I left Los Angeles and the comedy scene there after years of trying to
figure out why that people who had talent were overlooked more and more
for people who would rather sell your baby, steal your car, and ensure
your future love life was ruined by STD's. (other than babies)I figured
out like most do that people who are screwing over others are likely to
get what they want because they are screwing people over. No one likes
that unless they are involved with the person in a really kinky way.
There
were rare exceptions. If you ever see K-Von, you'd see a kid who shows
up at every single open mike possible, and gets to all his gigs on time
or early. He's not the funniest guy ever, but he does write his own
material, and his delivery is on target. He is an example of great
marketing, and smart booking. He is now touring with Jamie Kennedy and
I see his future as upwards. Same with Martin Moreno. He started as an
open miker, did all the rooms he could even starting his own shows. He
still runs open mic rooms, and opens for his friend Gabriel Inglesias.
It's a great story, and it should be.
But, then there are 50
or 60 people for every K-Von and Martin who are just snakes, out for
their own gain, and couldn't care less who was harmed on their way up
to whatever it is they consider "fame and fortune". There was a woman I
worked with on many occasions, giving her gigs that paid great, and
inviting her to work with me at other gigs that were not paying well,
but had potential for a lot of future work. She was okay funny- not
outstanding- doing a lot of "boyfriend" material that many women do,
(just as many men do married men stuff). But she didn't do comedy
because she liked making people laugh and feel great- she did comedy
because she "Wanted a TV show". That kind of bothered me.
There's
an ulterior motive in many of those on stages, and it's the idea that
fame is more important than the audience. They sound like they're
reading scripted monologues, don't interact with the audience and
worse- they consistently lie about their experience, and skill level,
getting jobs that should go to those who really have the chops and
stage time. They'll join in conversations just to hear about some gig
where an agent may be- and then manipulate stage time sometimes bumping
those who the gig is really geared towards. This woman proved to be
exactly this type of "comic", and when I clued into her game, I was
happy to drop her off my list of folks I'd support, or assist.
Los
Angeles is filled with these types of performers. They will show up and
shmooze, but only talk to people with whom they assume they'll get work
from. Sadly, the people who hire like to be sucked up to, and many of
them buy into the constant faux praise, and unending "I" conversations.
The thing is, it's not just Los Angeles. It seems that small fish in
smaller ponds play that, and just as much creep out those of us who
work hard to be funny for the right reasons. They're a nightmare for
other performers because they attempt to represent those of us who
aren't trying to be anything but funny and audience friendly. Comedy
should take the pain of life away, not create more of it.
In
Vegas, it isn't much different. The pond is pretty small, and the
guppies are plenty. There are a few gold fish, who work pretty hard to
put on great shows and do so without the drama and antics of those who
just want to manipulate casinos into hiring them whether they have the
skills or talent to put on a great show or not. Then their are the
leeches. Leeches are what ruin show business for those of us who just
want to do a great thing for the audience- and nothing more.
Cris
Angel is a great example of a monster leech. He came to town, under the
guise of 'helping out' local acts, and bringing something new to the
stages. But he's done a lot of damage, making people less interested in
seeing the kind of show he claims he wants to do. There's another
comedian who has had his own showroom in at least six hotels that I can
think of, hires new comics to open for him, then uses their material
after he moves on to the next hotel or new opener. He's done this for
20 years, and no one except club owners seem to want to know him. He
brings in a lot of crowds, but mostly, they're just there for a cheap
show, and free drinks. He doesn't know that, but the rest of the city
does.
One of the Angel Fish is Cashetta. (
Cashetta.com) Cashetta
came to town and within a few short months landed a great gig in a
great room- and shared her luck by putting together a show that allows
other local performers to unwind and give a great act- in the After The
Show program. *11pm Monday Nights, Harmon Theater, and yes I play
there.* Short Bus Comics (
shortbuscomics.com) is another show that does
a lot for local acts. There isn't pay yet in this, but the word is out
that the acts are better quality than many of the expensive shows in
town and that it's nurturing to its performers. (Saturday nights, Greek
Isles, 8 and 10 pm).
But there are leeches who attempt to break
into these shows, and do nothing but talk about themselves, lie about
their credentials, waste the audience time with really awful, hack,
dried up material- and then bad mouth those very shows that offered
them time in the first place. There are four or so really terrible open
mic guys who basically can't tell a joke to save their lives, and they
go to every open mic known- just causing cesspool like stench when they
are up there. These same people are given shots at the other shows- and
then when they tank- they spend time on Craigslist, or using Facebook,
Twitter, and MySpace dissing the very show that had they only worked
enough to be good- could have nurtured their careers.
The most
recent incident I can think of- there is a guy who is claiming to be an
"actor and comedian" because he attended an adult ed. acting class, and
showed up at some open mics. He started to come to a show in town
fairly regularly, then proceeded to say he was a member of the group he
was hanging out with. Not a big deal as the producer gave him coaching
on his performance, and he at least pretended to take the direction. No
sooner had he made one show, he took over the NAME of the production
and then booked himself in another venue- claiming he was a member of
that company. So the posters and promos were about that title. The show
tanked, and people left it thinking, "Why would I see X, when this is
such a bad show?" He kept doing it until someone in the production
company caught on and let the producer know.
Then, when he
realized he wasn't going to ever be part of the regular show, he
started posting things on line about the rest of the company and
started pimping up this other room he started up on his own. The
problem was, he hired some of the worst acts, and still used the
production company's name. If that wasn't bad enough, he would send
emails to all the cast, letting them know of when HE was running HIS
show, and selling it as a Networking opportunity. He borrowed the
mailing list of the company- and then had balls to tell people that the
show HE was running was the same night as the original company's show.
So people got very confused, went to his event, and left, PISSED that
they saw crap, had to pay for it, and oh yeah. where were the regulars
from the company he took the name of? Oh yeah- they were performing at
their weekly gig.
This town is REALLY small. It's Las Vegas-
Sin City, but it's also made of four primary communities- Henderson,
Summerlin, North Las Vegas, and "Strip". If you work with someone in
one,you learn about those opportunities, and the town gets VERY small
VERY fast. I think I've worked with nearly every other headliner at one
point or another, had six stages to play on strip and off, and oh yeah,
after 27 years of doing comedy- I kind of know a lot of the names of
those who also did road gigs. There are some comedy clubs that opened
and claimed they'd be a place for pros who locally worked here, but
when the pros figured it was just a scam they re-focused their
attention on open mic people, and started classes- getting more money
from people than they did in ticket sales. Pros get it, and avoid it.
Newbies think it's a real club, so they hang there.
Another
club that did pretty well at first, moved to a couple of other hotels,
finally settling in mid strip. They stopped paying acts after a few
newbies said, "Hey, we'll work for free". That split the management of
the club up and now there are two versions, the Downtown and Strip. The
pros go to the Downtown one. Yet, one room opened up claiming they'd
support local acts- hired many pros- and then didn't pay- the women.
Men had no problem. They lost credit pretty quickly. This town is
small. You can't screw one person and expect it not to be known by the
other 50 who do pretty well here.
Yet, the open mic guys who
start their own rooms- and do so by lies and stealing - somehow think
they're immune to it. It isn't so. If you screw people over, you will
be found out pretty fast. This is a VERY small community for
performers. In LA, you wouldn't last ten minutes because people who are
smarter and have done it longer are better at it. But here in Vegas,
you last a few weeks- then either press, other comics, or worse- your
own people, figure you out. You're done. That's the end of your
reputation. If you come to comedy as an actor, and think you're going
to act your way into a regular gig- you're fooling yourself. No one
buys it. It's been done way too many times by way better talented
people.
Those of us with integrity, talent, and perseverance
will somehow prevail, despite the nasty snakes and leeches. (Yes I like
animals, cut that out.) We may not all be rich, or we may not all have
TV shows, but we have the knowledge that when the stage is empty for
the night- the audience is leaving happy. And a happy audience is the
best payment ever. (sort of, but you know what I mean.) If you're in it
for any other reason, I feel very sorry for you.