THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO HACK STAND-UP COMEDY BY Steven Rosenthal THE H H AAA CCCCC K K H H A A C K K HHHHH AAAAA C KKK H H A A C K K H H A A CCCCC K K FAQ HACK (from the British word Hack-neyed) adj. Over used and thus cheapened, trite. (From THE AMERICAN COLLEGE DICTIONARY) Note (1): This list is written mostly for the benefit of new comics - not for the condemnation of seasoned acts. Just because you see an older comic doing some of these is no reason to start hurling tomatoes. A lot of this material became cliche' because of overexposure in the '80s, and any comic you see may have written it well before it became hack. Note (2): These guidelines may not apply in Britain. From what I understand, Europe is just now getting a stand-up boom like we Yanks had ten years ago. It is entirely possible that English audiences have not seen these topics a million times. INDEX 1.Things are different than other things 1."L.A. is different than..." 2."Men and Women are really different..." 3."Cats are different than Dogs..." 2.Any Stereotypes in the Crowd Tonight? 1."What's up with these 7-11 employees?" 2."And I said 'Put down the Donut, officer'" 3."Black people walk or talk or dance differently than White people." (Then demonstrate) 4."Now, folks... I have nothing against homosexuals..." 5."I was in Alabama recently..." 6."What would ROMEO AND JULIET be like in da hood?" 7."Horror Movies wouldn't work if the characters were black!" 3.Did You Ever Notice That Observational Comedy is Getting a Little Old? 1."I fly on airplanes a lot..." 2."Bob Dylan/Michael McDonald/Michael Jackson sings funny." 3."You can't hear what the guy's saying at the Drive through." 4."What's up with these Remote Controls?" 5."Do We Have Any Pot Smokers in the House? 6."Anybody remember GILLIGAN'S ISLAND?" 7."I saw a lotta construction on Highway Blah Blah..." 8."You gotta be careful these days, lotta diseases out there..." 9."Have you seen that commercial where blah blah blah?" 10."Have you guys seen this nicotine patch?" 4.Topical Material Should Be Topical 1."So Howard Taft is in the news again..." 2."What's up with this Lorena Bobbit, huh?" 5.The Comic Tackle Box 1."...and that's just the women!" 2."What if O.J. Simpson sang the Brady Bunch theme?" 3."I know what you're thinking. You're thinking that I'm the illegitimate son of Mario Andretti and Fred Flinstone!" 4."Am I going too fast for you sir?" 5.The invisible prop 6.The "list" 7."... it's just me" 8."Well folks, it's about time for me to get out of here..." 6.You Folks Like Impressions? 1.Jack Nicholson 2.Robert DeNiro 3.William Shatner 4.Elvis 5.Christopher Lloyd as "Reverend Jim" from TAXI 6.Others to stay away from 7."That Reunion Tower Sure Looks Like a Penis" 8.I'm Not Making These Stock Lines Up People! 9.Wait a Second... I'm a Hack! Section 1: THINGS ARE DIFFERENT THAN OTHER THINGS 1a "L.A. is different than..." A ton of comics move to Los Angeles to pursue a television or film career and write a lot of material based on the little differences between LA and their former place of living. The trouble is that comics have been doing this since the beginning of time and the chances that you'll have a original observation are slim. 1b "Men and women are really different..." No kidding. Volumes could be written about how comedians pit the genders against each other and turn the club into a kind of "Battle of the Sexes" with the losers generally being men. Typically, female comics will appeal to their sisters in the crowd for support in male-bashing ("Am I right, Ladies?") and males will hunt for approval among a usually shy male audience ("Oh, you guys wouldn't be saying that if you weren't here with your women! If it was just us guys it would be different!") Guys don't ask directions, girls take a long time to get ready for a date, married men are stupid and whipped, women take too long when shopping, men hog the remote control, men leave the toilet seat up, etc. etc. Aside from the fact that sweeping generalizations about gender are inherently sexist, these gender based topics have been covered a lot - brilliantly at times, but a lot nonetheless. Another typical angle on this is stating something that women generally do (ie. go to the bathroom together, dance together, compliment each other on their looks) and applying it to very masculine types for comic effect ("You never see two guys doing this! Hey Joe, your skin is looking lovely lately.") Don't say you weren't warned. 1c "Cats are different than Dogs..." Andy Kindler's magazine article THE HACK'S HANDBOOK says that this bit boils down to "Dogs will do anything, cats don't care. Example: Cats won't fetch a bone. 'You fetch it. I'm getting something to eat. And take away this cheap shit and get me some real food.' Dogs will eat lard and Spam!" The whole pet thing has been a road comic's staple bit for years now. Don't do it. Section 2: ANY STEREOTYPES IN THE CROWD TONIGHT? 2a "What's up with these 7-11 employees?" I know that Apu on THE SIMPSONS is funny, but that's as far as it goes. Mostly comics just do a poor characterization of a Middle Eastern/Hindu and throw in a couple of cheap shots about Slurpees or a dot on their forehead and leave it be. 2b "And I said 'Put down the Donut, officer...'" Yeah, cops eat donuts a lot. Haven't heard that one before. Same goes for "Orientals can't drive.", "New Yorkers/taxi drivers are rude." or "Black men have large genitals" Whoopie. 2c "Black people walk or talk or dance differently than White people." (Then demonstrate) Racists, back me up on this! 2d "Now, folks... I have nothing against homosexuals..." When comics deny their homophobia or racism before a joke, you can be sure that they are trying to soften the blow of one of the most homophobic or racist jokes you'll ever hear. "I have a lot of gay friends..." is usually followed with something extreme not unlike "But fags suck don't they? And they should all be put to death!" Airline stewards and the not-so-recent "Gays in the Military" debate have given comics a new way to avoid writing by merely doing their "really effeminate fag voice". Even though any homosexual male in the Marines could probably kill a stand-up comic instantly with his bare hands, audiences still laugh at the lame bit about the girlish soldier who likes to re-decorate and flirt with the rest of the troops. Don't do the "fag voice" unless it has a really good joke behind it, because otherwise you're getting the laugh at the minority's expense and they really don't deserve your scorn. 2e "I was in Alabama recently..." And let me guess... hmmmm... were the people there stupid and inbred perhaps? The stupid incest Southerner joke was put to rest when Dennis Miller said, "There are people in Alabama who are their own fathers." That's it, it doesn't get any bigger or better than that. 2f "What would ROMEO AND JULIET be like in da hood?" OR "Could you imagine if The President was Mexican?" Typically the pattern is: It wouldn't be that way if it was my ethnicity! Because if it was my ethnicity it would have a lot of stereotypes associated with my ethnic background! Stop this. It's an easy joke. 2g "Horror Movies wouldn't work if the characters were black! Because they wouldn't peek into the bushes... they'd just run!" Not only is this the same pattern as above, but it's been stolen from Eddie Murphy who took it from Richard Pryor. Section 3: DID YOU EVER NOTICE THAT OBSERVATIONAL COMEDY IS GETTING A LITTLE OLD? Have you ever noticed, how a lot of stand up comedian's seem to say "have you ever noticed" all the time? Observational Comedy was pioneered by Carlin in the 70's and brought to life in the 80's, an era where no topic was too mundane and "the little things in life" became more appealing than "The Big Picture". In fact some topics were so trivial that comics had to feign hatred just to keep the sets interesting (as in: "You know what really pisses me off? Nail Clippers!") I won't go so far as to declare all observational comedy hack, but the passion has gone out of the love affair. And there are certainly a lot of "little things" that already have been noticed once too often. Like: 3a "I fly on airplanes a lot..." Yes, I'll bet you do. Or you used to when there was more of a road to work. However, every other comedian in the world did too, and you all wrote bits on it. Bits on the safety devices, bits about not being allowed to smoke, bits on inept pilots, bits about what you'd do if the plane was going down, bits about the seat being a floatation device etc. etc. 3b "Bob Dylan/Michael McDonald/Michael Jackson sings funny." No duh. Let's move on. 3c "You can't hear what the guy's saying at the Drive through." Let me guess: So you just mumble back to them. That's original. 3d "What's up with these Remote Controls?" "What's the use of the eject button?... Our parents in the old days had to get up and change it manually... Guys hog the remote... We can't just watch one channel nowadays..." Heard it. 3e "Do we have any pot smokers in the house?" "I don't have a joke about that, I just wanted to see who I can hang with after the show!..." Pot jokes always turn into a reference about the munchies so stay away from that gag. Also, the one about pot being different from the other drugs ("There's no gang wars over pot, just pillow fights...") has been done. 3f "Anybody remember GILLIGAN'S ISLAND?" Yes we do. And we don't know how could they get so lost on a three hour tour or how come the Professor could build so much stuff but he couldn't build a boat to leave with. It'll just remain one of the great mysteries of our time. However, since we're so aware of the dilemma, don't bring it up. 3g "Saw a lot of construction on Highway Blah blah blah" This one's more typical of the Midwest I hear. A comic gets into town and asks where the big construction site is. Then he/she gets to relate by using his/her old jokes about the "Men Working" sign ("They should change the sign!") or the Slow/Stop sign ("That describes how they're working!"). 3h "You gotta be careful these days, lotta diseases out there..." "Remember when it was just STDs? Now herpes is like nothing!" or the old standby condom jokes "Who's NOT going to buy the larger condoms!", At the checkout line "Price check on extra small condoms", "I'm wearing one now!" and "I wear two condoms all the time and when I'm ready to have sex, I just take off one!" 3i "Have you seen that commercial where blah blah blah?" THE HACK'S HANDBOOK calls commercials "The Hack Happy Hunting Grounds" and notes The Clapper, the "I've Fallen and I Can't Get Up", the "This is Your Brain on Drugs", and the "You can do anything while wearing these Tampons" as overdone. I'd like to add the Douche commercial ("Sometimes I don't feel so fresh"), the Psychic Friends, the Chia Pet, and any shyster lawyer who gets you a big settlement. 3j "Have you guys seen this nicotine patch?" "Now, I'm up to three patches a day! I gotta start smoking to get off the patch!" Section 4: TOPICAL MATERIAL SHOULD BE TOPICAL 4a "So Howard Taft is in the news again..." It's pretty clear that a topical comedian has to write more currently than others. Hey, that's the price you pay for the ease of having premises delivered to your doorstep every morning. There's nothing sadder than an outdated topical joke. Saying, "Anyone remember the LA riots?" is just as good as telling the audience "I haven't written much in the last three years." There's no good rule for determining a joke's shelf-life. Some large topics will be good for a year or two. Others will go out of date within days. Just stop patting yourself on the back for how great you think your joke is and think about whether the event would still be on the minds of the audience. 4b "What's up with this Lorena Bobbit, huh?" One of Nostradamus's quatrains goes as follows: "And a woman named Bobbit shall strike at a man's center and there will be much mirth made." Okay, I was kidding (Please, no flames from the Nostradamus people). The truth is that Bobbit jokes swept like a runaway train through the club scene for the simple reason that you could turn the genders against each other with a topical bit that's also a dick joke. (One comic I saw actually made it a racial bit as well by saying "Why do all you white women always have to go cutting people's dicks off?!") But besides the fact that the topic is pretty hack to start with, it's clearly too old and too overdone to even touch now. Same goes for Tonya Harding, The Menendez Brothers, Pee-Wee Herman and probably Barney the Dinosaur. Section 5: THE COMIC TACKLEBOX 5a "...and that's just the women!" The "Bait and Switch" is a classic comedy device that'll stay with us probably forever (for what else is comedy than setting up expectations and then switching gears against those expectations?) However, boil the device down to its bare bones and you get a joke that comics are starting to do to death. Set up a character that's really obscene and then say, "Okay Rabbi, calm down!" Describe a very masculine group and top it off with "...and that's just the women!" If you have one of these, make sure the gag is better hidden. 5b "What if O.J. Simpson sang the Brady Bunch theme?" Nothing says, "My only comedy influence is MAD Magazine" like a lame parody of a beautiful song. Never mind that it kills. Songs always get a cheap laugh, and the lamer and more scatological the parody, the better the reaction. The truth is that song parodies haven't progressed a lot since you were in third grade (remember "Jingle Bells, Batman Smells, Robin laid an egg..."?) and you're appealing to the crowd with a juvenile device that every child flocks when they get tired of knock-knock jokes. But wait! Don't throw away your brand-new Ovation guitar on account of this FAQ. Music acts don't have to be hack. Songs are a good way to close (nothing like closing on a big performance thing) and original music or new takes on old styles can be very very funny if you can pull it off (I'm thinking of Steve Martin's take on the song his grandmother taught him). But just taking a popular hit and throwing a bunch of dick references in it is pretty lame. 5c "I know what you're thinking. You're thinking that I'm the illegitimate son of Mario Andretti and Fred Flinstone!" Or any other two people. I think Judy Carter (or Gene Perret) says something about making your first joke about your appearance. However, this old gag about linking yourself to a celebrity or two is done quite a lot, and never really well. The only writing you have to do with this joke is to find people who look like you, and what good is that? 5d "Am I going too fast for you sir?" A typical trick is to pick someone up front to turn the audience against by making the person look really stupid, either by pointing out their confusion or by explaining the last joke to them. I know of at least two comics who pick fun of the same seat at exactly the same time during their acts. THE HACK'S HANDBOOK also recommends asking the person their name and then repeating the question in sign language as if the person was deaf. If you truly have an idiot bothering you (not an uncommon experience) and you have an interesting way to point out such stupidity, then by all means do it. But don't slam somebody for the sole purpose of making you look smarter and don't just make fun of their speech. 5e The Invisible Prop "So I'm wearing a beanie with a propeller on it while walking down the aisle of the grocery store..." Comic puts hands on imaginary cart, walks around the stage and makes propeller noises. Audience roars. This scenario illustrates the "Invisible Prop". There's no punch line. Nothing is clever about the bit. But people will laugh up a storm if you can illustrate your bit with second rate pantomime. Hack comics use this technique to bolster their humor void acts. Don't do it, even if you have some incredibly amazing sound effect you want to showcase. 5f The "List" You burrito munching-no job-zit freak-retard-etc-etc-etc Is it funny to call someone a burrito muncher? Probably not. Is it funny to tell someone they have no job? Nahh. Is it funny when you call someone a zit freak? Nope. But string them all together, and hilarity ensues. The longer the list, the funnier it is! Not only is it an unfunny crutch, but it's hack. Rent "White Men Can't Jump" if you need proof. 5g "... it's just me" Hey, does anyone like gay porn? Oh, so it's just me. Typical crutch guaranteed to get a laugh. Ask a rhetorical question to which nobody in their right mind would admit to. Then follow it up with, "It's just me". Oh I get it, the hack denigrated him/herself. Ha ha ha ha! Hacks often use this line, but it's a truly accomplished hack who can use it as a callback -- and believe me, there are plenty who do. 5h "Did I say that one out loud?" Who said that? I can't believe I said that! Hack says an outrageous line. The line is delivered in such a way that it sounds like it was Ad-libbed. Hack follows it up with "Did I say that one out loud?". The audience thinks they've seen the hack says something s/he didn't really want to, when in fact, the line is cold, calculated, and precisely inserted in their routine. 5i "Well folks, it's about time for me to get out of here..." It doesn't take much Show-Business savvy to realize that one should close big. That means saving your best joke, or most "Performance-heavy" joke for the last. However, a lot of comics see this as a time to break out all the bells and whistles (the props, the unicycle, the Elvis jumpsuit, the trained monkey act, etc. etc.) Don't rely on some big extravagant wacky thing to get an applause break to leave on. The audience came to the club to watch something humorous, not a rap song, a guitar solo, a balancing act or a sappy story about how your grandfather just died. You're a comic. Please close with something funny. Section 6: YOU FOLKS LIKE IMPRESSIONS? 6a Jack Nicholson Please, please, please, do not do Jack Nicholson. Jack Nicholson is done so often and people have made fun of those comics who do him so much that even poking fun of the Nicholson impression is now a cliche'. Just stay away if you value your dignity. 6b Robert DeNiro "You talking to me?" Yes, I am and you've almost as over done as Jack. 6c William Shatner Every sketch show in the world does a Star Trek bit. Don't rehash it on stage. If a bit starts with the phrase "Captain's Log..." then you're starting off already with a 99 on the hack meter. 6f. Elvis Hey, I can impersonate Elvis! Why don't I put him in a wacky situation, like bungi jumping, and sing the Flintstones song in his voice? 6e Christopher Lloyd as "Reverend Jim" from TAXI I'm not sure why this is done so much, but it is. Perhaps it's an easy impression. 6f Others to stay away from. Don Knotts, Louis Armstrong, Jimmy Stewart, Ronald Reagan, Ross Perot. 'Nuff said. Section 7: "THAT REUNION TOWER SURE LOOKS LIKE A PENIS" When a hack comes to a new city on tour, most of their 'new' jokes about the city will have been done to death. You can be pretty sure that at least one comedian in Dallas, at some point in their illustrious career, will have noticed that Reunion Tower (already nicknamed the Dallas Phallus) looks like a penis. American comics visiting the UK find it necessary to do Sean Connery impressions. Everyone in Scotland can do a Sean Connery impression, and might even make a joke in the process, which most visiting comics don't bother to do. You don't have to shy away from doing a truly original take on some aspect of a new city, but the obvious stuff has been done much better by the locals than you can imagine. Section 8: I'M NOT MAKING THESE STOCK LINES UP PEOPLE! Some stock lines have been around since the age of vaudeville, yet still work because audiences haven't heard them. But again that doesn't mean you should do it just because it gets a yuk. The following are old lines in the public domain that are undeniably hack. (An overweight comic's opening) Let me move the mike stand so you can see me better. (A waitress drops something) "Just put that anywhere." "Keep drinking folks, because the more you drink the funnier the show gets." (point to the microphone) "There's a reason they don't give these things out at the door, pal!" "Hey, I don't come to where you work and knock the gas pumps out of your hands (or french fries, or dicks out of your mouth, etc.)! "Hey I remember my first beer!" "Where'd you learn to whisper? A rock concert? In a helicopter? Or some other place where whispering wouldn't be very effective!" "How many of you rent Pornography?" (No one answers) "Yeah, a five billion dollar a year industry and I'm the only one!" "I'm available for Children's Parties!" (Yeah, you and a thousand other comics who think they're shocking.) "Excuse me, am I interrupting your conversation with my act?" SECTION 9: WAIT A SECOND... I'M A HACK! Don't panic! There's hope for you yet. All the inventive comics I know started out doing hack material (I myself began with a Brady Bunch song, an inner child joke and a dream). When you start you don't know any better. Learn what you're doing wrong and keep writing until you find your voice. And don't fret if you have a really great joke about a topic that's a little shaky. Mike Welch (welch@ix.netcom.com) writes: "I feel that an accomplished writer can take on ANY subject, even a HACK one and do something brilliant with it...at least in theory." I agree. But the rule should be, if everybody's going to be talking about the same subject, you'd better make sure that your joke is brilliant. And that's what it's about, isn't it? I'm sure that most of you got into this business because you love the art (and if you're getting into it now for the money, then you've got another thing coming). Art is always reinventing itself and comedy is no exception ("Good Evening, Ladies and Germs!" used to be funny!) It's the next generation's responsibility to determine comedy's direction and I wish you all good luck in that endeavor. You've been a wonderful audience. Good night! REFERENCES: "The Hack's Handbook" by Andy Kindler. NATIONAL LAMPOON February 1991 pp. 34-36 Many thanks goes out to: Kim Binstead (kimb@ling.dai.ed.ac.uk) Avi Liberman Sue Lyon (100433.2577@compuserve.com) Chris Pentzell Arlo Stone Mike Welch (welch@ix.netcom.com) and Andy Kindler for all their help in putting this together. This FAQ is Copyright 1995-7 by Steven Rosenthal, and is made available as a service to the Internet community. It may not be sold in any medium, including electronic, CD-ROM, or database, packaged with any commercial product, or published in print, without the explicit, written permission of the author, Steven Rosenthal, and the FAQ maintainer, Steven J. Silberberg (c) 1995-7 Steven Rosenthal stevenr@cinenet.net