Albany Times Union

Cracking jokes before lockdown

Comedy specials from March have been released

- By Jason Zinoman

Remember March? It seems like a long time ago, but in this endless year, there were a disorienti­ng two weeks right before the lockdown when we all knew about the virus, but we were still coming to grips with its urgency and with how radically life was about to change.

On the first day of that month, comic Michelle Buteau filmed a stand-up special that showed no trace of anxiety. The next day, Joe List did, too (he centered a whole joke around a cough without drawing attention to it), and within a week, Beth Stelling shot her hour without mention of COVID -19 either.

These were a few of the last specials recorded before comedy clubs went quiet. By March 13, when Lewis Black walked onstage in Michigan, the last time he performed in front of a live crowd, the landscape had dramatical­ly changed. His dark opening joke: “Thanks for risking your life.”

These specials, only recently released, now are a portrait of a world in transition.

Michelle Buteau, ‘Welcome to Buteaupia’ Watch on Netflix

There’s something cathartic, exhilarati­ng and nerve-racking about Michelle Buteau making her entrance. Wearing a goldsequin­ed suit that glitters beneath a disco ball, she dances through the audience, pre-social distancing, before climbing precarious­ly over a stairwell, landing on a platform near the crowd and roaring in triumph. This sets the giddy tone for this Netflix show, a shot of joy from a comic whose jubilantly witty delivery features signature quirks that can make any joke funny. There’s the cartoonish way she bats her eyelashes, or her lingering stonefaced stare, or the way she softens the edges of a joke by muttering, “So silly.”

Buteau covers cultural difference­s with her Dutch husband, sex stuff and shooting a movie with J. Lo.

Joe List, ‘I Hate Myself’

Watch on Youtube

Observatio­nal comedy gets a bad name. The term evokes hack jokes about airplane food and bad impression­s of Jerry Seinfeld. But at its best, irritable analysis of the details of ordinary life can not only be hilarious, but also give you the revelatory pleasure of looking at things you see every day in a new way. There’s no comic today better at this than Joe List, an astute joke writer whose new special has already passed 1 million views on YouTube.

An unassuming, bespectacl­ed New York comic, he has created a punchlined­ense act that examines the most well-trod subjects (fast food, therapy and, yes, air travel) with predictabl­e annoyance or sarcasm. This puts pressure on his premises to stand out, a standard he consistent­ly lives up to with small, perceptive observatio­ns, like how people say they “are OCD” as opposed to “I have OCD.” This quirk of language provides the foundation for a joke that leads to him imagining what would happen if you did this with other conditions. “I’m genital herpes,” he offers up as an example, marveling at it before adding the tag: “Call me Gen for short.”

In a time of major crises, List focuses outrage on minor oddities, like the unnecessar­y noise you make when you yawn, casting the loud yawn as a desperate plea for attention. His gripes often resonate, too. His paranoia about the potential fraudulenc­e of cavities (“It doesn’t hurt. You can’t see it. But you must fix it”) not only had me nodding, but also making the case to friends the next day. When a joke turns you into a crank, you know it has worked.

Beth Stelling, ‘Girl Daddy’

Watch on HBO Max

Beth Stelling is so laid back she practicall­y reclines. With one hand casually sunk in an overall pocket, she strikes a pose as relaxed as her delivery, an offhanded pace interrupte­d by wide grins and “Beavis and ButtHead” chuckles. Don’t be fooled. Her laconic vibe masks some extremely polished joke writing and a ruthlessne­ss about getting laughs. In her canny debut, part of the first batch of original specials from HBO Max, she ends a bit about dating with a hard pivot: “What I’m saying is men are garbage.” Then she laughs, extending her arms into a circle: “But women are the can.” With a smile, she adds: “We’re in it together.”

An hour with Stelling goes by fast, as she maintains a bemused look through light jokes about heavy topics (rape, divorce). She never gets too exercised but is expert at shifting gears. Adopting a shy feminine pose, she follows it with a gravelly bass. Among her act-out impression­s, she does a nice job with that bored, wealthy lady that Maria Bamford has mined for so many laughs. Stelling generally lowers the register of her voice for punch lines to increase the impact, and flashes a crowdpleas­ing Scottish accent to juice up another bit, mixes in crowd work and ends her special with a highly physical joke with her laying on the ground. By the end, her style starts to seem like savvy misdirecti­on, a persona distractin­g from the polished instincts of a born entertaine­r.

Lewis Black, ‘Thanks for Risking Your Life’

Watch on itunes on Oct. 6. Listen on Pandora now

The flailing response to the pandemic is one subject of Lewis Black’s famous rage, as he vibrates with fury over having to listen to politician­s when all he wants to hear is a decisive plan from someone in a stethoscop­e. There are no cutaway shots to the crowd or even images of them in the front row. Perhaps putting the audience in the dark keeps the prospect of infections further from the mind. It also adds an eeriness and resignatio­n. Black’s rants here are not as packed with punch lines as usual, nor are the jokes as intricate or explosive. And he comes off as more subdued, discussing the death of his father and the aging of his mother, currently 101. There’s also a melancholy that emerges in the deep-seated sarcasm.

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