Interview: Traci Skene and Brian McKim

Double your pleasure
By SARA FAITH ALTERMAN  |  April 19, 2009

Shecky-double-comedy-main 

For the past 10 years, comedians (and married couple) Brian McKim and Traci Skene have cultivated a unique online niche for their comedy Web site SHECKYmagazine.com. A forum for both sharp, funny content and for erudite dissection of the craft and business of comedy, SHECKYmagazine is widely regarded – by comedians, industry folk, comedy fans, and various combinations of these things – as an authority on making and selling "the funny," as well as a sweeping resource for comedy-related news in general. McKim and Skene come to Mottley's Comedy Club (just named Best Comedy Night by our readers) this weekend.

I had assumed that you'd met on the stand-up circuit, but Traci's MySpace page says, "I've been doing stand-up since I was 19. I've been doing my husband since I was 18." Have you really been together since before you were comedians? What's it like to grow a relationship while it's also presumably fodder for material?
MCKIM: We met in 1984, when Traci was 18, and she started doing stand-up a year later. I'd only been doing comedy since '81. Our relationship is kind of fodder for material, but not really. We don't reveal anything about ourselves on stage. We're very old-school in that regard. I trash her at the end of my set, and she trashes a 'husband', but she refers to me obliquely. But it has been interesting. It's made the road much easier. The road can be horrific if you're traveling by yourself.

So what is the best, and, conversely, the most difficult part about working and touring together?
MCKIM: I think the best part would be that you can relate to each other. I would think it'd be very hard to relate to a comedian if you're not one yourself. I'm assuming that a comedian who marries a non-comedian has a rough go of it. Not that stand-up is so horrible. And I don't think we're unique in that regard. I think it would also be the same for a brain surgeon or a cab driver.

SKENE: The hardest part for me, and this doesn't apply to him, is that, when we tour, I go onstage before him, and then I have to worry about not just my set but his set. So, if it's a rough crowd, I start to feel bad for him because I know that he has to go on next. But then he feels badly for me. It's double the stress.

For stand-up, our writing process is individual. We write everything else together, but when it comes to our stand-up, it's separate. Each of us has one or two jokes that we've collaborated on, but for the most part we like to keep [our joke writing] separate.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Comedy central?, Interview: Louis CK, Dane Cook is funny, More more >
  Topics: Comedy , Entertainment, Bo Burnham, Internet,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY SARA FAITH ALTERMAN
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   INTERVIEW: ANDY RICHTER  |  November 25, 2009
    We have a chub for Andy Barker, P.I. (just released out on DVD), because we have a major chub for the show’s star, Andy Richter. Richter plays an accountant who is mistaken for a detective-for-hire and decides to just roll with it. 
  •   REVIEW: SPREAD  |  August 19, 2009
    If only there were some way to watch a con-artist houseboy give his cougar sugar mama a squirming reach-around, charm the pants off a candy-necklace string of countless empty-eyed Hollywood stick figures, lose his heart to an untouchable social chameleon, and, in the process, find himself .
  •   NORTHERN EXPOSURE  |  July 29, 2009
    While New York is grittier, Los Angeles juicier, and Boston is wicked smahter, for some odd reason it is Montreal that, for two weeks every summer, becomes the epicenter of the comedy universe.
  •   JUST FOR LAUGHS  |  July 27, 2009
    Blogs, Tweets, and comedy video direct from moose country
  •   BEAT THE TWEET  |  July 22, 2009
    Warm weather is supposed to be accessorized by lackaday, by a breezy sensibility best enjoyed with a frosty tall boy in one hand, the sloppy product of a back-yard barbecue in the other. Instead, I find myself struggling to balance my beer between my knees and my overstocked paper plate on my thigh as I furiously poke at my BlackBerry.

 See all articles by: SARA FAITH ALTERMAN