The Nigerian
The Realest Member of TheColi
Pardon?What's with the weird eye thing you keep doing ?
A wise white man once told me, "Unsolicited, free advice is worth about as much as it costs." Keep that in mind as you read my response to your remarks.can't front, i chuckled.
i don't really feel your style but props for having the balls to go on stage.
some unsolicited advice from someone who has never done comedy (so do what you want with it). Although i haven't seen you perform the material live so it's hard to judge fairly, your jokes/material just seems like you're trying to offend for the sake of offending. and it feels like you're chasing the funny like a musician trying to chase the catchy melody. i think you would have better results and at the same time maybe have more fun if you first focus on your philosophies. I think the best jokes are born out of things you feel represent your authentic version of the truth. i don't know how to explain it but just i guess what i'm trying to say is to not start from funny. Start from truth (whatever you see it as) and extract the funny from it where you find it. don't manufacture it. after that, the jokes will write themselves. all you need to do is fine tune afterwards. i feel like a lot of comedians try to start from funny right away and it ends up sounding awful cause the audience feels like the comedian is trying to make them laugh. it gives them too much power and they don't want that much power. they want the comedian to lead the journey. going on a tangent a little bit but all in all, i'm not saying not to offend. i'm saying not to offend just for the sake of offending and explore your truth and then extract the funny from it. a lot of times the funniest thing about the performance is not the joke itself but the sincerity (which is contagious) with which the comedian is expressing something that seems absurd on the surface but then you realize deep down you kind of agree which makes it even funnier. if you develop that. you'll even have some of those racist dudes laughing at your jokes.
The humor in my jokes are rooted in overbearing sincerity. However, it's sincerity from a perspective that is rarely expressed in public, much less a comedy stage.
I have ZERO intention of making racists laugh. If they want to get beyond themselves and their feelings and see the well crafted humor in my work then great. If not, that's even better. As the great Paul Mooney once said "I like a little salt on my crackers."
I'm to racists what Corey Holcomb is to chicken heads.
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