Thursday, January 15, 2009

Goofin' On The Presidents



I find it pretty interesting that the best stuff SNL has done in years has been the political material of the last year, specifically Amy Poehler and Tina Fey's respective portrayals of Hillary Clinton and Sarah Palin. Actually, it's not really political material, in the sense of what Jon Stewart or Bill Maher do. It's character material. And that's why it works so much better than most of the lousy sketches SNL churns out: these are fully formed characters, as brought to life by Poehler and Fey, as were Will Ferrell's George W. Bush, Dana Carvey's George H.W. Bush, and Chevy Chase's Gerald Ford. And being able to crack those characters, as these actors have done, is the key to making them funny. Carvey's Bush didn't really bear much resemblance to the real thing, but it was a complete, funny character. I find it interesting that Carvey, who I don't even think is particularly funny, was able to crack that character, while in eight years, nobody really succeeded in doing much with either Reagan or Clinton, both much funnier presidents than Bush 41. Which leads me to an interesting topic for discussion: who was a funnier president, Nixon or W? Nixon just plain looked and sounded funny, but Bush seems more like a complete comedy character--you almost couldn't write a more perfect character to put into a comedy situation. What do you think?

Night Gallery: Make Me Laugh



Thanks to John Fontaine for sending this along. "His aspiration is to collect funny bones and hang them on the walls of his life to cover up the cracked plaster and yellowing wallpaper that is part of the of the interior decoration of failure." Man, Serling's got comedians nailed.

Very Old Jokes

Like, older than Henny Youngman jokes. Archeologists have dug up an ancient Greek jokebook dating from the 4th Century. It's called Philogelos: The Laugh Addict. So if you hear Carlos Mencia doing Spartan jokes, you know where he got them. A sample: A misogynist is attending to the burial of his wife, who has just died, when someone asks: "Who is it who rests in peace here?". He answers: "Me, now that I'm rid of her!" Boy, comedy sure has evolved over the last 1500 years!