Michael O'Blogger

The Official Blog of MichaelOConnell.com

Sunday, January 31, 2010

O'Connell/Zeravica back 2 back open mic action!

The Professor X of Comedy (tm) and the Fist Officer (tm) are back on stage this week!

Yes, that's right comedy fetishists, Michael O'Connell and Vladimir Zeravica, after a couple weeks off while Vlad's been off flying around the country and earning a living, are back on stage this week for your chuckling pleasure. And back to back nights, Monday and Tuesday!

Monday is set. We'll be appearing at Po' Boyz Bar and Grill in Folsom for their weekly open mic night. That show starts at 9:00 PM, and we'll be on sometime after that point.

Tuesday is still up on the air on the location. We will either by appearing back at Tommy T's, OR will be debuting at Laughs Unlimited in Old Sacramento. There's still a scheduling question on that, so I'll have to update you once I know. The big Tommy T's open mic finals is coming up later this month, you see, and there's a "Finals Dry Run" going on Tuesday after open mic ends, where competing comics will be previewing their sets. I'm not sure at this point if that's ALL us open mic winners or just some, so don't know if I need to be there or not. Waiting to find out. If so, Vlado will be on during the open mic portion, I'll be on stage during the Dry Run portion an hour or two later. If not, we'll both be hitting Laughs Unlimited and doing our stuff for the downtown crowd.

Now, as a warning - this will not be new material. We'll be fine-tuning our existing acts (with minimal changes) this week, so if you've seen our YouTube videos, you've largely seen our sets. If you want to see those same jokes live, then by all means, come out and support us! If, however, you feel let down by reruns, we certainly understand.

More to come, but for now, here's the info on the definite one tomorrow night:

Po' Boys Bar and Grill
9580 Oak Avenue Parkway
Folsom, CA 95630
(916) 987-2886
NO COVER CHARGE

Hope to see you there!

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Hecklers ON stage? Another night of Tommy T's comedy

I headed down to Tommy T's tonight for the Tuesday open mic night. No getting up on stage for me this week. Two reasons. One, Vlado's out of town, and I don't want to be pulling ahead of him in the stage experience. That ain't right to do to a hard-working pilot-slash-comic. And two, I went alone, and therefore had no one to lift my ass up on stage. So unless they planned to have me do my act from back by the bar, it was just going to be spectator tonight. After the near-empty room Vlado and I had to deal with a couple weeks back, I wanted to do my part for fellow comics by at least being another person on the crowd. Apparently, on some nights, that can near DOUBLE the crowd.

So I hit the pharmacy first on my way over, and found myself in a ridiculous line. I thought this was going to make me late, but after I got to Tommy T's at almost 7:00, I found out that someone had confused the details on the evening. While the notice had said they would start at 6:30, it was actually a 7:30 start. I was early! Sweet! That allowed for starting drinking even earlier. You can do that kind of thing when you're not having to worry about getting up on stage.

I hung up at a table by the bar this time. This is where the comics tend to huddle, so it seemed like the place to be. Said hey to Lou and Ellis...and Ty, the big winner last time I was on! I noticed near me there was a table with a couple of pretty loud guys (REALLY loud guys) who seemed to be drinking a lot. I sensed trouble amiss...

I had assumed these guys knew each other, but, as I found out later, they were just both really loud, really drunk guys, so the Jack Daniels pheromone just pulled them into each other's orbits, and they fell in love immediately. As the show started, they were both quite distracting. Sometimes they'd be together, sometimes one would be at the bar while one was at the table. When this one guy was sitting alone, he would, without even looking up, comment on what the comedian was saying (positively, at least - "Yes! Yes! That's true!"), and with his voice, the comedian AND the whole rest of the place could clearly hear him. That is, when they could hear him over the REALLY drunk guy, who was talking at near shouting level to the bartender for what seemed like forever. People all the way up front kept looking back all night, wondering who the rude loud people were in the back (you know, the ones right by ME?), and many of the comedians had to deal with the situation - either having to play off the guy at the table with his comments, or deal with heckles or general loudness from bar guy.

So after a while, Ellis gets up there and call for the next comedian. Oh, joy. It's table guy! Table guy (pretty drunk but serviceable) states right off that he's not a comedian, and that he just came in to fill out a job application for waiting tables and decided to go up. He has no act. But to his credit...he was entertaining. He just kind of talked about his life a bit, and was a pretty naturally funny guy. So it wasn't disastrous or anything. But he did look up at one point when he obviously had nothing left and asked, "Isn't there supposed to be a red light coming on to save me here?", and Lou hit the light for him. He finished and went back to his table. Pretty well received.

So bar guy continues the yammering. Loud, drunk, obnoxious, getting shushed from all sides. Twice on stage Ellis, while making it a joke, of course, told the people back the bar to...well, to be quiet (I'm paraphrasing, of course). Then we're down to only three comedians left. Night's almost over. Ellis introduces the next comic by name...and bar guy start loudly yelling cheers for himself. There was the most amazing collective "Oh, God" from the whole room. It was magical. It was a brilliant mixture of discomfort and train-wreck anticipation.

Bar guy takes forever to get up to the stage, holding up his arms (and his drink) and yelling for himself the whole time. My first breath-holding moment (an "Oh, no" combined with a guilty but unavoidable "Ooh, this is gonna be good!") was waiting to see if he made it up the stairs to the stage - stairs I've seen sober comedians trip on three times now. He managed. He set his drink down on the stool and grabbed the mic. And started rambling. And stumbling. And, not surprisingly, going nowhere. It was painfully beautiful. After a couple minutes of this (I still couldn't tell you what he actually said, as fixated on the carnival atmosphere as I was), I started to wonder if he'd even see, and if so, heed, the red light when it came on. Well, that didn't end up being a problem. Apparently lost for more to say, he then decided to wow the crowd by stepping OFF the stage and on to one of the front row tables (where people were sitting). NOW we were in about-to-see-some-good-stuff territory.

At this point, Lou cut his mic. Which confused and annoyed bar guy to no end. Then, from my seat in the back, I could see Lou and Ellis, each slowly coming forward on opposite sides of the room, readying to get up on stage from two different sides and put an end to the spectacle. Bar guy saw this, and said (as you may have surmised from his vocal description earlier, he didn't NEED a mic to be heard), "Okay, okay, fine, I'm getting back." He then backed up and stepped back on the stage, managing to (dammit) do so without falling over. But Lou and Ellis approached, having him penned in, and apparently explained it was time for him to leave the stage. Thankfully, they didn't have to physically drag him off. Wait a minute...did I just say "thankfully"? Ripoff!

There were a couple more comedians to go, and, of course, bar guy didn't leave. He was back at the bar, being loud. Now, when the last comedian of the night went on? That's when this guy went into full heckle mode, and completely destroyed this guy's act (a guy whose act was, frankly, a bit cerebral and hard to follow to START with). I would hear later that it was around this point where bar guy then asked Lou when it was his turn to go up on stage. Ooookay. That's when Lou let him know it was time to go. I didn't get to hear all of it, just some loud bitching from bar guy as he was made to leave Tommy T's.

The show ended, and I headed down the elevator to go out to the smoking area where everyone meets post-show. I managed to get out there just in time to see bar guy being dragged by someone he obviously knew...dragged toward a car. There was a clearly embarrassed girl behind the wheel, waiting. Bar guy was pointing and belligerently yelling at the assembled crowd. I came out there just as he was yelling, "Come on, hit me! Any of you! I dare you!"

And I swear to you...for a minute there, I almost went up and did it. Just because it would have been the funniest thing to do at that moment.

But, after dropping him to the pavement once, his buddy managed to get him into the car and drive him away.

Oh GOD am I glad I didn't perform tonight.

The good news? In the middle of his drunken ranting at the bar, this guy apparently told Lou that he'd be back every Tuesday night from now on.

I can only dream....

[NOTE: The photo above was taken just before bar guy left the stage. You can see him there behind Ellis, being a drunken asshat]

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

The 01/05/10 Comedy Video - Now on YouTube

Hey! Did you just tell me to go embed myself?!!

People who couldn't make it out to the big me 'n Vlado comedy debut on January 5th have been shouting for video. Well, here's mine, to start with. Will be getting Vlado's up ASAP.

This video, again, was shot by our old pal Rich, who was nice enough to lose a lot of sleep (he rises at about 2:30 AM to get to work) and drive a long way (he lives in freaking Galt) to set up a camera and do this for us, and then to have jump through a few hoops to get it transferred off his camera. Not only did he get the video for us, but he made each of us some awesome DVDs of them. So thanks, again, Chico Rich, for all the effort and for being there for us.

The sound's a bit low, but that's mainly because of the acoustics of the place and...well, frankly, my not-so-booming voice, and my not having figured out yet that just holding the damn mic works better for me. So you may have to pump up the volume a bit.

Hope you enjoy. And away we go...

Saturday, January 16, 2010

The Comedy Odyssey - Part 3 ("Post-Comedic Stress Disorder")

So my second attempt at stand-up hadn't been fantastic, but it hadn't been disastrous either, at least. But I knew I needed to get right back on the horse. Or the bike. Or whatever the right metaphor is. Vlado, too, wanted to get back up onstage and keep hitting it so we didn't get rusty, so we decided we needed to hit the next Tuesday night's open mic at Tommy T's--me, just to practice (you can't win again if you've already won, but a lot of comedians, as I said earlier, show up just to work their stuff in front of a crowd), and Vlado to see if he could get a win and get in the February competition as well.

I was going back to my original 5 minute routine, with just a couple of minor tweaks. Vlado had reworked his routine, adding in some new stuff and adjusting old. Both of us did our practicing at our respective homes (having learned my lesson about not rehearsing, I was taking no chances this time).

Tuesday came, and Vlado said he and Babydoll planned to have dinner at Spaghetti Factory and invited me to join them, so I did. Per Vlado, loading up on carbs before comedy can only be a good thing. It took a bit longer than we thought, but Tommy T's is right upstairs from the S.F., so we headed up with a few minutes to spare. The place was mildly filled, even a bit on the quiet side. But as we soon found out, it was going to be a long night - there were twenty comedians signed up for that night! Damn! Vlado had gone upstairs before we started dinner and put us on the list, and we decided that going in spots #'s 8 and 9 would be good for us (let the crowd get good and warmed up first...as I'd learned a few days before, going first sucks!), and this time, Vlado would be the one going before me (just to mix things up a little).

As the comedy began, the place slowly started filling up more. Pretty soon it was a pretty packed house. But the best part of the crowd, Vlado and I both noticed, was a couple of guys sitting a couple tables down from us. These were big guys...and the kind of guys who just seem to laugh at everything. And better yet, they had that kind of infectious laugh that gets other people around them going. We were both pretty stoked by this, as these guys promised to make things a lot easier for us.

We started to notice that while our time was supposed to be coming up, people seemed to be getting up ahead of us...people whose names were not on the list. Turns out there were some drop-ins...local comedians who popped in and wanted to do a few minutes. The vets get vet treatment. So we waited, and waited...

Soon we got told that we were coming up. Whew! Vlado wheeled me over to the stage door area, where we had a seat. The plan was that he'd get up and do his thing, come back down while Ellis was doing his interstitial bit, take me backstage and get me up the stairs to wait my turn to go. We were both prepared, calm and ready.

Then things started going a wee bit wrong. Know those two guys I mentioned? Just as the latest comedian finished up and Ellis got back on stage, we looked over and noticed both those guys got up and left...along with their whole big table. That was very disappointing...we were counting on those guys. Then, right after that? ANOTHER table got up and left. There had been a lot of comedians up there, and as this was a week night, people weren't going to hang around too late. So as we watched, the place emptied more, and more, until...

Vlado's turn!

Vlado went up on stage and looked down on the crowd. He didn't count right then, obviously, but did do a count later after both of us sat back down. 19 PEOPLE. That's what was left of the crowd when our turn at the mic finally came.

Can you guess what happened next?

Yeah, not pretty. Playing to a very small crowd? NOT FUN. Vlado did his revised act. An act, of course, meant to play to a big crowd...or even a medium crowd...but not, like, a can-fit-them-all-into-one-minivan crowd. It was rough. The room was dead. DEAD, I say! You could smell their bodies decaying. Their next of kin requested charitable donations in lieu of flowers.

Vlado got done, came down to get me, and told me, "Just push on through. That's all you can do." What else CAN you do, right? He got me up the stairs and I waited, and oddly, after having seen what he had to go through, I got eerily calm and relaxed. I now had zero expectations of doing well, and that seemed to take all the pressure off. All I was up there to do, I figured, was just practice my set, get my timing back, experiment with my new plan of just holding the mic the whole time instead of messing with the stand, etc. The crowd being involved? Irrelevant.

So Ellis gave me my intro, which I actually enjoyed quite a bit: "Ladies and gentlemen, the funniest man on wheels...the Professor X of comedy...Mr. Michael...O'Connell!" So I rolled out with the DJ playing AC/DC's "Back in Black" as my intro music. Very cool. And, yes, I remained calm. Almost TOO calm, in fact. I felt like I was talking to a few friends over dinner. So I just did my bit, and those 19 people were nice enough to sit through it. I had my marks and my timing back. I even felt the improv groove again, and called out to Ellis, referencing something in one of his earlier jokes and tying it into mine. What I didn't know at the time was that after introducing me, he'd LEFT...he had to take off for a few minutes or something, and (as I would find out at the end of my set when some other guy came up instead of him) had someone else do his MC chores for a couple of comics. My improv bit didn't actually require a response from him, so it wasn't like I was left hanging or anything. But I did find it funny that one of the other comedians in the back tried to cover for him and did a deep "Yeah" in response to what I was saying. So, yeah...I was just happy to work my stuff. Why? Because Vlado had jumped on the grenade first, and I knew in advance what to expect. I'm trying to imagine what would have been going through my head NOT realizing how quiet things were going to be. I had a good time, all things considered.

After I was done, we headed back to where Babydoll waited at our table, and we 1) ordered drinks quickly and 2) made sure to stay for the entire rest of the show for the poor devils who still had to go on AFTER us. We wanted to make sure to give them some extra support. And they needed it, because even MORE people left. By the time the last three comedians of the night were up, there was maybe 6 or 7 people left. Ow. I felt really bad for one guy in particular, because it was his very first time doing an open mic. And he had THAT crowd to work with. It was almost complete silence for him, but the thing was, he actually had a really good set. And he had good delivery. He would have killed with that act if there was more than half-dozen people there. After he got down, I wanted to be able to tell him that, but he was sitting a ways away and ended up taking off before I could talk to him. I really hope that didn't sour him to the experience. Oh, and one guy I really liked? He was, like, the second-to-last comic. And he looked down and saw the crowd and made a comment about the small size...and the proceeded to just throw out his whole routine and just goof around with the crowd. And it was funny! That's a sign of a real comic, guys who don't need a routine to please a crowd.

My favorite part of the night, though, was when the winners were announced. No, sadly, not Vlado this time (we'll be back to try again), which would have REALLY made it my favorite part, but what happened was very cool. See, when Vlado and I first checked out the open mic at Tommy T's, the week before we went on, the first comedian that went on was...well...he was not good. I mean, he seemed like a really great guy, and seemed like a very funny guy, and had the confidence...but he just didn't seem to get the structure of comedy. He kind of...well, lacked any kind of punchlines. At all. It didn't go well for him that night. The following week, before Vlado and I went on, he came back and went on again. And both Vlado and I were pleasantly surprised to find he had a couple of punchlines in there. Excellent. And then came this open mic, and there he was again. And you know what? He got it! His routine was good! It was done the right way and everything! I was really happy for the guy. Unfortunately, he ended up taking off after his set, and didn't hang around 'til the end to find out that when they announced the two chosen winners...he was one of them! I'm so inspired by that guy! He tried it once, it didn't work, but he didn't let that turn him off to the experience. He learned from his mistakes, adjusted, tried again, and did so again he got it right. And it paid off! Now I may be competing against him next month. This guy's my new hero!

Okay, actually, my favorite part of the night ended up being after the show. Vlado, Babydoll and I headed outside after the show FINALLY ended (it went on forEVER) where Ellis and some of the other comics were hanging out and smoking. There's nothing in the world like hanging out and talking with comics. It's not like a normal conversation. Here, someone would bring up a subject, and then it was like everyone was just passing the punchline around the circle. Everyone's just doing bits on the fly. It was great being a part of that. Comics are awesome people. It was great getting to know some of them some more.

So, to summarize...WE didn't stink...the CROWD did. I swear! I had already had my tepid crowd experience the previous Wednesday, but now Vlado and I both got to experience the tiny crowd moment. This is something comics have to deal with, so we were both glad that we got to get that experience out of the way. It's kind of like learning to box. You're going to be afraid of getting punched in the face until you actually take that first punch. And we did. And we'll both be prepared for it next time. Neither of us have been booed or heckled yet, so we still have THAT experience to look forward to at some point, but so far we're doing okay, and both of us are hungry to get up there and face it again.

And we shall...so stay tuned here for details! More stories and a big comedy competition yet to come!

Thursday, January 14, 2010

The Comedy Odyssey - Part 2 ("The WRONG Way...")

So I left Tommy T's after the night of my big debut feeling pretty good. After all, I hadn't just achieved the goal of simply getting up and doing it, but I'd done pretty darned well. Like, winning-the-contest well. After having spent years wondering what the stand-up experience would be like, I now knew, and I LIKED it.

Now I had to go back the next night and open for the Wednesday night comedy showcase. And they even handed me up to five additional minutes. That's pretty short notice. I had less than twenty-four hours to pretty much double my set, so I figured I'd better get right home and get it figured out.

I got home, still pretty wound up from the experience, and it was getting on toward midnight. I first had a lot of Facebook things and emails to answer about the night, since everyone on there was all a-buzz about the reports Vlado and I had been doing during and after the show. That took a while. It was getting quite late, though, and I knew time was short because I had to get up early(er) the next day. See, I had arranged with Tim to go see a matinee of Sherlock Holmes, and had already bought my ticket online. Plus, I had also told my friend Barrie we'd come grab him afterward and we'd all head for Tobacco Road, my cigar lounge, a place Tim, unlike Barrie and I, hadn't gotten to experience yet. So I had little time to work with that night, and no time the following day to work before having to arrive for the show.

But I wasn't that stressed about it. After getting off stage that night, I'd had one clear impression that stuck in my head, surprising at is was.

"Wow. That was EASY."

This was problem #1.

I had faced the great on-stage challenge, and it had gone unexpectedly well. Based on this, my mind told me that all my stressing out and preparation the first time around had been a waste of time. Doing comedy was a piece of cake! So I figured I didn't need to sweat it so much the next night. Yes, I had five additional minutes to come up with, but that really wasn't a problem. As I mentioned last time, there was lots of stuff that I'd had to throw out to work my material down to five minutes. Now, I figured, I could just relax and take my time up there, and all I had to do was to select a few things from the cutting room floor and insert them into my previous material. How hard could THAT be? Not very for me, I figured. So instead of sitting down and writing, preparing a new set and rehearsing it, I just decided I would go to Tommy T's, get up on stage, and "just wing it".

Because, you know, I had SO much comedy experience at that point, why SHOULDN'T I expect to be able to pull that off?

So I finished up my Facebook stuff, had a celebratory cigar on the patio, and got into bed, setting my alarm to get up early to get ready and make it to the movie on time. But I was still wound, and had a million things going through my head (possible new jokes being many of those million), and I just could not fall asleep, try though I did. In the end, I ended up getting about three hours of sleep before the alarm went off.

This being problem #2.

I got myself up and around, packed up all the stuff I'd need for the night since I wouldn't be coming home before the show, and headed for the theater. Tim met me there and we saw the film, which I enjoyed quite a bit (despite the fact that, due to the lack of sleep, I started dozing off a little at one point). After that, we grabbed Barrie, and we headed to Tobacco Road. Some of my regular guys I hang out with there were on site, and wondered how the big comedy night had gone. I told them about the win, and Zack bought me a cigar to celebrate. Cool. So we chilled out and smoked up, until it was finally time to get underway. Tim headed over to the joint, while I dropped Barrie off and then went and picked up Vlado. To Rancho we did go.

The night before, after the show ended, the manager Christine had told me to call and and let them know how many people would be coming with me the second night, as they would reserve a table for my party. Reserved table? My, my. I liked that. In addition to Tim and Vlado and I, Tim's brother Brian, A.T., Ken, and my housekeeper Cindy had said they were coming. When I called Christine at the club, I gave her the number, and she said the table would be waiting, and she said she'd just get us our "regular table". Vlado and I had sat at this table both times we'd been there, and now it appeared that we were becoming such regulars that we had an acknowledged "regular table". NOW we were starting to feel like comedians. And showing up and finding a sign on your table that says "VIP Reserved - Michael O'Connell"? Now THAT's living the dream.

Cindy coming was an awesome thing. During all the lead-up time, when she'd come over to clean my place and do the laundry, I had been telling her about this. And she very much wanted to come see my open mic. But Cindy is also the mother of my friend Tami, who's married to my friend Chris, and Cindy is their babysitter. So she knew if both Chris and Tami went, she'd need to be with the the kids and wouldn't be able to attend. So I told her, jokingly, not to worry - I'd just have to win the contest so she could come see me the next night. Well...THAT turned out well. So she showed up, very happy to be there, and I was very happy that the win had allowed that to happen.

So we relaxed at our table before things started, with me, kind of in a daze and half-awake, feeling no fear. I was chill. That night was going to be a comedy showcase, with three comedians and a host, and me opening. The host came over and say hey to me...nice guy named Robert that I'd met and chatted with after the previous night's show (he'd been one of the comics on stage, but not competing to win, as he'd already won a previous open mic...just working on his stuff). He soon got ready to head up, and Tim and I took our cue to head for the stage door (luckily no one was seated in our row of travel this time). The place was pretty full-up. People hadn't spread up to these seats this time, though, because apparently the floor paint had dried in front of the stage, and those tables were back. This intimidated me a little. I had, the previous night, been initially bothered by the open floor, but it turned out to be kind of nice without having people looking right up at you. Now I'd be able to clearly see faces. Hmmm.

Tim got me up the stairs, and Robert quickly introduced me...and kindly mispronounced my name (O'Conner. That's helpful when you're trying to make a name for yourself. At least he didn't call me a "fist commander"...). Out again I went, though this time not as zen...and this time, kind of a zombie from the lack of sleep. I arranged with Tim to come out and set the mic stand for me, so I wouldn't have the same problem with the having to lean over. He got it to a certain height, and I told him that was fine. It LOOKED fine when he set it, but as soon as he left I realized it was just a little bit too tall...and because of that, and because of my non-bending spine, leaning toward it was going to make my head go down even further. To get the mic up to me, I had to grab the stand and lean it up to me, holding it at a balanced angle. This was kind of awkward.

Which kind of set the tone for the performance.

I got started, and felt out of sorts from the start. This got worse when I went from my same opening joke and moved right into the "new" material. Which, again, I hadn't practiced with (because, again, I'm so much of a pro that I don't NEED rehearsal...). So I felt unsure about it, and I think that came through. And the new material wasn't necessarily great. Pretty early on I did a Jerry Lewis joke that fell totally flat, which was my first taste of onstage crickets. I now knew what it was like to hit the wall of silence. It's not a pleasant feeling the first time, believe me. You get a rush of panic when you've not experienced it before and you're not too sure what to do with it. Please note, also, that the first two tables in the front row were filled with a group of college girls celebrating a birthday party. Clearly, none of them were old enough to have any idea who Jerry Lewis WAS. Coyotes howled in the distance. A tumbleweed went by. I longed to have an emergency dick joke in my quiver for backup.

I pressed on, not having a grip on my set, fumbling in a couple of places trying to integrate the old and new. More new stuff didn't hit big. More panic. More nerves. I was not only out of it, but had lost my previous night's confidence. My energy level was low. My mind was all over the place. So much so that I didn't even realize until a day or two later that I'd left out part of a bit, which made the punchline not make too much sense. The hits just kept on coming.

Was it a total tank? It sure as hell felt like it up there, though there was laughter. By the end, I did my final joke, kind of lingered for a moment, and then said thank you and good night. I left the stage feeling like I'd totally blown it, and just to add that little extra helping of goodness, Robert asked the crowd to one more time give it up for Michael O'Conner. Greeeat.

I got back to my table, and the others were kind about it. But I knew what doing it right felt like, and that had NOT been it. I ordered food and drink and dealt with it, and listened to the rest of the comics. I'd asked Vlado to video it for me, which he had, because good or bad, I wanted to be able to review the game tape for learning purposes. I had things to learn, all right. They included:

1) Sleeping before a performance is kind of important. I should have said no to the movie and gotten a good night's sleep. Sleep helps you brain more better.

2) Practice, practice, practice. Winging it is not a game for the noob. I should have gotten home the night before, decided for sure what I was using, typed the new stuff into the existing routine, and practiced it a number of times. I heard a good quote that night from Vlado, who was quoting Sting: "You have your whole life to make your first album. Then you only have six months to make your second one". I had very little time to come up with a longer routine, but I still should have taken that time. I'd forgotten how important all my previous prep had been to making my confident.

3) Going first sucks. The opener is the one who has to has to warm up the crowd. By definition, then, the crowd is COLD when you get them. This is not pleasant. I prefer a crowd thawed and pre-heated. Will try to avoid that in the future if possible.

4) Confident is not the same thing as cocky. I'd gone up the previous night confident, because I'd gotten myself into that state. Because of the way the experience went, I let it get into my head that doing a set of comedy was a breeze. You never know, from one night to the next, what kind of crowd you're going to have, whether there will be tables or an empty, just-painted floor in front of you, or if a sorority girl is going to be having a birthday party. You have to respect the stage. And I did not. This was a lesson learned the hard way. Which is a good thing, I think.

We enjoyed the rest of the night, though I had a lot on my mind, smarting from my lukewarm sophomore showing. Turns out I could have done worse. Robert, the host? All of a sudden, another comic ("Boogie"...very funny guy) was up on stage hosting instead. Where had Robert gone? Well, I talked to Lou the manager after, and he said that Robert was supposed to be doing like three jokes between comics, and he'd been doing just one. So he got yanked in the middle of the show and replaced. Ow. That made me feel bad for Robert, but made ME feel a little bit better. At least I didn't get fired.

After it was over I ended up talking to a couple of comics, including the last comic of the night, whose name, if I'm remembering right, is Brian Diamond. While he had shown up late and hadn't seen my act, I talked about it not going too great, and a got a lot of good advice from him from his twenty years of doing stand-up, mostly about how there are way too many factors that affect what a crowd, and a night, as going to be like, to stress over trying to figure it all out. You just need to get through it and get on to the next gig. I really appreciated what he had to say. And also, a couple of girls stopped on the way out to tell me how great I'd been. I simply said thank you, when what I wanted to do was apologize. I let my co-ed fans down! Oh, the humanity!

I always try to look for the lessons in any seemingly bad situation, and found many of them that night. The biggest silver lining was that if I want to continue doing comedy, I'm going to have to learn to deal with a bad crowd, and with moments of silence when the jokes don't quite work. And I got that experience on that Wednesday night, very early on in my "career", and felt it prepared me nicely to deal with that possibility in the future. Having a great first time out isn't necessarily a positive thing - they aren't all going to be like that, and the sooner you get that through your head, the better. It is, I can tell you, through my head.

And getting back on the horse is very important, too, so I wanted to do so as soon as possible. Vlado and I both felt that way, and agreed we needed to come back the following Tuesday night for open mic, and, like many comedians there, work on our acts in front of a crowd.

Of course, "crowd" can sometimes be the wrong word, as we were going to find out in less than a week.

Part 3 to come.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

The Comedy Odyssey - Part 1 ("The RIGHT Way...")

If you've read the earlier entries, you know how my journey into stand-up comedy began: I made myself a bucket list in 2002 and decided to put "Do a comedy open mic" on it, I mentioned this a while back to my buddy Vlado, he said that he and I should get up and do it, I said okay. Just that simple. He did some research on local Sacramento comedy clubs, and we decided we would do this thing at Tommy T's Comedy and Dinner Theater in Rancho Cordova.

We set a date not too far distant, and both started working on our material. I, being a procrastinator, took my time. Not surprisingly, the date crept up fast (being right after the holidays). So I finally had to sit myself down and do some writing, and come up with 3-5 minutes of material. My problem with this was probably the opposite of most people. Your average person would sweat having to come up with a whole five minutes of comedy. For me, it was trying to figure out how I was going to squeeze everything I wanted to talk about into JUST five minutes. So I wrote, and I wrote, and I threw lots of stuff out for the sake of time. When I finally had the routine I wanted, it came out about two minutes too long. Oops. More editing. During this time, Vlado and I spotting each other became invaluable. I would send him my routine, he would send back notes with lots of edits. It was only because of his intervention that I was able to FINALLY (like, two nights before the show) get my bit running at right around five minutes. This would work just fine, providing no one laughed very much. Yes, I too enjoyed the irony.

Being big Facebook guys, we posted up our intentions on our respective pages. Another part of Vlado's plan was that we tell everyone we knew what we were doing, making it that much harder to back out of it. This worked nicely, because suddenly, we both had tons of friends and family expressing interest in coming to see it. There was now no turning back.

We decided it would be smart to go the open mic night at Tommy T's the week before we went on, both to get a feel for the place and to get a lot of our questions answered. We showed up just before they opened, and the manager there was extremely helpful and friendly. I got the chance to figure out the wheelchair logistics. The stage in this place had three big steps going up to it on either side. I realized right away that even though someone could probably lift me up those, doing so in front of a crowd of people would not only be a little humiliating for me, but pretty uncomfortable for them to watch. The place did have a backstage area, though. Still steps to deal with, but they could be handled out of eyesight, at least. I asked my chair-lifter of over thirty years, Tim, to hook me up on that, since he was going to be there anyway. Problem solved.

We ordered drinks and food and settled in to watch the show, and to see what we were in for. The very first comedian on stage--not to be unkind, just to be accurate here--was awful. He literally did not know what a punchline was. He just tried to tell funny stories...ones that never really came to a point. They weren't even jokes. The next comedian wasn't all that much better. Vlado and I looked at each other, both thinking the same thing: we could do this. If these guys could do it, certainly we couldn't do any worse. Even if we stunk, it appeared we'd be in good company. We left there, with a week left to go, feeling confident and relaxed. We were now able to visualize the location, which makes a big difference when you're rehearsing, and we also got to see how other people would be seeing us up there. It helps to realize that even though people might not be laughing aloud, that doesn't mean they hate your guts.

As the day approached, did I fear doing this? Not really. I've been a big self-help, Tony Robbins kind of guy the past couple of years, and I'm all about trying new things and ignoring the fear (and sometimes that even works). All my emotional turmoil came from working the routine. Many drafts later, I found that once I had a final product, I relaxed. Thinking I'd never be able to complete a routine was a much bigger fear than the idea of actually doing it. I did have fears about being able to memorize the routine; I haven't had to memorize anything in quite some time. But then, one night, I was in the kitchen and had my stopwatch handy, and was away from my written routine (still on the computer, unprinted). I decided to time out the opening part of my act, to check its duration and see if anything there could be shaved. I hit the stopwatch, and much to my surprise, I did my whole act from memory. How about that?

Once I had the final set locked, I spent that last couple of days before the big Tuesday rehearsing - making sure I had it memorized, trying different physical movements and voice inflections to maximize the funny, etc. I had it down. All I had to do, now, was to do the same thing on stage. Under a spotlight. In front of people. Hmmmm.

Tuesday came. Vlado offered me a ride with him and his girlfriend, but I decided I wanted to drive. I wanted to have that final bit of time during the commute to get my head straight, go over my act, and get my emotions in the right place of no-fear. I also made a decision before I left my apartment. I was going through my checklist, and one of the items was to print out my routine to take with me. I figured I'd take a final look at it at the club before going on, and keep it folded in my coat pocket as a backup in case I got brainlock up on stage. I pulled up the file, and was about to hit the print button, and I changed my mind. I remembered the previous week at Tommy T's, watching some guy sitting at a table before the show, looking a nervous wreck, pouring over his typed routine. He looked miserable. I also remembered seeing a couple of comedians on stage actually taking out their notes and setting them on the stool, and referring to them as they went along.

I didn't want to be any of these guys. I didn't want to be the first guy, minutes away from getting on stage and still not believing that I was ready or able to pull it off. And I definitely didn't want to be the other guys. The essence of stand-up comedy is to appear that you're just making up, on the spot, the stuff you're talking about up there. Notes completely destroy the illusion - and they also look very unprofessional. So I made the choice to leave my notes at home. As someone said to me later that night, I was like Cortes burning his ships. While this is historically inaccurate (he actually grounded them, and only nine out of the twelve, and you don't care about any of this, do you?), it serves as a pretty good metaphor. It was all or nothing for me at that point. And making that choice stoked my confidence even further.

After a drive through heavy commute traffic (which is why I left early), I got there, met up with Vlado and Arianna, and headed inside. We were a good hour early (they were open, but the show didn't start until later), so were able to get the table we wanted (the same one as the previous week). And soon, we were joined by a couple of important members of our crew: Tim, who would be my "stairmaster", and Rich, who had agreed to video the performances for us (being a professional in the industry, he was the perfect choice. I should point out that he was in TV. If I left it vague like that, you'd suspect I was talking about porn). Vlado got himself a beer. Me? I'd decided I didn't want to drink or eat anything until I was off stage. So I hadn't eaten all day. Probably not the best idea, but still seemed like the smarter choice.

We'd had several people have to cancel on us at the last minute, so we weren't sure how many of our people were actually going to show. Well, plenty did. Soon enough, my friends Barrie, Jessica and Kyle showed up. And Vlado's lifelong buddy Al joined us. Old school chums (as in old chums from school) began to appear. Dennis (the goalie!) and his friend Laura. Mike R. Kim (who I hadn't seen in about 25 years (if not more)). Roxanne. Chris K. and Tami. Larry and Tina. Rachel and Nichole. Robert. And John B. It's important to mention John because of something that happened later. Like Kim, I hadn't seen John in over two decades. John's ended up with M.S. in the years since, and uses an electric scooter. Not only was it great to see him again, but he inadvertently became part of a funny story. Also, my friend Joy, who hadn't been sure she was going to be able to make it, showed up with her mother and niece, both of whom I know. And even though they had to show up late, Chris B. and Emily made it just before the show started. The only one who looked like he wouldn't make it in time was A.T., who had a class that night that didn't get out until 8:30, but he said he planned to show up and hang out with us anyway, even if he missed us on stage.

And family was also in attendance. Arianna's family showed up to support Vlado. I had representation from all three sides of mine. My stepsister Wendy and her husband Rick showed up for the Bryant side. Chad came with Larry and Tina, repping the Moon side. And carrying the banner from the O'Connell side, my Uncle Stan and Aunt Kathy (and Stan's sister Dorothy) made the scene. This was brave of them because I warned that largely Mormon side of the family that these comedy shows can get quite vulgar and explicit, and that they could always just wait to see the video of my stuff later (which PROBABLY be less vulgar and explicit...), but they took their chances and braved Tommy T's anyway, which really meant a lot to me.

So we had ourselves a good showing of support, and were quite happy about that. Soon the lights went down and the show began. It was coming. I was more excited than nervous, but still felt some nerves with the anticipation. We had signed up on the list to be #'s 5 and 6 for the night, so we would let the crowd get a little warmed up first. And they did. There were two comedians up there who were really, really good - so much so that I decided not to bother worrying about winning the contest because one of them would surely take the prize. So that actually relaxed me some more.

The main manager (Lou) came over during one comic's bit and let me and Tim know that I was up next. This was our cue to head to the stage door to get ready to get backstage. Problem - the place filled up quite nicely, and the already close row between tables that led there was filled with people. We had to clank and bash and "excuse me" our whole way there, knocking chair aside, but finally made it. This was the biggest stress of the night for me, but only because I was so afraid that we were making a lot of noise and distracting the comic up on stage. He didn't seem to notice, thankfully.

Once that guy finished up, the MC - Ellis Rodriguez, a great comedian that Vlado and I had met the week before - got up on stage to do his between-comics jokes, and that meant is was time to head in. We got backstage, and Tim easily got me up the extra-tall stairs (three decades of experience makes that happen), and he headed back down, leaving me there behind a black curtain, waiting to hear my name. I could see some of the audience from back there. I went into kind of a zen state. I didn't want to be afraid. I didn't want to be nervous. I wanted to relax, have a good time, radiate confidence, and do my routine just as I'd practiced it so many times. The only concern on my mind then was not wanting to run over my time and get management ticked at me (as management is the one who decides the contest winners, after all).

Ellis's bit went quick, and then I heard my name, and the applause. Go-time. I rolled out into the spotlight. I had asked Ellis beforehand to drop the mic stand for me, and he did so. Unfortunately, turns out it was TOO low, and I realized quickly that I was going to have to lean over to speak into it for that portion of my act that required a stand (I'd be removing it at some point for the final part of my routine). So I took a breath, leaned in, and began.

And I wasn't nervous. I felt so relaxed, in fact, that I even broke script and improvised something right up front, making a joke having something to do with the strange set-up of the floor (they had roped off the whole area in front of the stage for floor painting, so all the tables were gone). And I went into my act. Now if you've never been on stage, you haven't experienced the strange kind of time compression that happens. You know how during an accident or when you're starting to take a fall, everything kind of goes into slow motion? This is the opposite. This period of time kind of just vanishes. You go into autopilot. This is why rehearsing your act is so important; if you're going on autopilot, you'd damned well better have your route programmed in. I did, and before I knew it, my time was over. Only after did it occur to me that I had never seen "the light". There's a light, which I now know is up by the bar (didn't realize until I was starting to go up that I'd never bothered to find out where the light they told us about was), the goes on solid red when you're down to a minute left, and starts blinking white if your time is up and you need to (and I quote) get the hell off the stage. Had I gone over? I had no idea. I just knew I heard cheering and was leaving the stage as Ellis came back on.

It had felt really good, that act I had just done, but I had no way to know if it really HAD gone well...since I could barely remember any of it. My first sign that it had was Tim, meeting me at the stairs, quite excited, whisper/shouting, "Dude, you killed!". Oh...killed is good. In comedy. Right on. That made me feel better. I can't really remember what Tim and I discussed going down the stairs. The rush was still jamming up my head. So much so that I didn't realize until later that Ellis was on stage talking about me at that time. Still don't know what he said, since I still don't have the full video yet. Let's hope it wasn't, "Could the rest of you comics tonight please not go seven minutes over your time like O'Connell did? Did he NOT see the blinking light?".

Second sign was when we came out the stage door, and Vlado came up. Vlado was getting ready to go up, and was heading to the stairs at stage right, and like Tim, he looked really, really jazzed and whispered, "Dude, you nailed it!" Okay. Nailing is good, too. Killing and nailing. I was feeling pretty sure that my good feelings about the performance weren't just all in my head. We then headed back through the thin, thin row of tables, but this time, didn't have to ask people to move. They all got up. And several shook my hand, and said that that had been great. That was cool. But cooler still was getting to the and of that aisle, and realizing the person sitting alone at the last table was A.T. He had managed to arrive and get inside RIGHT before I went on. That made my night. I really wanted him to be there for this. I was quite glad they'd started the show a little late.

Vlado got called up. And called up badly, I should add. Ellis Rodriquez impressively butchered his name. Vlado had written his name (with his pilot title in mind, as he was going to be doing pilot humor) as "First Officer Vladimir Zeravica". Ellis had trouble reading it and pronounced the first part "FIST officer" and then did things to the pronunciation of Vlado's name that shouldn't be done to a barnyard animal. But that was his cue, and, decked out in suit and tie, Fist Officer Vlado took the stage.

Vlado HIT IT. I'm not going to get into details, as I don't want to give spoilers (we plan to have the video of both our performances up soon), but as someone who knew Vlado's routine inside and out from reviewing all the drafts, I can tell you he was ON it. He, too, even managed a little improv in the middle (cocky bastards, aren't we?). The jokes in there that were my favorites did really well, which made me feel all smart for betting on the right ones. It was as though he held the whole audience in his...fist? (See what I did there? In comedy, we call that a "throwback". Okay, I totally just made that up. I've been in comedy for just over a week. Like I really know all the lingo by now...). He finished on the perfect groaner joke (in a good way), and as he told me soon after, he, too, had NO idea how long he'd been up there or if he'd actually done his whole act. Fortunately for him, he has a lot more experience at autopilot than I do, so it was smooooth flying. Nicely done, Fist Officer.

My next indication that I'd done okay came in the middle of Vlado's act. Ellis came over to my table and crouched down next to me. He clasped my hand, leaned over to my ear, and just whispered, "Jesus Christ". He then paused, like he was looking for more words, but then just repeated "Jesus Christ" again. With that, he shook my hand, got up, and walked away. So that's good, right? Blasphemy is better than even killing and nailing, right?

Some of our people had to leave (it WAS a Tuesday night, after all), including Rich, who came and did his video thing until after 9:00pm with us even though he had to get up at 2:30 AM for work. That's why he's our BOY, yo! Most of the disappearing folks didn't come over and say goodbye, and I thought that was very courteous, them not wanting to talk over the other people up on stage. We knew we'd talk to them the next day.

Oh, and I also flagged down the waitress right away and ordered FOOOOOOOD and drink. I was really, really hungry at this point. Got me some chicken strips and fries (and a Guinn), and was so hungry I burned the inside of my mouth on hot chicken. Didn't even feel it (until later)...I was feeling too good. Vlado and I toasted there at our table. We had set upon a mission, had seen it through, and hadn't either embarrassed or soiled ourselves. Armed with our phones, we both started going Facebook updates for those who hadn't been able to join us, and waited on the final comics to do their thing.

When the very last comic was in the middle of his bit, Christine (the manager who'd given us our tour the previous week) came over to me and leaned in for a whisper. She asked if I was available the following night, because they were about to announce me as the winner and the winner is supposed to come back to open the show the following night. I said I was, she said not to tell anyone just yet, as Ellis was going to be announcing it up on the mic. Vlado and Tim looked at me to see what that was about. I kind of shrugged them off, wanting to keep to my covenant of secrecy. But Vlado pulled out his phone, got on Facebook, typed the words "MIKE WON!!!" as a status update, but didn't hit "enter" until Ellis came up on the mic a few minutes later and made it official.

Wow. Shock. This was an important life lesson for me. One about facing fears. Everyone knows the stats on where the fear of public speaking ranks with people (scarier than death OR the Blair Witch). Comedy is scarier. It's not just public speaking. It's the lion's den of public speaking. Your job isn't just to hold the audience's attention. They expect LAUGHS. A lot of them. And they will punish you (with either silence, heckling, or yawning and starting to play Bejeweled 2 on their iPhones) if they don't get them. Your feedback is immediate. That's intimidating. So when you factor all that in, it's a pretty scary proposition. This made it a perfect test of my new way of thinking, and all that I've tried to learn about managing fear. I knew that I was going to feel great just knowing that I'd forced myself to do it and follow through, one way or the other. If I'd failed, I'd have at least been able to say I tried, and would always have the story about the time I got up on stage and tried to tell jokes with a bunch of my favorite people in the world there to watch me. Winning was not expected. But it was really cool. It was just that extra little pat on the back for not chickening out, and an incentive to keep trying new things in life...because you never know if you might just end up loving it.

And I loved this. Comedy kicks ass.

So I now officially have TWO things (this and Ireland) crossed off my bucket list, so big thanks to Vlado for forcing me to get it off the list and put it on the stage. He and I set out to make this reality and did just that, having a fantastic time in the process. And getting us a new nickname for Vlado in the process (I'm thinking of officially changing his name on my cell phone to "Fist Officer" now...).

A good and successful first night of comedy. And a chance to come back in less than twenty-four hours to do it again...and this time with a full 10 minutes available to me instead of 5. Hell, after a debut like that, there was no way anything could go wrong the following night, right?

Yeahhhhh. About that?

Stay tuned for Part 2 ("The WRONG Way...").


EPILOGUE

Oh, yeah...the John B. thing.

So John was sitting in his scooter at a table a few away from ours. While Vlado was on, this woman came up to John in the dark, handed him a card, and told him she'd really enjoyed his stuff. She said she ran an open mic up at a place at Folsom, and that she'd really like it if he'd come up and perform there.

Yes. She thought he was me.

Because, you know, us wheelchair people? We all look alike. At least in the dark, apparently.

Best part of that? John never even told her. He just rolled with it, thanked her for the compliment, took her card, and after the show was over, came over and handed it off to me.

Now THAT's comedy.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Second chance! Tommy T's, tonight, at 7:30!

Wish I had time to go into all the details, but the night is short, and got to get this out before I turn in.

So, yeah, last night was the big open mic comedy contest at Tommy T's Comedy Club, and Vlado and I went up and did our thing. Much prep, much sweat, much angst, much self-doubt...but we pulled our material together and stayed true to our pledge to get up and do this.

And we both did pretty darned good. How good? Seemed to me that one of us HAD to end up the winner, since we were, of COURSE, the two funniest guys in the room (in our minds, at least, but positive visualization is all part of the process). We both hit it hard.

And at the end? Holy crap. I won. Didn't see that coming. I thought this would be a one-time, once-in-a-lifetime thing. Looks like now it's going to be at least THREE times in a lifetime.

So because I won, I have to come back tonight (Wednesday, 1/6) and be part of a comedy showcase, and (woo hoo!) I get a full 10 minutes. If you knew how much material BOTH of us had to leave on the cutting room floor when trimming down our routines to the 3-5 minutes allowed, you'd understand how much I have left to work with. So much so that I'm not even taking additional notes. I'm just going to get up there and reintegrate earlier material from memory. Should be able to hit 10 minutes, no problem. Especially if I doze off for a little bit in the middle... And apparently this now enters me in a contest in February I need to show for, but I'll have to wait on the details of that.

So if you've got nothing else going on on a Wednesday night, feel free to drop in sometime before 7:30 and join us. I'll be the one on stage, but Vlado, Tim, A.T. and I will be hanging there, and from indications, several others. If you're one of those people who wished you'd made it Tuesday but something came up, you've got another shot. So use it! We already know a number of people showing. Should be another fun party.

Can't begin to thank everyone who showed up to support us. Man, I'm not going to be able to remember everybody. A.T., Tim, Barrie, Jess, Rick, Wendy, Rachel, Nichole, Babydoll, Babydoll's fam, Robert, Mike, Roxanne, John, Joy and fam, Chris K., Tami, Tina, Larry, Kim, Chris B., Emily, Chad, Dennis, Laura... Who else, who else? A special thanks goes out to my Uncle Stan, Aunt Kathy and Aunt Dorothy, who, despite my warnings about the "blue" comedy of all those less family-friendly comedians (hey, I did a couple stripper jokes, but strippers have families, too, right?), showed up to represent the O'Connell family. And a very, very special thanks to our man on the cam, Rich, who showed up and did the video despite the fact that he has to get up at 2:30 AM to go to work, and hopefully (I'm now worried about the lighting after seeing some photos...) captured the performances of me and V for those who couldn't make it to enjoy.

Okay, off to sleep myself, but again...if you think you can make it, see the previous post for the map and such. Come on down and have a good time with us! Join the O.Z. (O'Connell/Zeravica) Tour! Or the Z.o.O. (Zeravica or O'Connell) Tour, depending on what we decide on...