Triple Action Comedy Club
It’s Fatty Arbuckle Day …
Little-known fat: Today is Fatty Arbuckle day in Hungary, Botswana and Mozambique. Silent film legend Roscoe Conkling "Fatty" Arbuckle, born today in 1887, was a mentor to such lesser-known slapstick comics as Flabby Falstaff, Porky Pigstein and Morbidly Obese McGillicuddy.
Super Tuesday shocker: Monty Python election special
Super Tuesday Election shocker!! … Monty Python is reporting that Silly Party candidate Jethro Q. Walrustitty is poised to outpoll both Joe Biden and Donald Trump in several key swing states.
March Forth: Key & Peele military marching video
It is one short step from March 4th to March Forth: Here, Key & Peele drop some PTSD-level satire on the classic military drill sergeant call and response scenario.
SNL: Please Don’t Destroy (with Sydney Sweeney)
From SNL last night, the triple gagsters from Please Don’t Destroy and host Sydney Sweeney mourn the outlandishly ridiculous death of a friend. These guys are almost always hilarious. (See more Please Don’t Destroy...
Charlie Chaplin: Silent film “Thriller”
The legendary Little Tramp really knew how to cut a rug. On this day in 1978, grave robbers – very silently – his coffin from his grave in Switzerland, prompting the cemetery’s night watchman to call the Keystone...
Belushi: March comes in like a lion and …
Happy March 1 ... Former SNL meteorologist John Belushi reminds us that in some countries, "March comes in like a wildebeest and goes out like ... a tiny little ant." A classic rant from a true comedy lion.
Dave Chappelle: Ja Rule’s take on 9/11
To celebrate Ja Rule's birthday (see Revisionist History), here is a classic clip by young Dave Chappelle riffing on the media's habit of tapping celebrities to weigh in on major news events.
Blogging WORST Practices
Inspired by one of my actual marketing blog posts, this video leverages that age-old advertising tactic, HUMOR(!), to promote my debut novel, “A Man of Remarkable Restraint.”
George Carlin: A few words about “words”
"They're only words." Beyond his infamous "7 words you can't say on television," George Carlin has plenty more to say about "bad words."