Marc Maron's WTF podcast is essential listening for comedy fans. Equal parts neurosis and fascinating conversation, the podcast features Maron talking to comedians in his Los Angeles garage about what makes them tick. (Recent episodes have included stand-up Todd Glass publicly discussing his homosexuality for the first time and former Onion editor Todd Hanson talking candidly about his depression and suicide attempt.) Maron attended BU and worked in Boston for most of the '80s, opening for some of the scene's most prominent stand-ups. Six of those comics — Kenny Rogerson, Tony V, Barry Crimmins, Mike Donovan, Jimmy Tingle, and Frank Santorelli — will be guests at a live WTF taping at the Wilbur Theatre on Friday night following Maron's (separate-admittance) stand-up show.YOU'VE MENTIONED ON YOUR SHOW THAT YOU HAD SOME CONFLICT WITH THE BOSTON PERSONALITY. I don't know if it was conflict. I grew up in New Mexico, and my family is from the East Coast. For the first couple of years there, the inconsistency of the Boston accent can be a little intimidating. But over time it becomes charming. It's hard not to feel like an outsider for a while, but I grew to really get a kick out of it, and get impressed by it somehow.
DID THAT OUTSIDER FEELING HAVE AN EFFECT ON YOUR COMEDY? There was a comedy scene when I was a kid and starting out that was really defined by people like Steve Sweeney and Don Gavin, Kenny Rogerson. George MacDonald was there, Mike McDonald, Mike Donovan. I started my career opening for these guys, and I was just an angry, neurotic little Jewish guy. So it definitely didn't jibe in my mind completely well with working-class New Englanders, but I fought it out and found a way. I never felt immediately accepted on stage, but that feeling has stayed with me probably to this day.
WHAT ABOUT THE BOSTON SCENE AT THAT TIME INFLUENCED YOUR WORK? I started my career hanging around Catch a Rising Star and Nick's Comedy Stop and basically every weekend driving out to one-nighters, opening for these guys that were established in the area. I was fortunate in that I was relatively bookable, and able to go out and do a lot of these one-nighters. So I started my career driving into a complete mystery. A lot of times you'd go do one-nighters and you had no idea what you were walking into, what the setting was going to be like, how many people were going to be there . . . Like Pancho Villa's in Leominster. There was this weird, tiered balcony, and this giant disco ball. That gig was around for years. The Taunton Regency was another big gig. So how does that define my stand-up? I can do this anywhere, anytime. Just give me directions.
Related:
52 ways to leave 2009, Nothing beats nothing, Interview: Sarah Silverman, More
- 52 ways to leave 2009
Your usual lackadaisical approach to New Year's Eve — just see what happens and go with the flow — is not going to cut it this year. Sure, the end of this decade may not have the same kind of new-millennium pressure riding on it as the last one, but the plunge into 2010 is a milestone nonetheless.
- Nothing beats nothing
Jerry Seinfeld held out on a Seinfeld reunion till last year, when he finally found a way to do a comeback that wasn't really a comeback. He and Seinfeld co-creator Larry David resurrected the greatest sit-com of the '90s as a show-within-a-show on David's Curb Your Enthusiasm . The reunion made Jerry, George, Elaine, and Kramer hilariously relevant again.
- Interview: Sarah Silverman
Recently, “Sarah” — the character played by Sarah Silverman on Comedy Central’s The Sarah Silverman Program — was upset because in today’s world it just wasn’t safe anymore for children to get into strangers’ vans.
- Cross Town Traffic at the Wilbur
When bespectacled alt-comic icon David Cross paid a visit to the Wilbur Theatre last October, he giddily tore Boston “a new asshole” — but, hey, at least he was kind enough to have “stitched that new asshole up with jokes.”
- Interview: Aziz Ansari is on the fly
It's been a good few months for Aziz Ansari.
- Happy returns
George Balanchine didn’t go in for productions of the old classic ballets.
- The Big Hurt: Dialing up Billboard’s Ringtones Chart
We may scoff at the very idea of Billboard ’s ignominious Ringtones chart, but mobile phones are one of only three viable revenue channels musicians have left these days (the other two being commercial licensing and crooked charities).
- Oscar predictions 2010: Locker is a lock
Except for some pipe-dream scenarios in which the 10-nominee/weighted-voting system could turn out a victory for Inglourious Basterds or some other dark horse, everyone concedes that this year's winner for Best Picture and just about every other significant award is — The Hurt Locker ! How did this happen?
- Slideshow: Dr. Lakra at the ICA
Dr. Lakra at the ICA, showing through September 6, 2010
- Review: Sonny Rollins at Symphony Hall
The lines were around the block for will-call and walk-up ticket purchases at Symphony Hall Sunday night — causing the show to start a half hour after its advertised curtain time. The place was nearly full, the mood celebratory. All good to see in a down economy. But this was the first disappointing Sonny Rollins concert I’ve attended in years.
- Have whiskey, will swim
Filling this year’s slot in SPACE Gallery’s annual “Outlandishly Entertaining Documentary” hole is Big River Man , John Maringouin’s take on the greatest adventure yet embarked upon by Martin Strel.
- Less
Topics:
Comedy
, Radio, Arts, Internet Radio, More
, Radio, Arts, Internet Radio, comedy, Podcast, wtf, Interviews, Marc Maron, Less