Louie (Louis C.K.'s show on FX)

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honestly, more into seeing that than another season of louie at the moment!

shmup....smug....shmub....shmug.... (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 18 January 2015 23:42 (nine years ago) link

new, apparently "sillier" season of louie starts April 9. Eight eps this year

Simon H., Monday, 19 January 2015 00:32 (nine years ago) link

new special

https://louisck.net/purchase/live-at-the-comedy-store

Number None, Tuesday, 27 January 2015 19:11 (nine years ago) link

Hello. So below are my messy thoughts about my new special "Louis CK live at the Comedy Store" available here https://louisck.net/purchase/live-at-the-comedy-store for 5 dollars, all over the world...

So this is my sixth hour-long standup special. The truth is, I really love making these. I skipped doing one last year and I missed it. This one is different from the recent others. For one thing, it was shot in a nightclub instead of a theater. I love doing the theater shows. When I was a kid, my favorite thing in the world was Richard Pryor's concert films. The idea of being a comedian and doing a "concert" was a real goal for me. Performing in a theater expands your material and opens you up as a performer. The pressure of playing to thousands of people, I found, always makes you better. And every concert hall I've played has made me feel like I'm getting a whiff of that city or town's history. The whole thing can be very exhilarating.

But Nightclubs, comedy clubs, is where comedy is born and where comedy, standup comedy, truly lives. Going back to Abraham Lincoln, who was probably America's first comedian, Americans have enjoyed gathering at night in small packed (and once smokey) rooms, drinking themselves a bit numb and listening to each other say wicked, crazy, silly, wrongful, delightful, upside-down, careless, offensive, disgusting, whimsical things. Sometimes in long-winded, red faced hyperbole, sometimes in carefully crafted circular, intentionally false and misleading argument. Sometimes in well-chiseled perfectly timed trickery of verbiage. Pun-poetry. One line, one off, half thoughts. Half truths. Non-truths. Broad and hilariously wrongful generalizations, exaggerated prejudices and criticism of nothing and everything while a couple over here shares a pitcher of sangria, this table of guys order round after round of beers. These women over here are having vodka and cranberry. This guy drinks club soda and sits alone. He actually came for the comedy. It's a club. It's a bar. It's late at night. No one here is being responsible. These are the things we do when we are DONE working and being citizens. We go to a comedy club and pay a bit of money to laugh harder than we ever do anywhere else.

That is the standup comedy that I've been doing for almost thirty years. I have been working theater (and now arena) stages for the last nine of those thirty years but the amount of hours I've spent on a club stage outnumber the theater stage hours by more than I can figure.

I've been on comedy club stages probably more than I've stood on any other kind of spot in my entire life. I started in the Boston comedy scene, on ground that had been laid by great comedians like Steve Sweeney, Steven Wright, Barry Crimmins, Ron Lynch, Kevin Meany, Don Gavin, back in 1985 when I was 18 years old. I skipped college (still regret it), worked shitty jobs (will never regret that) and spent every single night at any comedy club in Boston I could finagle my way into. I would watch every single comedian and I would BEG to get on stage.

In 1989 I moved to New York. I discovered a bursting comedy club scene, where you could literally do 8 shows on a saturday night. (I remember Ray Romano held the record at 9 shows).

It was a glorious time for standup comedy clubs. Great comics everywhere. Colin Quinn. Mike Sweeney. Joy Behar. John Stewart. Charlie Barnett. Ray Romano. Dave Chapelle. Chris Rock. Brett Butler. Brian Regan.

All working out every night in clubs all over the city. There was the Improv on 44th street. On 1st Avenue, Catch a Rising Star and around the corner on 2nd ave, the Comic Strip (still there). Carolines was on the Seaport then. And in the Village we had the Comedy Cellar (still there), the Boston Comedy Club and the Village Gate.

I spent my early twenties bouncing from one stage to the other, from 8pm till about 4am, when Dave Attell, Kevin Brennan, Nick DiPaolo and I would head to a diner and eat breakfast.

The money was terrible. About ten dollars per show on the weeknights, fifty a show on the weekends. So every other week you had to leave town and work in another city. You'd go live in Atlanta, Columbus, Phoenix, Tampa, for a week. Most clubs would put you up in a condo behind the club and you'd work the whole week. Tuesday thru Sunday, two shows Friday, three shows Saturday. You could make about 700 a week as an opening act. A good headliner might make 2500 or 3,000 but that was rare. I worked in comedy clubs all over the country and I think I actually remember every single club. My favorite clubs were the smelly little beer soaked places with dim lighting and low ceilings. Go Bananas in Cincinnati. The Brokerage in Long Island (still there) Penguins in Cedar Rapids. The Comedy Underground in Seattle.

Then there were chain comedy clubs that were always too antiseptic and suburban. Some of them were literally inside of a mall next to a sunglass hut. The Improvs, the Funny Bones.

There were some comedy clubs around the country that were legendary. That lasted out the death of comedy in the 90s. The independent and truly great rooms where you can still smell the cigarette smoke exhaled by Bill Hicks. The Acme in Minneapolis. The Punchline in Atlanta. The Punchline (not related) in San Francisco. Cobbs in San Fran. The Laff Stop in Houston. Zanies in Chicago. Charlie Goodnights in Raleigh. The Comedy Works in Denver. These were the Meccas. When you could get a week at Acme, you know you could continue having the will to do this shit for another few months. A week at the Punchline in San Fran could get you through the next week at Harvey's in Portland.
There were club owners that were part of Comedy History. Who knew how to shape comedy. Mark Babbit, Lewis Lee, Manny Dworman, Lucien Hold, Silver Friedman, Bud Friedman, Ron Osborne, others.

I spent all of my mid to late 20s and thirties working out in places like these.

Later when I moved to Los Angeles, I discovered a scene out there that was creative and fun and also steeped in show business history. You could see Norm Macdonald. Charles Fleicher. Robert Schimmel.

In LA they have coffee houses and very cool rooms like Largo, where you can bring your notebook on stage and try just about anything.

People like Andy Kindler, Kathy Griffin, Patton Oswalt, Blaine Capatch, Craig Anton, Laura Kightlinger did outrageous stuff in those rooms.

I would sometimes go on stage at places like Mbar or Largo and come out with twenty minutes of new material, cheered on by the young, open and adaptive crowds of the "alternative" scene. But I never believed those jokes until I took them to the Improv, where the more average and basic character of the audience would cut the new material down to about three jokes.

And then there was the Comedy Store. I would take the last three remaining jokes to the store on Sunset. Maybe ONE of those would get a chuckle. And that joke, I knew, was the true treasure of the night.

I have always found the Comedy Store to be the most intimidating club of my life. It is what I thought comedy clubs to be when I listened to Lenny Bruce records as a kid. The black vinyl couches and chairs, the red formica stage. Andrew Dice Clay on stage playing to fifteen people in open defiance of their hatred and funny as hell. The Comedy Store is really show biz. As in Milton Berle with his bow tie undone around his neck show business. Mop your brow and say "tough crowd" show business. A guy being beaten up in the parking lot show business. The Comedy Store is where Pryor cut his teeth. Letterman fought to get spots there. George Carlin. Eddie Murphy. Marc Maron told me stories about living in the apartment behind the Store and how Sam Kinison pissed on his bed one night. This is the Comedy Store. The wonderful dark side of comedy.

The Comedy Store is the only club in the country that NEVER passed me when I auditioned. I auditioned at many clubs where I didn't pass but I always went back and finally did pass. The Comedy Store NEVER passed me. I just wasn't right for them. I didn't start working there until I became well known enough to circumvent the audition process. Until I became one of those guys who can just walk into a nightclub and go on stage.

So why did I shoot my new special in this place? I don't know. Maybe because, after thirty years of doing comedy, the most exciting feeling for me is going on stage, not entirely sure it's going to go well. To this day, when I work at the Store, I feel there's a one in three chance I might bomb. Like bomb hard. To a guy my age who has been doing it this long, that is exciting. So over the last tour I did this year, I started doing shows at the Comedy Store "Main room" to feel it out. The staff of the club is excellent and they really know how to run a traditional room. I loved working with them. Pauly Shore and his family were very gracious when we approached them about shooting my special there.

I really feel truly privileged to have shot this special on that stage.

Okay I didn't mean to write such a long thing about comedy clubs. The point is I prepared the material for this special on club stages. I went to the Cellar here in New York, and their new club, The Village Underground, about ten times a week with the occasional trip uptown to Gotham Comedy Club and "The Stand" on third avenue. I went out to LA to put that spin on it, working Largo, the Improv and finally the Comedy Store, hammering this stuff together in front of late night comedy club audiences. So it only seemed right to shoot it that way.

That's all. I hope you enjoy the special. Please see the movie "Boyhood". It's a great piece of filmmmaking and even literature. And take your kids to see "Into The Woods" It teaches the greatest lesson you could teach a kid: If you are paying attention, life is very confusing.

Thanks.

Louis CK

ps. I guess I didn't have to cancel the show at MSG tonight. I don't blame the mayor. That storm was a monster. We got lucky. When you consider the action taken by the government of entire north east, they got it right. To expect accuracy from each individual mayor is just too much.
For us in New York and us in my house and us at MSG it was overblown. But if you expand that "us" to everyone in the path is the storm, they were spot on. My family in Boston is part of us for me. So that's how I look at it.

Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 27 January 2015 19:20 (nine years ago) link

promptly bought. the businessman on the airplane bit is v v funny.

Sounds like a forks display name (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 27 January 2015 19:23 (nine years ago) link

Releasing this on a snow day when a lot of people on the EC are home from work is a savvy move

, Tuesday, 27 January 2015 19:54 (nine years ago) link

what makes louie brilliant is that louis knows there's greater things than LOLs

― it definitely wasn't designed to be a pants pocket player (stevie), Thursday, May 29, 2014 4:23 AM (8 months ago) Bookmark

Funny things are the greatest things which is why I hate his tv show. I feel like I'm in the twilight zone when I see people rave about it. And his standup has sucked for a couple years now at least.

Hungry4Ass, Friday, 30 January 2015 18:46 (nine years ago) link

show is hit or miss, I too am perplexed by some of the rapturous praise for it, as if putting joke-less short films about angst-ridden new yorkers on tv under the guise of a comedy show is somehow groundbreaking or forward-thinking

Οὖτις, Friday, 30 January 2015 18:51 (nine years ago) link

Hint: it's not a comedy show. It's a show made by a comedian that is occasionally comedic.

Runny Trumpet (Old Lunch), Friday, 30 January 2015 18:54 (nine years ago) link

so, like GIRLS

Οὖτις, Friday, 30 January 2015 18:56 (nine years ago) link

Hint: it's not a comedy show. It's a show made by a comedian that is occasionally comedic.

― Runny Trumpet (Old Lunch), Friday, January 30, 2015 1:54 PM (3 minutes ago) Bookmark

I'm not stupid, Old Lunch. I know he's intending to make something unfunny... that doesn't make it cool to me...

Hungry4Ass, Friday, 30 January 2015 19:00 (nine years ago) link

i do think that a lot of the reaction to his show is condition positively and negatively by a load of expectations that are only obliquely satisfied.

I dunno. (amateurist), Friday, 30 January 2015 19:00 (nine years ago) link

conditionED

i can't type today.

I dunno. (amateurist), Friday, 30 January 2015 19:00 (nine years ago) link

I've seen this thing sometimes, perhaps on here, saying he's like brave or ballsy for not being funny... but I think if a funny guy can be Real & Funny instead of just Real (and the show does get pretty real), then that is a lot more impressive and worthwhile to me... Just one guy's take

Hungry4Ass, Friday, 30 January 2015 19:04 (nine years ago) link

Just one guy's take

you mean you are not speaking for the entire Hungry4Ass demographic?

I dunno. (amateurist), Friday, 30 January 2015 19:04 (nine years ago) link

at his best he's a damn good and moving story teller. see the episode where his friend is contemplating suicide. but yeah some of them are just strung together bits which can be hit or miss.

Heez, Friday, 30 January 2015 19:10 (nine years ago) link

I definitely prefer the earlier funnier series.

the joke should be over once the kid is eaten. (chap), Friday, 30 January 2015 20:21 (nine years ago) link

glad youse guys are here to inform me that i'm mistaken that i think this show is great, now i've seen the error of my ways i can get my life back on track, thanx shakey and canks

#Research (stevie), Saturday, 31 January 2015 22:04 (nine years ago) link

also the amount of "people only think/pretend they like this" Mind Blowing Opinions on ilx lately is v zzzzz

#Research (stevie), Saturday, 31 January 2015 22:05 (nine years ago) link

oh cool we're having the same ol dumb argument itt again

Anyway the new special is just OK - some great bits, but way more aimless ones than usual

Simon H., Saturday, 31 January 2015 22:50 (nine years ago) link

agree, though i enjoyed it

i'm guessing some of the aimlessness is d/t the small club setting?

gbx, Saturday, 31 January 2015 23:20 (nine years ago) link

possibly. I'd be down for a CK lecture or commentaty-track series on classic movies though

Simon H., Saturday, 31 January 2015 23:22 (nine years ago) link

glad youse guys are here to inform me that i'm mistaken that i think this show is great, now i've seen the error of my ways i can get my life back on track, thanx shakey and canks

― #Research (stevie), Saturday, January 31, 2015 5:04 PM (5 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

also the amount of "people only think/pretend they like this" Mind Blowing Opinions on ilx lately is v zzzzz

― #Research (stevie), Saturday, January 31, 2015 5:05 PM (5 hours ago) Bookmark

Lol... this is why I don't really post here anymore... everything's so weirdly personal. Just wanted to say a couple word's on a tv show my main man... sorry for offending you #Research (stevie)...

Hungry4Ass, Sunday, 1 February 2015 03:27 (nine years ago) link

there is room for us all in our shared hunger... 4ass...

the plight of y0landa (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 1 February 2015 03:28 (nine years ago) link

the irony of cankles, CANKLES, being like "oh i didn't mean to offend anyone" on ilx is blowing my mind - dude i am not offended and generally you are one of my favourite ilx presences, i just find the "people only pretend they like this thing they say they like" argument to be REALLY BORING

#Research (stevie), Sunday, 1 February 2015 10:46 (nine years ago) link

louie is a good show

nose, Sunday, 1 February 2015 16:04 (nine years ago) link

the three "Late Show" episodes are some of my favorite TV ever, really

Abstinence Hawk (frogbs), Sunday, 1 February 2015 16:10 (nine years ago) link

Nobody said anything about "pretending to like" the show fwiw

Οὖτις, Sunday, 1 February 2015 16:49 (nine years ago) link

the irony of cankles, CANKLES, being like "oh i didn't mean to offend anyone" on ilx is blowing my mind - dude i am not offended and generally you are one of my favourite ilx presences, i just find the "people only pretend they like this thing they say they like" argument to be REALLY BORING

― #Research (stevie), Sunday, February 1, 2015 5:46 AM (7 hours ago) Bookmark

Lol you're cool stevie but... I'm trying to think of the non-dick way to say this... You are lying about what I said and then getting mad at me for it... that is insane

Hungry4Ass, Sunday, 1 February 2015 19:59 (nine years ago) link

you know, i can't really see what i was going on about earlier wrt 'people only pretend etc' tbh, which i'm going to lamely chalk up to a general lack of sleep and an 8 month old baby who won't sleep, sorry canks and shakey. i still love this show to death and am probs too defensive of it. peace out!

#Research (stevie), Sunday, 1 February 2015 23:04 (nine years ago) link

i think it was that billy corgan thread where dudes were like 'you'd all think billy was cool if he wasn't so uncool' that i was actually riled by but the truth is i'm too deranged by lack of sleep to be responsibly ilxing right now.

#Research (stevie), Sunday, 1 February 2015 23:06 (nine years ago) link

one month passes...

Fun interview:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALszCInuwoY

with HD lyrics (Eazy), Wednesday, 18 March 2015 00:50 (nine years ago) link

Mislabeled video.

Common Street Screwers (Leee), Wednesday, 18 March 2015 04:03 (nine years ago) link

two weeks pass...

this is on next week!

tender is the late-night daypart (schlump), Saturday, 4 April 2015 18:55 (nine years ago) link

just checking in before literally never coming back to read everyone's bullshit opinions

tender is the late-night daypart (schlump), Saturday, 4 April 2015 18:56 (nine years ago) link

I've seen the first 4! Shutting up now.

fuck me, archipelago (Simon H.), Saturday, 4 April 2015 20:08 (nine years ago) link

Just catching up with season 3 now on Hulu. Stopped watching after I gave up cable. It's pretty funny. The one with F. Murray Abraham as his uncle killed me. Really built up a desire to see who they could possibly have cast as his father to top the uncle and then...

the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Saturday, 4 April 2015 20:16 (nine years ago) link

huh i guess i read it when it got bumped but it didn't register at all that this was coming back tomorrow.

Clay, Thursday, 9 April 2015 04:46 (nine years ago) link

I will say that of the 4 s5 eps I've seen, the premiere was my least favorite.

fuck me, archipelago (Simon H.), Thursday, 9 April 2015 04:55 (nine years ago) link

I'm on the fourth season. This show is great. It rarely makes me laugh, but the scene where the bin men wake him up by breaking into his room and jumping on his bed had me in tears for several minutes.

but then again, who really cares? I don’t. (dog latin), Thursday, 9 April 2015 14:50 (nine years ago) link

this is good:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AYuvII0Pohw

Darin, Thursday, 9 April 2015 16:01 (nine years ago) link

yeah, i lolled

Maybe in 100 years someone will say damn Dawn was dope. (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 9 April 2015 17:00 (nine years ago) link

this was a v good ep

johnny crunch, Friday, 10 April 2015 03:00 (nine years ago) link

aces; judy gold was very funny

Maybe in 100 years someone will say damn Dawn was dope. (forksclovetofu), Friday, 10 April 2015 03:46 (nine years ago) link

who was the actress who played gold's partner? I recognized her.

dan selzer, Friday, 10 April 2015 04:25 (nine years ago) link

so is he really just ignoring everything that happened at the end of last season? haven't checked but bringing the title music back suggests yes as much as anything

funny bits but too predictable an outcome with the pregnant woman and the lazy cartoon angry lesbian thing wasn't cool

nashwan, Sunday, 12 April 2015 12:18 (nine years ago) link

are you really asking about plot continuity on Louie, in its 5th season?

some dude, Sunday, 12 April 2015 12:48 (nine years ago) link

well even Pamela was asking about it last season...

nashwan, Sunday, 12 April 2015 12:53 (nine years ago) link

i just don't think there's ever gonna be anything on the show that he's not willing to shake the etch-a-sketch on and just move on to the next unrelated story.

some dude, Sunday, 12 April 2015 13:02 (nine years ago) link


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