
The History of Sketch Comedy
A Journey Through the Art and Craft of Humor With Keegan-Michael Key
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Narrated by:
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Keegan-Michael Key
About this listen
From the beginning of time, there have been many monumental questions that have perplexed the human race such as: Why are we here? What is the meaning of life? And... Who’s on first?
In The History of Sketch Comedy, Emmy and Peabody-winning actor, writer and producer Keegan-Michael Key (Key & Peele, The Prom, Jingle Jangle) embarks listeners on an epic, insightful and utterly entertaining voyage through the annals of sketch comedy. Key takes us from the early flatulence jokes of Ancient Greece and the acting troupes of Europe in the 1500s, to the rise of The Second City in Chicago and his own comedy origins on the ball fields near Detroit’s 8 Mile. Equal parts masterclass, personal odyssey and virtuoso performance; Key's The History of Sketch Comedy dissects the landmark characters, concepts and performers that pushed the boundaries and forged new ground in the comedy pantheon, and along the way reveals his own experiences of discovering and being influenced by them.
Over the course of ten half-hour chapters, one of the most beloved voices of our time treats listeners to a private, millennia-spanning interpretation of sketch comedy history, from its humble past to its immodest present.
©2020 Audible Originals, LLC (P)2020 Audible Originals, LLC-
Jan 4 20211 min
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33 mins
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Jan 28 202137 mins
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Nice to listen to someone who loves the subject
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A history of American sketch comedy
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Wonderful
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Great
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brilliant
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it begins with E
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Superb!!
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Amazing
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This entire thing is the epitome of that old adage.
The show is about explaining why it's funny... but never finds the funny.
The format is this:
Contemporary sketch as exemlar
Explain it's context in history
Exemplar sketch in history
Explain why it's funny
Repeat.
Which is all well and good, but the sketches all feel like a jock and a history nerd got together to write them after sharing a keg. So they all go like this:
My man [historical character] did [historic action] and farted. Oh no you didn't! It's funny because [history] and they farted.
So every sketch loses the history and the humour.
Which is a shame because beneath all the dad jokes, it's got some great content to understand the building blocks of comedy.
If you have to explain the joke...
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The history and dissection of the craft of improv and sketch was very interesting (though there was the overlong explanation of the Who's on First? routine he could (and did) use Four Candles for that).
He was even nice enough mention The Goon Show as great inspiration to Monty Python, but deemed that only member worth naming was ... Peter Sellers
What? No love for Spike? The subversive genius who began alternative comedy?
Lacking in scholarship odd for a collage boy
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