Multi-part PBS series lauds funny people
Frazier Moore, writing for Associated Press, kicks off his summary of the PBS series, “Make ’em Laugh, The Funny Business of America” (which debuts tomorrow night), with a pretty good insight.
The funniest people don’t take no for an answer — at least, they don’t without a fight for their audience’s yuks. Their policy has never been “invite ’em to laugh.” It’s “make ’em.”
This never-say-die zeal (and the laughter that results) is the unifying spirit of “Make ‘Em Laugh: The Funny Business of America,” PBS’ six-hour, century-spanning showcase of the nation’s leading laugh-getters.
Hosted by Billy Crystal and narrated by Amy Sedaris, the series blends history with performance and taps the expertise of more than 90 comedians, writers, producers and comic scholars.
We were totally unaware of this series. (Hey! Who is running the p.r. department at PBS? How about a press release or two?) We were watching… something, can’t remember what… on PBS a coupla weeks ago and we saw the promo starring Billy Crystal. We forgot about it and then a couple of sharp-eyed readers reminded us. (One of ’em saw the book in a bookstore– Ya gotta love that synergy!)
Moore (who we trashed in a previous posting when he bobbled an analysis of Jon Stewart’s Oscar hosting stint in ’06) may have redeemed himself with that simple observation. We hope it was his and not lifted from the intro to Episode One, which is described thusly:
Kicking off at 8 p.m. Wednesday (check local listings), the series asks, “Would Ya Hit a Guy With Glasses?” as it celebrates comedy’s nerds, jerks and oddballs. The outsider has always been a source of amusement, the series observes. Examples range from bookish Harold Lloyd of silent films through Phyllis Diller and Steve Martin to the goof ball heroes of Judd Apatow comedies.
Stay tuned. We’ll try to view it live or at least tape it and view it later.
We don’t expect to like all of it… or relate to it– one of the episodes devotes some time to the Three Stooges. (We’re having trouble appreciating the Stooges on even an intellectual level these days.)
Check your local listings for airing time. Check out PBS’s page on the whole affair. Jim Lehrer on Comedy? Huh? Wha?!
2 Responses
Reply to: Multi-part PBS series lauds funny people
No Stooge love?! Why I oughtta…Billy Crystal was promoting this on Letterman Monday night, and Sedaris did the same on Ferguson last week. It seems like it might be okay, but I can’t get my hopes up too high. Docs like this tend to cater to the average viewer, who watches a lot of comedy but doesn’t <>know<> a lot about it. For us, it will be approximately 85% “stuff we already know”, 5% “cool, I didn’t know that!”, and 10% “well, that’s kinda inaccurate”. For the average viewer, the “didn’t know that” quotient will be much higher.
I saw the Jim Lehrer advertisement on USA network, and found it hysterical. Lehrer was telling old school one liners in his usual dead pan way. The screen said, “Lehrer, on Comedy?” and something to the effect of “I think not.” They then show a collage of comics I’m assuming they’ll be profiling on the show, and then pan back to Lehrer, who says, “I got a million of ’em.”