Joined: Sun Mar 26, 2006 8:04 pm Posts: 5300 Location: upstate NY Gender: Male
The thodoks criticism is completely off the mark. You could accuse about 90% of working comedians of relying on shock and vulgarity, and you'd be wrong 70% of the time. (That's 63% of comedians!) Vulgarity isn't vulgar anymore, and I'm not laughing just because he's occasionally talking about testicles and swearing. The guy raises interesting issues about parenting, marriage, relationships, blah blah blah everything. No, he's probably not as much of a sociologist/social critic as Carlin, but he's a comic genius in his own right.
Joined: Sat Oct 16, 2004 11:41 pm Posts: 23014 Location: NOT FLO-RIDIN Gender: Male
I fucking love Bill Burr--that guy is great. He's vulgar and to a point, he relies on that vulgarity, but I think, very much like Carlin, his underlying message is a strong social critique that's really, really funny, and absurdist in very tempered ways.
Louis CK makes me laugh sometimes. His bit on gay marriage is pretty great. But other times, it's a very boring social critique under the vulgarity. So I guess I'm on team thodoks here.
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given2trade wrote:
Oh, you think I'm being douchey? Well I shall have to re-examine everything then. Thanks brah.
Joined: Sat Jul 29, 2006 7:04 pm Posts: 1875 Location: Atlanta, SE of Disorder Gender: Male
I think he's an above average comedian. I've only seen him in clips though, I'd have to see a full set or cable special to judge fairly. I really enjoy his FX show though, even think it has its moments of brilliance. He's a great guest when he pops up on a late night talk show.
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I think he's an above average comedian. I've only seen him in clips though, I'd have to see a full set or cable special to judge fairly. I really enjoy his FX show though, even think it has its moments of brilliance. He's a great guest when he pops up on a late night talk show.
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 3:08 am Posts: 22978 Gender: Male
I really became a Louis CK fan when he was on Opie and Anthony, and He was talking to i think Bill Donogue of the Catholic League, who had panned his show Lucky Louie. Problem was, the guy had never personally watched the show, merely issued a statement on it based on other reviews, speculation, etc. Louis got so mad trying to talk to the guy on FM radio at the time, and let out an exasperated "You... you.... Blockhead!"
the use of the term blockhead makes me chuckle to this day.
November 4, 2011, 9:24 am Louis C. K. Plans Online Broadcast of Comedy Concert By DAVE ITZKOFF
In an epic, farewell-to-New York broadcast of “Conan” Thursday night that featured guest appearances by Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert; a rare visit from Triumph the Insult Comic Dog; and the host, Conan O’Brien, officiating a same-sex marriage, the standup Louis C. K. made some news of his own. He announced on the show that he is taping a comedy special that will be broadcast only on the Internet.
Louis C. K., the star and creator of the FX series “Louie,” said in an interview with Mr. O’Brien that his upcoming concerts at the Beacon Theater in Manhattan on Nov. 10 would be recorded and then posted in an edited version on his Web site, louisck.net, on Dec. 10 where it can be viewed for a cost of $5.
Asked in a phone interview on Friday morning why he was not bringing the special to a traditional cable television network, Louis C. K. said: “To me, I flip the question over: Why should I go through a cable network when I can just give it directly to the people who want to see it? It’s so much easier, and it’s an interesting experiment.”
Louis C. K. has been featured in the standup specials “Shameless,” which ran on HBO in 2007, and the Emmy Award-nominated “Chewed Up,” which appeared on Showtime in 2008. His most recent standup show, “Hilarious,” was presented at the Sundance Film Festival and picked up by the Epix cable channel, earning him two more Emmy nominations.
But in recent years, he said, the cable channels have become increasingly difficult and unnecessary platforms for him to present these kinds of shows.
“HBO used to be the thing,” Louis C. K. said. “It used to be called an HBO special, even if you had a special on Showtime – people would call it your HBO special. But HBO gave up that. They don’t do it anymore. I offered them ‘Hilarious,’ to broadcast, and they said, ‘Well, we don’t do any business with you. You don’t have a show on HBO, so we don’t have a reason to promote you that way.’”
Showtime, he said, “was really nice but they don’t really push stuff, they just kind of stick it on.” And Comedy Central is “a weird place – they show too many commercials and they cut all the cursing out.”
The joy of presenting a standup special that eliminates any traditional broadcast partner, Louis C. K. said, was that this new show “will be available immediately, and universally.” He added: “You don’t have to have an iTunes account in good standing. You don’t have to have your credit card at Netflix updated. You can be a loser and watch this thing. You can be in prison.”
Using this strategy, he said, monolithic and intrusive media corporations don’t have to be part of the equation, either.
“Everybody is outnumbered,” Louis C. K. said, “because everything in your wallet represents all these contentious relationships with these huge companies. If you want to watch one of my specials on Netflix, they start marketing to you, and you start getting Jeff Dunham ads. You try to read an article about Rwanda and a pop-up comes up for Larry the Cable Guy. ‘Hey, I heard you enjoyed Louie’s special – now we know who you are.’”
He continued: “You can’t put an old black-and-white TV set on your kitchen table and turn it on and watch something. You can’t throw on a record and listen to music. You have to belong to something. The idea was, let’s just make a thing where you stick your five dollars in a slot, and enjoy the show.”
i am much more willing to accommodate the possibility that i'm wrong on this particular matter than i am to subject myself to a louis CK routine in it's entirety
Joined: Tue Oct 19, 2004 12:10 am Posts: 10993 Gender: Male
in all seriousness, i highly recommend his show. it does contain a few stand-up routines peppered throughout the episodes a la seinfeld, but the tone and style of humor of the show generally differs greatly from his typical stand-up experience.
i can't imagine anyone giving louis c.k a fair shake without watching Louie first.
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