Comedy
review: Twitter comedy club
Published Date: 10 June 2009
By JAY RICHARDSON
TWITTER COMEDY CLUB ***
THE INTERNET
SUBSCRIBED to by an audience of over 6,500 from the comfort of their
home computers, this inaugural Twitter comedy gig was a fine advert
for experiencing stand-up in a real, purpose-built club. One-liner
specialist Gary Delaney and musical comedian Mitch Benn visibly
swelled their fanbases as the evening progressed, achieving more
"re-tweets" than anyone else. Delaney was the night's
undisputed hit, his material expertly crafted to Twitter's 140 character
format while Benn, who offered alternative lyrics for Bohemian Rhapsody,
even flogged CDs during the virtual interval.
Generally though, this admirable experiment was
a chaotic failure, beset by technical gremlins, malevolent trolls
of the type you find in any internet forum and over-stimulated fans.
The audience could employ various applications to see the comics
tweeting their 140 character gags, yet all spluttered forth at varying
speeds like a temperamental videprinter.
Nevertheless, it was fascinating to follow as opener
Matt Kirshen took the virtual stage while tweeting from the back
of a real gig, unable to complete his psychiatry anecdote yet supplementing
his lines with Wikipedia links.
Rob Heeney began tweeting before he'd even been
properly introduced and it was disconcerting to see his innocent
wordplay on "Poles" retweeted around cyberspace as genuine
xenophobia, a fate that also befell Mark Watson.
Carl Donnelly gave me my first laugh by simply posting
a link to himself performing on You Tube, though this failed to
capture the gig's spirit as well as Delaney slapping down a persistent
heckler, or Pappy's Fun Club inventing and conversing with their
own naysayer, one "Terry Witter".
Kudos to Terry
Saunders, whose exceptional typing speed ensured his amusing tale
of testicle examination unfolded in something approaching slow motion
and to compere Tiernan Douieb, who valiantly held this shambles
together. |