Ghosts was good - basically the entire same cast of CBBC Horrible Histories, which is also good for a laugh.Ghosts
as i mentioned before hidden camera is the only comedy
i think it's less the camera and more memes there's yutes in some dusty end of Montana who makes a shitpost about wishing he could get away with crapping on a politicans car the way a pidgeon does and that gets more laughs and responses than something a comedian has spent sleepless nights painstakingly putting togetherdo we think that the democratisation of the camera has created a critical challenge for comedy?
not only due to the fact that IRL/spontaneous japes tend to be funnier than staged comedy can ever be, but also by sheer numbers, the amount of hilarity captured each day on phones by normies gigantically eclipses professional comedy (which was always 50%+ shit anyway tbh)
you can easily see how the style has affected mainstream, even TV comedy - on Limmy, People do nothing, etc ... and that whole fly on the wall Office fake documentary style. The space available for sitcoms is very tight
yeah Britain being so fawing to anything any anybody to make it rise back to its so called former glory its embarassing especially considering how many African people still work security and cleaning jobsIt's ironic you say all of this when Portugal still has a powerful far right
My problem with British self-hatred amounts to this kind of vacuous obsequiousness. This desire for a national renewal, for Britain to reconstitute itself. Whereas for me and Webbie (I should think) it's more a case of the chickens coming home to roost.
i mean yes but that means you can also be greeted back with some mercenary troll sending you scat porn to "trigger" youI was always annoyed by eg transphobic jokes in Friends, it's just that in 1997 I had no way of being heard, whereas now I can tweet asking why this was accepted.
i think it's less the camera and more memes there's yutes in some dusty end of Montana who makes a shitpost about wishing he could get away with crapping on a politicans car the way a pidgeon does and that gets more laughs and responses than something a comedian has spent sleepless nights painstakingly putting together
and then they wonder why people say stand up comedy as an entire form is shit and should be gotten rid of
hence my previous point that podcasts fucked up the entire game for everybody comedians got it in their heads that their "social comentators" and that people want to hear their opinons on everything and the fans decided to put them on pedastals cause they thought they were speaking truth to power.The Cum Town guys make about 75k a month off their podcast, far more than I expect they do actually doing stand up.
I dunno that the Cum Town guys specifically fall into that, they just seem to mess around from what I've heard, but I agree in general. Can't stand that "comedians are the new philosophers" thing and the veneration of people like George Carlin.
Is there a more extreme case of this than Russel Brand?hence my previous point that podcasts fucked up the entire game for everybody comedians got it in their heads that their "social comentators" and that people want to hear their opinons on everything and the fans decided to put them on pedastals cause they thought they were speaking truth to power.
the Bill Hicks myth run completly rampant
Yeah, I heard about that bit. Crappy joke for Chapelle to make though.Chris Rock coming on stage and asking whether it was Will Smith was pretty funny though.
Seems significant that three of them are American and the one who isn't is based over there anyway. I know Bill Hicks was supposed to be more popular in Britain than the US at first, but that comedian - prophet thing seems to be an American phenomenon and I don't think it really flies over here. Frankie Boyle seems to be trying it a bit with how much he's leaned into politics over the years, but he isn't put on the pedestal that those guys are, Brand less so than the other three, mind you, as he's become a sort of Alex Jones figure rather than being celebrated for his comedy.The four that come to mind are Hicks, Carlin, Chappelle and Brand.
it's not just twitter. it's the way that - i know this isn't a new observation - basically anyone's opinions can be heard because pretty much anyone can participate in the internet. yeah i think that does make people more considerate, on the whole, or at least a certain tranche of people are more considerate of some things they weren't beforei mean i think this is reductive maybe its just people being more considerate of things that they weren't prior, to say it's just twitter is giving the site more power than it actually has.
Todd Philips before he went and "reinvented" himself as a serious clown director was a guy directing comedies where men called each other homophobic slurs as a way of affection