[For this year’s April Fool’s series, I wanted to highlight one great routine each from a handful of the many wonderful stand-up comedians doing their thing these days—in case, y’know, you’re (like me) looking to move on from a problematic fave. Add your faves, present and past, in comments!]
This might come
as a surprise to anyone who knows me to be the
congenital optimist that I am—a critical
optimist to be sure, but nonetheless—but I have a serious soft spot for
very dark humor, the darker the better. Partly that might be the irresistible
appeal of opposites (they do, as Paula Abdul and MC Skat Kat
knew all too well, attract). But I’d say it’s also and especially my sense that
underneath most dark humor—and definitely the best dark humor—is a deep
sweetness, a real compassion and care for the world, if one perhaps masked in
humor because of the equally real concurrent fear of being hurt by that world.
I see all of
that in the best darkly humorous comic—and quite simply one of the very best
comics period—working today, Anthony
Jeselnik. Jeselnik’s stock-and-trade is writing short jokes that offer
darkly comic twists on audience expectations, sometimes in standalone
singularity, sometimes as part of a long series (I defy anyone not to crack up
at the dropping babies
and murder-suicide
series in his most recent special, Fire in the Maternity Ward
[2019]). If there’s a sweetness underlying those jokes, I would have to agree with
anyone who’d argue that it’s buried pretty deep.
But each of
Jeselnik’s specials to date has ended with a long set-piece, one that still
relies on a number of individual jokes of that ilk but that adds up to
something more—and, I believe, something more clearly thoughtful and sweet (if
still dark as fuck). And the set-piece that ends Fire, a 15-minute long “very
true” story about the time he drove a friend to get an abortion (I
apologize for linking to The Federalist,
but that’s the clearest write-up of this specific set-piece I can find; click
through at your own risk), is both a stunning dark humor tour-de-force and,
again, a profoundly sweet representation of friendship, care, and love. It’s
maybe the best single performance by maybe our best contemporary comic, and
that ain’t no joke.
Next stand-up
fave tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Takes on Jeselnik and/or other faves you’d share?
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