will feel like a drug.

  • WhiteOakBayou@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    I like the kind that is either non stop puns or long weird/funny stories that have lots of setup for relatively fewer, but larger, payoffs.

  • HiddenLayer555@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    As I mature, I find myself thinking very lowly of standup in general despite watching a lot of it when I was an edgy 18/19 year old. When I try to get back into it now I just see the various ethical problems with their jokes and that makes it not funny for me.

    White standup comics get free reign to drop racist dog whistles and if you criticize them on it they get all snippy with you. The most popular “genre” of white stand up comedy still seems to be “I went to a [insert culture here] restaurant and here are my disrespectful and stereotype enforcing hijinks” or even “I went to [insert COUNTRY here] and will now proceed to joke about how their culture is different from us.” I can only hope the whole thing is made up and they’re not that atrocious in real life, though the vast majority of service staff seem to have stories about famous comics treating them like shit so I wouldn’t be surprised.

    Even a lot of ethnic standup comics portray themselves as the victims of racism in one joke but then have no problems using stereotypes of another ethnicity in the very next joke.

    Also standup definitely seems to have an air of being attended by older generations who find insulting the younger generations funny. Things like participation trophies (which was a boomer idea by the way, the kids aren’t planning school competitions or buying the prizes) or terms like “snowflake” seems to have gotten into boomer rethoric partly because of standup. Reactionary takes about progressive social movements like veganism or car-free living are also the norm because I assume they know most of the people who watch them are the type to get mad at how other people choose to live their lives. Standup in general seems to have a “let’s make fun of anything people are doing that’s different from how it was before because we don’t want to do it that way and need validation that we’re not assholes on the wrong side of history” attitude. Or they’ll just make fun of random people living their lives, I remember watching a comic on YouTube doing a whole segment making fun of people who swim laps in hotel pools because it annoys him, like bro mind your own damn business.

    Occasionally a comic will try to earn brownie points by saying the most superficial shit about a major societal problem and then act like they singlehandedly solved it. Bonus points if they’re talking about another country’s problems which the West fucking caused.

    I’m not saying all standup is like this or all standup comics are racist or reactionary, but I am saying there are very few long running standup shows/podcasts with none of these problems.

    • z3rOR0ne@lemmy.ml
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      6 months ago

      I have felt the same for a while. I have had to heavily rethink my relationship with standup comedy, because I think it can be such a powerful medium, but as I’ve gotten older, I recognize that comedy can reflect much of the bigotry and hatreds of their time.

      It’s obviously more nuanced than that, as comedy can also reflect joys, insights, and the general societal consciousness of the time.

      With that said there are still a few stand up comedy that I can say I don’t feel bad laughing at these days. So here’s a short list that if you’re so inclined, I’d take a look at:

      • Tig Notaro
      • Benny Feldman
      • Noam Shuster
      • Hannah Gadsby
      • Maria Bamford

      I’d elaborate on each of them a bit, but I’d rather simply let their comedy speak for themselves.

      EDIT: typo, wording