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by in Podcast

Your host, Thomas Attila Lewis, recounts the Boston Marathon incident, and a roadtrip to Dallas, Austin, and Kansas City with the amazing Bill Burr and Paul Virzi.

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by in Video

I’m really proud to report that the most recent “Bill Burr Tours…” video that I made with Bill has really taken off over the last week with more than 12,000 views in the last 5 days. It’s not the hundred of thousands or millions that this video deserves but it’s still amazing. The piece was shot during the second week of January and went up the last week of January. The video was featured on LaughSpin.com and has been highlighted by Caroline’s On Broadway and RooftopComedy.com as well. Many thanks to everyone who has viewed or linked the piece. If you haven’t, please consider posting about the video or tweeting about it – that would be awesome!

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General Malaise

13 Feb
2009
by in General

My friend Tim was just telling me tonight that everyone he’s talked to late this week sounds sick or that they are ready to crawl into bed and I can second that observation. It’s been an exhausting week+ and everyone at my house has been sick over the past two weeks.

For me it started with a cold that I caught in San Francisco a couple weeks ago, which incidentally was the last place I had any alcohol. Came back to the Berkshires and was thrown into the insane work of the 2nd product launch in as many months. Many late nights plus a day trip to NYC to get a sneak preview of Demetri Martin’s new show and I was starting to really feel rundown. As of last Saturday I was just barely starting to get a cough when I went with my friend Eric to go see Bill Burr who I did a great interview with in LA.

Burr’s show at the Hu Ke Lau in Chicopee was very rowdy which was a bit more stressful than fun but it was incredible to watch someone as professional as him handle that kind of situation. He still made it very very funny and kept his cool the whole time, it was very impressive.

Still I was feeling pretty poorly by the end of the night and got home very late. Sunday I had a fever, horrible shivers and cramps, a blinding headache, and I spent about 10 minutes vertical for the entire day. I managed to stagger into work on Monday but it’s debatable how on top of it I was. Eric was already feeling pretty bad by this point and by Monday night he was sick. Tuesday I got antibiotics from my doctor and was starting to feel better by Wednesday but that doesn’t mean I don’t have a terrible cough every day.

On Wednesday I had been asked by Professor Brian Brown to present how marketing works at Atalasoft to a class studying B2B businesses at the University of Massachusetts, Isenberg School of Management. I dosed up on cold medicine and throat spray and managed to get through a couple meetings and two full classes. The students were really attentive and I got a lot of great questions – I found it really inspiring just to be around a couple sets of students who wouldn’t fall asleep to this kind of stuff. Seriously though, it was an incredible privelege and I was very touched to have received a really great Isenberg School of Management coffee mug that I’ve enjoyed brandishing around.

I also see a lot of down faces at work and the stress is palpable. This combined with the economic news, Joaquin Phoenix going insane on Letterman, and a commuter plane going down with all 49 people aboard after we were hit by yet another ice storm is starting to take a toll. If I’m feeling up to it I will have to ski my guts out this weekend. I can’t face another week at work without regular exercise and I think the country should follow suit, and work out and coast on some endorphins.

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by in Interview

Bill BurrBill Burr’s excellent live show “Why Do I Do This?” makes it’s TV debut on August 31st, Comedy Central at 11:00pm. Burr, born in Canton, MA, got his start in Boston by stepping onstage during a contest for “Funniest College Student” and hasn’t looked back. You’ve had many opportunities to get familiar with Burr over the past 15 years, what with appearances on “Chappelle’s Show”, HBO’s “One Night Stand”, “The Late Show With David Letterman”, his CD “Emotionally Unavailable”, The Opie and Anthony Show, and his own XM Radio show, “Uninformed”. Not that Burr held anything back in his previous specials but this is one that shouldn’t be missed. His bits on overpopulation, homophobia, Hollywood portrayals of racism, and the insane internal dialogues we all have, set a comedic bar on those topics that will be hard to surpass for quite some time. LAist had a chance to speak with Burr as he prepares for a tour supporting a new set of material, good news for all the fans that Sunday’s special will create.

Listen to the full interview here:

LAist: How did this show come about?

Bill Burr: We shot it ourselves last year at the Skirball Theater in New York, then we had to cut and edit it, then we shopped it around a few networks and here we are.

LAist: How did you get started in comedy?

Bill Burr: I did a contest in 1992, “Find Boston’s Funniest College Student”. It was at Nick’s Comedy Stop. I was supposed to do 5 minutes, probably only lasted 3 minutes – I did mediocre, but I knew I wanted to do it after I did it.

LAist: I wanted to thank you being able to put what is a “male perspective” out there in your act, without getting all redneck about it.

Bill Burr: I know what you’re saying – I make sure people know these are just jokes. I definitely say what I think, but I don’t want to be on stage and come across like a know-it-all. I listen to that voice in me that says “I think this is bullshit” and then I go with it. I can’t count the number of times I’ve been wrong though.

LAist: It’s not that the ideas aren’t offensively funny, they’re definitely extreme but you do it such a way that’s not abusive.

Bill Burr: I’m not being malicious, I don’t mean anything malicious by them. They’re jokes. I always find it funny when a comedian does a special, and it’s in front of a whole bunch of different people, everybody’s laughing, he doesn’t get heckled, and then someone has to start talking about how the comedian was offensive. Basically what they’re doing is that they’re calling everyone in the audience a moron, and that they weren’t smart enough to realize these are jokes. There’s another thing that’s funny, watching people get into trouble on TV, when they didn’t mean anything malicious but they still end up apologizing. If I didn’t mean anything malicious, I would never apologize. The only apology I would make is “I’m sorry you didn’t understand you were watching a comedian, and that you thought you were watching ‘Meet the Press’”.

I’m just up there trying to make people laugh and that’s how I do it. I kinda talk about everything, I make fun myself and my life, and bigger things like population problems, all under the guise of this guy who doesn’t read very much, which gives me license to be a moron.

LAist: You say that, but your perspective is informed. Whether you are talking about race being represented in movies or overpopulation.

Bill Burr: The point behind that bit [the "movie" about black repression] is not that it didn’t happen, the point is that the representation of the event is so cartoonish. It’s been so many times, it’s such an odd movie and topic to have a genre around it. You know you’re going to have to have the one, truly over the top, racist white character who is going to represent every fucked up thought that white people have ever had. Then you’ll have the one understanding white character so that every white person who goes to the theater can say “that’s the person I would be in that scenario” – rather than showing how people really are, where everybody has good and bad in them, and they have positive thought and fear, and when you have fearful thoughts, that’s when you think “oh they’re going to come in here and ruin the pool”. I’ve never really written a movie script but I guess but for some reason in 90 minutes you can only develop characters to the point that says “this guy is bad and this guy is good”.

The joke is not the topic [slavery and genocide], the joke is that the way that Hollywood chooses to present this is ridiculous. Now the problem is that when certain people watch a comedian, they take it at face value, they try to say that “this guy doesn’t want black people in the pool”. These people and groups are a little insulting, they think people are too dumb to put things in context, if you’re too stupid to not understand you are watching a comedian telling jokes, you will go out and do something stupid regardless. I don’t think movies, books, and comedians should have to suffer because of this. You should be able to talk about what you want to talk about and I think morons will be morons, regardless.

I have a classic example of this. I had this dude come up to me when I was in North Carolina, and he was this really Southern, redneck dude, and he was really into my comedy, and I started laughing because this is why I love doing the road because I had all these judgements about him but he was really knowledgeable about my act [which was impressive]. One of the things he talked about in particular was his appreciation of this bit that I had done on Laughapalooza where some guy in a bar, who I didn’t know, is telling me a story and then drops the n-word and then I experience the awkwardness of figuring out what was the socially acceptable thing to do at that moment. He brought up that performance, and then later on in this conversation that I have with this very guy in North Carolina, he drops the n-word! And I look at him and I think “did this just happen?” So I say what-the-fuck to him, and goes, “well I could have said this” and then he dropped the n-word again. Now you’d think that he would have understood from watching my show what the joke was all about, and that dropping the n-word was not an acceptable thing to do, but he obviously didn’t.

As a performer, it’s not your responsibility to babysit people who think like that.

LAist: Another great bit in your act is your articulation of the internal messaging your brain does. The “did I just think that terrible thought?”

Bill Burr: The best thing about that joke is the number of women that come up to me and tell me the thoughts that they have. Just these incredibly violent and crazy thoughts. I had a girlfriend tell me, I don’t know what I was doing but I was pissing her off, and she literally had an iron in her hand and she was just thinking “what if I would just smash this over his fucking head”, and I had no idea this was going on behind me and she said “you had no idea how close I was, you were just sitting there running your stupid mouth, watching the TV.”

All that shit about “if women ran the world, there would be no war” and then you have a bunch of women come up to you and say “yeah, I was thinking about strangling my kid with an extension cord” and that makes you think, “ah good, it’s not just us”.

LAist: Other than Sunday’s premiere of “Why Do I Do This?” what else do you have going on right now?

Bill Burr: I’m about to kick off a tour with my new hour of material that I’ve written since this special. It’s called The Uninformed Comedy Tour and it’s hyping my new hour of material and my show on XM Radio, “Uninformed” that I co-host with Joe DeRosa, another great and funny comic who will be on tour with me, all the dates will be up on my website. We’re going to be at Comedy Connection in Boston as soon as they complete their move.

Bill Burr’s “Why Do I Do This?” premieres at 11:00pm on Sunday, August 31st, on Comedy Central.

Pic of Bill Burr via BillBurr.com

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