Posts Tagged ‘Hari Kondabolu’

Kamau & Laughter Against The Machine in Oakland & Sacramento! FEBRUARY

Thursday, December 30th, 2010

If you can’t get to one of my San Francisco New Year’s Eve (and Eve Eve and New Year’s Day) Shows, puhleeeeeeeeeeeeeease check me and my band of comedians, Laughter Against The Machine in OAKLAND(!!!) at The New Parish on February 8 & 9. Get YOUR tickets HERE

Or maybe in Sacramento on February 11th at The Sacramento Comedy Spot. (not on the 12th despite what the super cool poster says). Get YOUR tickets HERE

Photoraphic Evidence of a Job well done by LATM

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

That’s Laughter Against The Machine for you who are uninitiated. We wrecked maximum shop in Portland & Seattle this past week. Don’t believe me? Look below at these pictures by Saman Maydani.

Laughter Against The Machine kicked Northwest BOOTY!

Monday, June 21st, 2010

Laughter Against The Machine kicked MAXIMUM BOOTY this weekend over 5 shows in Portland & Seattle! Me, Hari Kondabolu, & Nato Green are STILL packing shows everywhere we go. And Check out this picture to see who we just added as an OFFICIAL NEW MEMBER! (Hint: IT’S Janine Brito!)

Check out our newest member Janine Brito!

Laughter Against The Machine 2010 Edition photo by Saman Maydání

LATM Founder is SF Weekly’s Best Comedian 2010!!!

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

This is 3 years in a row that The SF Weekly has gotten it right!. Nato this year, Ali Wong last year, and some black dude the year before that. Extreme congratulations to Nato! Of course I have a steak in this one. Nato is the co-founder of Laughter Against The Machine. We’ll be kicking out the comedic jams this summer in Seattle and Portland. You’ve been warned.

Best Comedian – 2010

Nato Green

Nato Green is a hard-working man in show business. (We can’t really say the hardest-working man in show business, in a town so packed with hard-working men in show business.) His Iron Comic series blends improv-style audience participation with traditional stand-up, his work at the Progressive Reading Series kept the writers doubled over, and his Laughing Liberally Local 415 and the New Jew Revue are legendary. He’s also a blogger for the Huffington Post, where he recently contributed an Onion-style fiction about a group calling the Tea Party “not conservative enough.” The takeaway quote comes from a woman too afraid of Jews to give her name: “I voted for Sarah Palin, but I don’t believe a woman’s place is to kill a moose. We should leave that to the menfolk.” But it is for a single night’s work that we honor Green at the moment: Laughter Against the Machine. The show returns this summer, with Green’s cohort of W. Kamau Bell, Hari Kondabolu, and, hopefully, Janine Brito, too, reprising the funniest comedy show we’ve ever seen. The funniest. In a town packed with funny shows.

Jay Smooth on T-Pain & the Know Nothing Know-It-Alls

Friday, April 16th, 2010

This dude is straight brilliant. He’s friends with my LATM co-hort Hari Kondabolu and it is clear why when you check out this video.

My buddy Hari Kondabolu interviews me at RooftopComedy.com

Monday, March 8th, 2010

AN INTERVIEW WITH W. KAMAU BELL

By Hari Kondabulu



“W. Kamau Bell is the most important guy doing comedy right now. He’s got the most astute, hilarious and completely righteous material going and he’s going to be a legend in his own lifetime like Richard Pryor and Lenny Bruce. Think Bill Hicks but slightly taller.”
— Margaret Cho

It’s praise like that has made W. Kamau Bell’s “Face Full of Flour” one of the most anticipated comedy albums of 2010. Recorded live at the San Francisco Punchline and produced by Rooftop Comedy Productions, the album features comedic meditations on Barack Obama, the wrongness of the Right, interracial mating, and why Black + White = Black.

Kamau was nice enough to take a break from his busy schedule to answer a few questions from fellow comedian Hari Kondabolu.

Hari Kondabolu: Why did you name your CD “Face Full of Flour” and how does it and you differ from your last album “One Night Only?”

W. Kamau Bell: First of all, my first CD wasn’t named “One Night Only” It was named ONE NIGht ONLY,” which is very funny joke if you get it. Most people didn’t. And secondly, how come you didn’t listen to my CD before the interview, Hari? I thought we were supposed to be cool. I’m going to go unfollow you on Twitter… There. It’s done.

This CD is called Face Full of Flour because there is a joke on it that was inspired by a Rice Krispies commercial from way back the 80’s. In the commercial a mom throws flour on her face to convince her family that she’s working harder than she actually is. My joke recommends Barack do the same thing.

Dammit. Now the joke is ruined. Nothing is less funny than a joke explained.

HK: Why make this album now?

WKB: I was very much aware that for like two years I was one of the only comics talking about Barack Obama. My first joke about him was in 2005, and I did it that year on Comedy Central, which according to Comedy Centrla is the very first Barack Obama joke. Don’t believe me? Google it. (I’m talking to the “YOU” who is reading this right now. Go ahead and Google it. Hari knows this already.)

Anyway, now that Barack is President there has been a ridiculous media story going around that it is impossible to make jokes about Barack Obama. I know this is ridiculous because I haven’t stopped telling Barack jokes since 2005. I kind of wanted to be on record again as being ahead of this nonexistent curve. Also the country is in such incredible transition it is great to be able to release a CD that addresses the transition while it is still transitioning… transitorially.

HK: You’ve told me that there are things on the last record that you no longer stand by. Did you have any fear when recording this record about making that particular moment permanent?

WKB: First of all, allow me to go very public with the first part of what you said. I had a joke on the first CD about Condoleeza Rice, which I also did on Comedy Central. It was a very funny joke to me when I wrote it… because I was so angry at Condoleeza at the time and at her stature as a such high ranking Bush cabinet member, but very soon after I had done it, it became clear to me (actually it was made clear by many, MANY women in my life) that the joke was not helpful to the struggle of women as a group… no matter how evil I perceived her to be at the time. And as my friend and main co-conspirator Martha Rynberg said so eloquently to me at the time, “You can’t talk about ending racism and then go out and create more sexism.” (KAMAU’S NOTE: This has now beccome OFFICIALLY the most unfunny interview in the history of Rooftop Comedy.) And unfortunately for me, the joke is forever out there on the Internet so occasionally people discover it and GO OFF on me. Recently when a dude on a website went off on me on his blog, I commented on the blog that I agreed with him, which I’m pretty sure shocked him. People don’t realize that us comics spend about 45% of our days Googling oursleves. Read More…

LATM’s Hari Kondabolu on Comedy Central This Friday!

Monday, January 11th, 2010

Get your Tivo’s & DVR’s ready! Laughter Against The Machine’s very own Hari Kondabolu THIS Friday, January 15@ 8pm Pacific & 11pm East Coast on Comedy Central! I’ll be watching.

Dude, you're still using IE6? WTF? Seriously, get with the times. Either upgrade to IE7 (or 8), or switch to something that doesn't suck, like Firefox.

Click anywhere to continue browsing with your current browser, but be aware things may not look or work properly.