The Wrong Show is an independent and alternative comedy night in Leeds. This is our blog. Here you will find comedy reviews, features, and interviews. We were formally known as HOWL. First Wednesday of the Month, The Fenton, Leeds.
Catching Elephant is a theme by Andy Taylor
Here’s a photo of our wonderful headliner last night, Fern Brady. More photos of the night to come.
Courtesy of The Foto Guy.
Comedy site Comedy Blogedy interviews HOWL comedian and organiser Thom Milson. Click on the big ‘INTERVIEW WITH THOM MILSON’ to read it.
Here’s a cheesy (kind of crappy piece of design for CUT-UP). This was made for Inspired Leeds, who have kindly listed CUT-UP as a featured event in Leeds. Yeah. CUT-UP is taking place Wednesday 27th June 2012 (that’s tomorrow) so you should come along.
I don’t know what’s going on with the grey around the lettering, it looks fine before I upload it to Tumblr. Oh, well.
Gordon Fairpoint - Crystal Maze, Art Museum, Goodbye.
James Bourke - University
By Thom Milson.
As some of you folks will have heard by now, Facebook is being a major dick, and is currently testing a system of paid sponsored posts. Under this system there will still be free posts, but by using a free post you will only reach about 8% the people who “like” and care about the thing you do. Paying will let you reach 100%. I don’t know if they’ll start doing this for real, yet, but it’s definitely looking that way.
For groups like HOWL this is very bad news. We are not-for-profit, and don’t make a penny from anything we do (we lose money actually). We do it this way because we feel it’s best for you guys. We’re not trying to simply run a comedy night with HOWL, we’re trying to create a community, one that relies on everyone involved. Even now, it’s a wonderful, amazing thing, that is becoming something really special (I feel) and soon, instead of it growing, it might become very difficult to maintain, as we can’t afford paid posts, it’s as simple as that.
People have suggested to me that we charge entry for HOWL. I just want to say now, WE WILL NOT DO THAT. This is for a couple of reasons: 1) It destroys everything we set out to do with HOWL. 2) If we charged I would want to give that money to the wonderful comics that come down and put on a show with us every month. They deserve money way more than Facebook.
What this means, is that we’re going to need you guys more than ever. Basically we want you to keep doing what you’re doing and sharing things, liking things and writing about things to do with HOWL. Tell people you know in Leeds about HOWL if you think they’ll like it. Nothing is as great as word-of-mouth. Write on the Facebook page too, it’s as much yours as it is ours. Get others to write on it too. Don’t be scared to join in is what I’m trying to say.
Also, I’ve had a few ideas about stuff to make more of a community out of this, but I also want to take suggestions. What would you like to see us do?
Here are some of the ideas I’ve had so far:
Again, if any of you guys have an idea you would love to suggest to us, or some idea of how to make this whole thing better, please give us a shout on Facebook.
Thom.
This is a guest post by Kev Eadie, a good friend of HOWL who will be undertaking a project related to the typical setting of live stand-up: basements. Here’s an introduction to his project.
What is it about basements that seem to lend themselves to stand-up comedy so well? For the duration of August, I’ll be doing a blog* in which I’ll document some of my experiences of basement stand-up comedy during the Edinburgh Fringe Festival 2012. This is just a kind of ‘test-post/prologue’, in which I’ve decided to touch upon how both the spatial properties and subterranean nature of basements might compliment stand-up performance and reception. Feedback appreciated. I hope you enjoy it.
Many of the comedy nights and comedy clubs which form the foundations of the stand-up industry are situated in basements. There is evidently something about this setting which enhances and/or even produces certain phenomena, which may benefit the art-form. Many commercially successful comedians for instance, who are privileged in that they are able to have increased control over where they gig, will still opt for these intimate, subterranean venues.
Initially, we have to address the obvious, which is that basements – mainly by virtue of their low ceilings – have great acoustics for enhancing laughter. Hard-surfaced furnishings, which these venues are often equipped with, can allow the laughs to bounce around even more. And in-terms of encouraging laughter the basement doesn’t stop there. Other factors which have been shown to increase laughter in audiences include being ‘packed-in’, sat in informal seating layouts and/or on borderline uncomfortable furniture. All are situations which basements lend themselves nicely to. Even the aesthetics of basement architecture, often dishevelled and asymmetrical, can be seen to complement certain values of stand-up comedy. Interestingly though, you could find or reproduce all of the above in an over-ground venue – therefore, there is something not only about the typical spatial properties and layouts of basements but also something about the knowledge that they are underground which attracts us into using them for stand-up comedy.
A possible reason behind this stems from the fact that stand-up is an intensely human activity. It enthusiastically celebrates two of our defining characteristics: language and laughter. By carrying out the ritual of stand-up comedy in a basement we are arguably mocking death with life: we have used the basement to cross a border into the netherworld, functioning at our most human in an environment in which human life is supposedly unable to survive. Furthermore, the basement is the perfect instrument with which to emphasise our humanity, in the way that other manmade underground sites just aren’t: a sewer system or the London Underground for example, present us with little other than practicality – whilst a basement, communicates the concept of the individual of the human soul.
So perhaps the pleasures of stand-up comedy in basements involve something more than just good acoustics. One of these pleasures, as argued above, is that through virtue of being located a few feet under and being of human character, basements serve as an ideal platform for us to use when mocking death. In the basement, to varying degrees, we will have our sense of immortality intensified. To do that which makes us feel most alive whilst faced with a heightened sense of death is quite a glorious, even instinctive thing – similar to the endemic of bonking that broke out in New York during the aftermath of the World Trade Centre attacks – it neatly follows the ethos of ‘if I’m going down, I’m going down in style’.
You can comment on this post, read it again or read more stuff in August at: *Down to the Basement.
Michael Sterrett talks about looking forward to The Dark Knight Rises, and the role of Alred in Batman’s life.
You might remember that a while back we were giving away some badges down at HOWL. Well, it turns out these badges will have certain benefits in the future. These benefits include:
They are currently been given out for free at all of our events, so if you want one come down and get one. The black badges are a limited run of 100 and we are into that number quite considerably. Also, you must ask for the badges, we won’t be handing them out. This is just to make sure that the people who get them are people who want them. So yeah, see you at our next show*.
*details regarding the next HOWL will be released soon.