Last Comic Standing, Season 5, Episode 1
Let’s all breathe deeply… Innnnn… Ouuutttt…
Once more… Innnnn… Ouuutttt…
Let’s go to our happy place.
Ant is a judge. Ant is telling people that they must come up with something original.
Let’s just leave that hang in the air for a second or two.
Innnnn… Ouuuutttt…
So far, no Buck Star, no strippers.
Auditions in New York, Montreal, San Antonio.
First the raw data:
From New York (taped at Gotham):
Lori Chase
Amy Schumer
Joe DeVito
Arj Barker
Dwayne Kennedy
Jane Condon (Capital One Audience Favorite)
From Montreal (taped at Kola Note):
Mel Silverback
Deb DiGiovanni
Gerry Dee
From San Antonio (taped at the Rivercenter Comedy Club):
Andi Smith
Sabrina Matthews
Ralph Harris (Capital One Audience Favorite)
Of course, NBC couldn’t help but ratchet up the geek/freak quotient, but, hey, that’s reality television for you. You gotta give the people what you’ve conditioned them to expect, after all!
Ant didn’t come off nearly as bitchy as we were told he was in reality. He was positively serene. (We loved Madigan’s slam when Ant got itchy and tried to ditch an auditioner just a little too quickly– “Your hair’s on! You’re sitting down, c’mon!”)
But we still have trouble with Ant being a judge, a talent scout, whatever they call them. San Antonio auditioner J.R. Brow got in a nice dig when Ant told him, “We’d love to have you come back tonight and bomb.” Brow replied, “Okay. I’ll do your stuff.” Bang! Zoom! Right back at you, segmented one!
(One thing we can conclude is that comics are basically nice people. How do we conclude this? Well, flash back to the first few episodes of each of the last six seasons of American Idol. Lots of bitchiness, arguments, feuding. Lots of diva-like behavior and more than a few, “Oh, yeah? Well, you can just go fuck yourself Simon, because I’m going to come back some day and piss on all y’all!” So far, the only blood drawn was by Brow’s smackdown– and that was delivered with the idiot grin/bemused look that comics effect when they know they’re delivering one below the belt! When comics are ascribed all those nasty attributes, perhaps it’s singers they have in mind, not us comedians.)
But we come back to it: Ant telling comics to come up with something original? As the Female Half astutely points out, Ant wouldn’t make it past Ant!
And any regular reader of this magazine probably cringed when the Talent Scouts were depicted throwing fruit at the target on the front of the t-shirt of one NYC auditioner. Throwing fruit at the comic! A timeworn cliche if there ever was one, probably dating back to before vaudeville! It matters not that he was wearing a target on his chest. Someone– everyone!– should have known better.
Big Issue: What is the producers’ obsession with inexperienced comics? When Bodden said to Montreal aud DeeAnne Smith, “You’re funny, but you’re not ready.” he summed up our thoughts well. We wonder why the producers don’t heed this sage advice. What good is a Bravo special going to do someone who is in this for three years? Or four, even? They’ll be forced to buy material, lots of it, but they’ll still hafta deal with the annoying gestures and the quirks and the overdone facial expressions that eventually disappear when folks get experienced and confident. Some folks might find all that endearing, but audiences would probably not be charmed over a 30- or 40-minute set.
Compare some of the greener comics to Phil Palisoul, Roy Wood, Jr. or Costaki Economopoulos— they’re polished, they’re calm, they’ve crafted jewel after jewel which they’ve woven into lengthy sets that have been road-tested in front of countless crowds or at innumerable showcases. How does youth and or good looks trump that when you’re searching for “The Funniest Comic In The World?”
Hey, why didn’t Capital One give out $1,000 to the Audience Favorite in Montreal? They could actually have saved a few bucks and given out $1,000 Canadian!
And why didn’t they mention that Montreal is host to the largest comedy festival in the world every year? And considering that many of the fest’s events are held in the very venue that L.C.S. taped in for the Montreal portion of the show, the omission is even more screwy.
We didn’t recognize any of the Montreal comics, except for Scott Faulconbridge. There are a lot of great Montreal comedians. Sad not to see them at least scurrying around in the background on those greenroom/backstage shots!
Mel Silverback (aka Dan Licoppe) is giving everyone conniptions, apparently. They let a guy through wearing a gorilla suit, goes the main theme of the whining. We gotta say, though, that the guy, er, the ape actually made us laugh. We honestly don’t think that a gorilla would take the whole enchilada, of course, but letting him through to the next round is no more ridiculous than promoting someone who does, say, a character. Like Larry the Cable Guy… or Jose Jimenez. Would anyone be inclined to watch a gorilla in a club for 45 minutes? Stranger things have happened.
We gotta say that Mel’s act, strange as it may have been, was better-constructed and more carefully written than a lot of folks who weren’t wearing a gorilla suit and a tuxedo.
(We predict that our stats will be filled with google searches for “Mel Silverback” He’ll make one of the larger cyber-splashes. Of course, a good number of them will be for “Mel Silverberg,” from people who don’t get half the joke. Other Google monsters will be Devito and Harris.)
The Joke of the Day. What was that? It should be called, “Are you funnier than a fifth grader?”
Knock, knock.
Who’s there?
Lame-ass jokes for $2.99 per month Standard Text Messaging Rates Apply open to legal U.S. residents age 18 and older.
Lame-ass jokes for $2.99 per month Standard Text Messaging Rates Apply open to legal U.S. residents age 18 and older who?
Orange you glad I didn’t say banana? Hysterical!!!
The first punchline is “A bucaneer.” For the third joke, “What’s orange and sounds like a parrot?” the punchline is, “Kathleen Madigan!” Jussst Kidding!
Other comics who got major face time:
In NYC:
Pete Dominick
Victor Vornado
Big Jay Oakerson
Wali Collins
Michelle Buteau
Chris White
Costaki
Calise Hawkins
Matt KazamIn Montreal:
Richard Ryder
Ryan Belleville
Graham Clarke
Alan Park
Trevor Boris
DeAnne Smith
James CunninghamIn San Antonio:
Bob Biggerstaff
Robert Hawkins
Roy Wood, Jr.
Phil Palisoul
Billy D. Washington
Dean Lewis
Johnny Elbow
Host Bill Bellamy is inoffensive and not much of a factor so far. (And has apparently struck such a sweet deal that he didn’t even have to travel to San Antonio or Montreal. Even Seacrest has to hump his ass to Birmingham every year!)
And a shout out to Philly boy Ralph Harris! (The Female Half and Harris were in the same open mike class over the river, back in the mid-80s!)
Once again, for those of you who have scrambled aboard only recently, the ten finalists for this season will be:
Gerry Dee
Deb DiGiovanni
Amy Schumer
Dante
Jon Reep
Ralph Harris
Matt Kirshen
Doug Benson
Lavelle Crawford
Gina Yashere
Stay tuned.
10 Responses
Reply to: Last Comic Standing, Season 5, Episode 1
ok…I am freaking out…Did they show a black guy doing the orange you glad I didn’t say banana joke?The producers taped me doing it..I was watching the show..just wondering if I missed it…It’s a joke I taught my kids..would have loved to have that make air.
JR Brow is an hysterical Austin comic, and he’s seasoned (at least 20 years)! He may have bombed in front of the judges, I wouldn’t know, but to potray him as a wanna be was just pathetic.
Big ups to Michelle Buteau and Billy Dee Washington for the face time. I’m also looking forward to meeting Arj this weekend at The Funny farm.In a nutshell I could at least watch the show. I can’t stand Ant and his DuPont Stainmaster carpeted brow either. Bellemy might now drive me crazy but who knows. The main thing I cant understand is why Raplh Harris is on this show? Not becuase I dont like him because I’ve been a fan of his for years back when he had his show on FOX. but I thought he was beyond this. But what the hell do I know?
Don’t you find it odd that in montreal they actually gave away four tickets but when they edited it for tv they showed only threeAlso how sad is it for the fourth comic to go through the process be funny enough to get a ticket but yet when the show is edited they make it like he is not even there.So the guy goes through the whole process for exposure and then does not even get it when he beats other competitors.I know decisions are made for other reasons when it comes to LA but to not even acknowledge how funny the guy is …is just what is wrong with these types of shows.This is the type of thing the internet was made for. Check the comic out his name is Brian LazanikIt is embarassing to the whole art of standup that this is how they chose to do itdarren frosthttp://www.comedywhore.com
On Mr. Lazanik not getting face time, perhaps he didn’t sign the release form. It’s the only reason we can think of to explain his exclusion from the broadcast.As for Ralph Harris being “beyond this,” we must ask, beyond what, exactly? Beyond exposure on a fairly popular network television show? No one, not even Howie Mandel, is beyond that. (Mandel told the press that he worried that hosting a game show on NBC would end his career, that, essentially, he was beyond such an assignment. Of course, he’s now more famous, more popular, more powerful than ever.)Harris had a show (on ABC, as we recall, called “On Our Own”) but it debuted 13 years ago. More than a decade has passed since Harris had a sitcom built around his talents. A lot has happened since then and entire new generations of standup fans have sprung up since then.There is a ridiculous notion floating around the internet that this show, this “contest,” is for unknown, undiscovered, new talent. Folks who push this meme on chat rooms or on message boards or a forum here or there are getting L.C.S. confused with American Idol.Nothing could be further from the truth. The first season featured a good number of seasoned veterans of comedy. As has each consecutive season. As does this season. In spite of the efforts of the producers to ram green comics into the process, it is the experienced ones who stand out, who make an impact in their brief turns or who eventually dominate the final ten.If it were up to us, there would be even more experienced comics vying for the top prize. If it were up to us, this silly town-by-town “talent search” conceit would be replaced by an invitation-only process, based on review of video tapes, submitted by comics themselves or by their representation. But that somehow goes against the already calcified conventions of reality TV– a genre that, though only a decade old, has already veered into self-parody.
Brian Lazanik was not the only person to meet that fate. If you look at the previous lists of those who made it through in their respective cities, you’ll note that Pete Dominick (NYC) got shafted in much the same way (though at least he got some facetime). I don’t think they’ll have been the only two. It’s casting, sad but true.
Letting the pros in on this is a flawed concept. I want to see people trying to get their first break – not a bunch of people I know are getting paid and don’t really need the money – just more exposure. Who would have thought the execs at NBC could be so dumb. Do they think that none of their viewers have Comedy Central in their cable plans? Last year I was shocked to see folks like Gabriel Iglesias. Is NBC taping this stuff and leaving it on a shelf for a year, or what? Let’s see…how many professionals have I seen on a show that’s billed like an amateur contest? Arj Barker, Ralph Harris, Sabrina Matthews, Dwayne Kennedy, Amy Schumer, Doug Benson, etc.. It’s like Celine Dion or Whitney Houston showing up to audition for American Idol. You know the real amateurs have NO shot. Even worse, a lot of the pros use some of their same material. It’s like a pathetic rerun of routines I’ve already seen. If you’ve already been on TV, you should not be allowed to be on this show! Comedy Central already has a contest for the best stand-up of the season. Maybe they should offer prize money to lure these camera hogs away from those trying to get their first break.
That’s a good point, Ms. I’ve always agreed with the good folks at Sheckymag, but maybe you’re right. I still don’t think rank amateurs should be allowed or people who’ve never set foot on stage before. But maybe making the cut-off national TV exposure would be wise. There are tons of great amateur comics who have been doing it for several years who just haven’t done any TV before.
Brain Lazanik did sign the release form…they won’t let you even audition if you don’t sign all the necessary forms.My complaint is not that he did not get shown getting a ticket…it is that he received nothing from the show in terms of exposure. If he was good enough beat the others ..then his jokes are good enough so he can get some exposure from it.Darren Frosthttp://www.comedywhore.com
A while ago, at March Break, read St. Patrick’s Day, I was on vacation, but I wasn’t being inactive.I went to Montreal for a reason, it was the only Canadian Stop for Last Comic Standing Auditions(Some of my friends recall I took Comedy Writing Workshop at Humber in summer of 2004)Though I lined at 8:30 up in the morning and received a number for my potential audition then,We soon realised that TV takes its time. Having drawn number 76 of likely little over 120 numbers handed out, the other potential comedians and I, (many well established, like a recent member of Air Farce) (and some of those had preset invitation times for auditioning)waited at the Starbucks on Avenue Du Parc most of the day,(not only is there a new language for ordering coffee, there is a call button to open the washrooms)and found that number 20 was only done by noon. Our chances in the 70’s were slim for 5:00pmThe supposed cut-off time.The group I hung around with then went for lunch around 3:30pmThen we all went to the audition venue, Kola Note (which resides above a carpet store), and crammed the stairwell for the remaining time.Auditions were now possibly extended to 6:30pmNumber 52 was out by 4:00pmLooked like they were cutting people off after 90.Behind me, was a crazy old lady with a hubcap, we don’t know why.Chances are she’ll be on tv.About 6:00pm I took the stageHaving been requested to state where we live and who we areI mentioned I live in the Ferrari fan capital of Canada without cheering for them, and I’m not dead.One judge had no idea what that meant. (Kathleen Madigan)One judge was a McLaren fan like me. (Alonso Bodden)The other had trouble getting past my super powers, and joined me on stage so I could prove them to him. (Ant)I possess a strong magnetic field in my left handI mentioned that North is wherever I want it to beAnt asked if he could join me on stage to prove it, if he could find someone in the studio with a compassI said go ahead, chances are slimSo he found one, and came onstageI asked where North was now, he said that was good and pointed northhe dropped the compass in my hand and the arrow swung 90 degreesAnt said “My god, he’s not kidding” “You have superpowers”Alonso asked where I developed these powersI said “I eat a lot of steak.”He asked what team I cheer for and I said “McLaren”he said “They have that new kid.”“Lewis Hamilton” I said “He’ll do well”Kathleen said “We’re not looking for freaks of nature so its time for you to go.”There was a lineup segment with a mounted policeman that I may be in though it would be difficult to determine, and the guy warming up to the pile of horse dung was directly beside me, however my feet did not enter the camera view. (This all happened before we went to Starbucks)You can find my material on blogger