Cool People

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Back in the day - and I’m talking about 25 years ago - if you were an aspiring comedian, and you lived in Milwaukee, you didn’t have a lot of options. There was a handful of dismal open mics in the most depressing rooms you could imagine. One of these was Wimpy’s Hunt Club, which was a corner bar on North Avenue, the sort of place that retired alcoholics would go to drink up their pensions. Comics would stand on a plank set up at the end of the bar and do their bits to heckles, at best, or, more usually, indifference. There was another open mic in the decaying ballroom of the infamous old Ambassador Hotel on Wisconsin Avenue - the hotel’s claim to fame being that it was the site where serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer did in one of his first victims. There were no actual comedy clubs at all.

I was in the audience at a lot of these shows - being a big fan of comedy, but too frightened to take the stage myself, I got to live vicariously by watching a lot of very raw comics struggle to eke out some yuks in the very worst of circumstances. If I had managed to work up the nerve to get on stage then, I’d probably still be dealing with some serious post-traumatic stress issues.

Not one of the dozens of would-be comics I used to watch ever went on to make a career of comedy. Not one - except for Dobie Maxwell. Dobie was a very hungry kid at the time, growing up in some very harsh circumstances without a lot of breaks - his parents were gang members who abandoned him to be raised by his grandparents. Through sheer force of will he fashioned himself into a nationally touring headliner with an aggressive and relentless delivery and the sort of mind that knows how to turn a thought into a real joke - not a common talent. If he reminds you a little of Rodney Dangerfield, that’s not an accident - Dangerfield has been been Dobie’s comedy hero since the first days I’ve known him.

Tuesday night, Dobie gets his first national television spot. He’ll be appearing on The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson. It’s a break he’s earned. Nobody has paid more dues than Dobie. He’s had no shortage of hardship over the years, including two auto accidents, both of which came close to killing him - the hazards of being a touring road comic. Some of us have been following his career over the decades. Now, at last, the whole country will get its first look at him. I’m thinking that with the world in the state it’s in, he just might be the sort of comic voice we need right now.

Congratulations, Dobie. You’ve come a long way from the Wimpy’s. Tuesday night I’ll be tuning in, and rooting for you.

I’ve found a YouTube vid of one of his performances that will give you a head start on what you’re in for next Tuesday night. Also, check out Dobie’s Dented Can Diary, where he has been detailing the life of a road comic every day for the last few years.

Giovanni Diviacchi
A few weeks ago I got a note from DC stand-up comedian Giovanni Diviacchi asking him to give his new joke book a mention here on KillThisBlog.com. Well, sure, I said, and then promptly got myself distracted by a project that’s been taking up whole weeks of my free time but which should bear fruit by the end of the month. But, I digress.

I’m happy to plug Giovanni’s book, How Many Clients Does It Take to Change a Light Bulb? because it gives me the chance to say some good things about him and what he’s doing. First, Giovanni gets my undying admiration as the author of the following one-liner:

If I seem a little nervous, it’s because my doctor prescribed a new placebo for my hypochondria.

Damn, I wish I had written that one.

Second, I like the way Giovanni has been exploring the tools available to us on the Internet. For example, did you know that you can download a pdf copy of much of his standup act for a mere 49 cents at Amazon.com? He’s also maintaining a very active blog at Amazon.com, where I didn’t even know you could keep a blog until I discovered Giovanni there. Anyway, the book:

Giovanni\'s Book
We all love to hate lawyers, and we love to mock the ruthlessness and venality they are perceived to possess, at least according to the popular conception of the legal profession in the culture at large. How Many Clients Does It Take to Change a Light Bulb? turns the archetypical Lawyer Joke its head, and lets lawyers laugh at the rest of us for a change. As such, it might be a little too inside to attract a general audience, but if you know a young person who is just graduating from law school, you might want to slip this slim little book (thirty-two pages) into his pocket when he isn’t looking. It might tell him something about the attitude he needs to develop to survive in the dismal day-to-day world of earning a living.

Check it out:

Erin Jackson, Comedian

Adding to the list of the many, many reasons that I am way, way cooler than you are, dear reader, is the fact that I know Erin Jackson, who is a semi-finalist in this year’s Last Comic Standing tournament on the well-known and highly-regarded NBC Television Network.

Erin will appear in the Vegas round of LCS and I am certain that everyone in the DC comedy scene is rooting for her. In a world where there is a lot of pettiness and jealousy (much of it instigated by me), Erin has achieved the rare feat of being liked by everybody. And she’s a fun and insightful comic on stage as well.

Here’s her audition set from the NBC website:

So there you go, folks. As a reader of this blog, you now have a rooting interest in her success, and you are hereby commanded to follow her exploits in the days to come.