Whilst I think the comparison joke has…. The fourth wall post when read properly - as opposed to…. Is well thought through. congratulations! Your cheque will not be in the post as I can’t find the button on the you tube.
Convoluted posts evoking Brechtian alienation that lull the reader into a false yet somehow uneasy sense of security before delivering a punchline comprised of a rehashed version of an old catchphrase have........
The more Stewart Lee 'lets himself go' the better he gets, middle-age has given him a lot more to say. The last few years have seen him really hit his stride imo, no one makes me laugh more
+Chris “cd” D Couldn't agree more :) For example his routine about the Ukips (Ep 2 'England', series 3 of Comedy Vehicle) is not only hilarious and brilliantly delivered, but quite profound. It's a million miles ahead of the likes of Michael McIntyre 'spoonfeeding you his warm diarrhea'!!!
Unfortunately due to government funding cuts, Darlington Arts center had to be closed and was derelict for a few years before it was sold off and turned into apartments. The staircase Stewart is referring to also used to have a classroom on it where we used to do our music 'listening' lessons as the sixth form college is next door and they shared spaces. Spent many hours sat waiting for lessons in that corridor looking at the posters. Its a great loss to the town and was an incredible hub of creativity.
@@graypaul4 I'm under the impression he was a furious Corbyn critic, HIGNFY and Twitter, part of the Corbyn pile-on. Can't find examples now, hope I'm not wrong.
Its the level of commitment ,actual research and amazing detail that defines everything he does ! Whatever he does or say you can bet it’s going to be complete!
Who doesn't want to know who's on a toilet and where? I came to this video because I love Stewart Lee, I watched it from the viewpoint of an aspiring musician and I leave with a clearer view of the direction I'm stumbling in. "Many are prepared to suffer for their art; few are prepared to learn how to draw"
I am and always will be impressed by this mans genius. There is no comedian out there previously or even presently that manages to hold your hand, take you on a completely random journey and places you never imagined being funny and still holds your attention throughout. He's not only clever, hes challenging, self deprecating and clearly a cut above some of the moronic comments on here.
@@Jordannadroj20 Norm and Stew are my two favorite comedians for exactly this reason. They play opposite characters to achieve similar results (Norm plays the dumbest guy in the room and Stew plays the smartest).
Being clever and being elitist aren't mutually inclusive. He's a much-needed antidote to the Michael McIntyre school of prancing, observational bollocks. Lee describes his comedy as sometimes being overly clever as a device to appear self-conscious - "smug" even - 20 minutes into this video. It's all part of the act. He's obviously a very humble human being and not part of any elitist Oxbridge favouritism. I see huge optimism in his so-called bitterness.
Spot on! I can't believe that McIntyre has been getting away with "spoon-feeding his warm diarrhoea" for so long. And "antidote" is such an apt description. When I first heard Stewart Lee voice the oblique derision, having long been bemused by the incredible success of "prancing, observational bollocks", I mentally punched the air and shouted "YES!"
Funnily enough I remember reading Stewart Lee locked himself in his flat for 6 whole months watching back to back Monty Python, the whole experience only came to an end when he let himself go.
Really enjoyed this, despite not being a graduate or knowing many of the references Stewart uses. It's a joy to be entertained and educated at the same time. I'm unsure if you'll see these comments Stewart, but if you do, thank you! I look forward to seeing your next tour.
Fascinating and absorbing. I have always had massive respect for Stewart Lee but I have even more now due to his candid and articulate way of unpicking a very personal process. One I will watch again and be sharing. Thanks so much for posting this.
Honestly, this is so important. His views are learned, they can be argued but he has a lot to say from his own personal experience and research. I gather, from his vast knowledge, that we were always progressing, humanity was moving. Social media came along and really fu3ked everything up. I stand by this. I mean it...
I realized I enjoy his style in a way that's like enjoying that Ansel Adams picture of the Grand Tetons: the subject's alright, but the real satisfaction's in the dynamic range. Astonishing how one could think they're looking at some snapshot when what they're witnessing is more like a master craftsman stretching out the medium.
You ever see Stewart Lee live? It's like watching a man slowly dismantle society with a teaspoon. You sit there, thinking, "Is he still going?"-but then you realize, you’re the absurdity he’s been talking about the whole time. Absolutely brilliant.
As someone from Doncaster I would have loved to have seen you from that time, but I do see your point. There are some of us with the same ideas questioning society and norms that you speak of, but so many people from my hometown are happy to just get along without any issue
Your description is totally accurate but that's why some of us like him. I think at some point in his long career, he thought I'm bored of telling jokes, I'm going to see if I can do a whole set on Crisps or stretch out a mediocre punchline (which everyone already knows) for ten minutes. Some how, he pulls it off. That said, he's definitely not for everyone. Sun readers for example.
the cultural insight was huis weakest game... where as his artistic one was birlliant. his cultural "insights" seem saomewhat standard left wing tho liberal, partyline. and therefore how i dont agree with his otherwise valid and somewhat important comedy
Wow I think its incredibly fearless the way that he goes for his 'peers' calling them out for using writers. I wonder if that had a backlash for him (forgive my ignorance). I used to think of comics as these scrupulous artists who were terribly jealous of their own material. But now...
Fantastic to see that this online now - I watched it at the event where this was filmed and in an earlier form at the previous writing event. Excellent both times, and I'm glad I can now share a link to it instead of enthusiastically misquoting it to my friends. I'd recommend Dan Abnett's talk from the same day as well. In answer to the comments below, the audience were fascinated, enthusiastic and much louder than you can hear on that recording (probably because only Stewart was mic'd!)
"I begin to assemble a facsimile of a person's ideas at the point of conception rather than at the point of perfection" is an amazing insight into his process.
the "let himself go" is a bit of a long-running stewart lee gag, where he talks about how comments online say things like "KD Lang's let herself go", "Morrissey's let himself go", etc.
I didn't think that Stewart Lee would be the sort of person who comments on RUclips videos. But now I see that I am wrong. In order to gather more material for a forthcoming show, he has adopted the persona Stefan G, someone who supposedly hates his stuff and resents his Oxbridge education whilst paradoxically loving Monty Python and ignoring their Oxbridge educations. It should be a promising routine.
Really fascinating, love when he reads that he's 44 then realsises he's actually 45 now! Gonna have to watch that economics episode of Comedy Vehicle now!
The little "scams and tricks" he mentions were the ways that our society in the UK used to nurture artists. Now we don't and we are reaping the rewards of neglecting our culture: a devastated cultural wasteland. Such a shame. :(
You must own your failings - the shame is yours - attributing it to a convenient scapegoat is just another of your failings. Take stock, take responsibility & take back your life - best foot forward now.
@@cahillgreg It's in no way your "failing" if you quit school because your professors are pedagogically unsound or socially irrelevant. In reality, that's their problem.
I was convinced,that he was pretending to read his old speach,in fact memorised the whole thing,just acted reading out!!!!And laughed lots through out,turned out he was reading ,Facinating suff cheers kid.
Totally agree with stewart lee. If im gonna watch a comedian i wanna hear him talk about his view on life like, pryor, carlin, hicks, cosby, stewart lee, and a few others.
Sadly the Darlington Arts Centre has been empty for the last couple of years, it's being sold to be converted into flats. Same as the beautiful library. :-(
Please tell me you're joking. Arts centres closing are a result of government cuts, absolutely nothing to do with God. Planet of the apes is a satire on society using blind faith as a tool of oppression. That should have been obvious, it had animals in it!
@@rowanmorrison7022 Man without acknowledgement of the divine is but an animal. It's why the devil and the evil things in religious iconography have horns, tails etc - beastly qualities. Art is about forms, forms are transcendental etc this all plays into a higher power.
He doesn't mention Eddie Izzard, whose autobiog. I have just read, but he also is a stand-up who learned to write his own material and how to make the most out of it. Now he is an actor/entertainer. They are clever people. I am a snob with my stand-ups; I only want to see the ones who are smarter than I am; who say things I haven't thought myself.
Hi Stewart, came to see your latest show in Nottingham with my son, then Salford with my mate. Both shows were superb. Keep doing what you do, it’s inspiring and also funny!
Wonderful to have an insight into his writing process. He's also quite insightful about the history of comedy too. I've always favoured writers as comedians from Beyond The Fringe through to Python, the Young Ones and Mitchell and Webb (for example).
By "let himself go" I presume you mean "is acting naturally without pretense of an inflated ego, one which might cause someone to dye there hair and wear fashionable clothing at the expense of their credibility." In which case I can but agree with you.
I used to think i wanted to be a stand-up... but the fact that i keep laughing out loud whenever the audience isnt laughing at lines that arent apparently funny leaves me thinking i should be a writer... or a fireman. Thankyou Steven Lee, ill remember this lesson.
good call. i really really enjoyed watching that. i've been a fan for years and even i was somewhat cautious when i saw how long it was, however, loved it
@@thinkingsincerely7260 According to some Channel 4 poll. He's made reference to the ranking a few times and even used it to name one of his shows. I made this comment before RUclips had direct replies. It was a sarcastic dig at a hater so is out context now.
The comments re: further education - and particularly with regard to arts courses - is even more true now than it was then. This is especially true, I think, in the Performance arena.
There's an obvious disparity between 'hooting and hollering' and laughing at the right moments - one you're ignoring. There were defined points where the audience didn't laugh at standard jokes. Stewart remarked on these points. Maybe for self confidence you choose to define silence as the best response to a typical joke, but most people think it's laughter.
Taking someone else's old material, changing the noun and presenting it in a written form is as funny as it ever was, or ever will be. I've always found that being at a recording of a SL set and then watching it again in isolation means you hear a whole lot of lines you missed. A comedy audience is so keyed up to laugh that twists that need to be right after the punch are lost in the laughter. Learning that several big-name stand ups use writers might go some way to my feeling that their material didn't seem to come from some fixed point. I admit I have laughed at a few Frankie Boyle one-liners but not constantly. Only a few stand ups invest in a real on stage persona. One one hand, they feel more real but on the other hand people seem to believe that they are seeing the real person. Les Dawson did have a gift that went mostly unrecognized. His writing was amazing, the only better thing being his delivery. Dave Allen actually did some quite harsh lines. DAs tiny bits that were aggressive were all the more potent because it was in such stark contrast with the rest of his set. I've always been impressed by SL continuing to evolve. After a couple of decades, it must be easy to work out a demographic and pander to them. Easy to judge opinions of the many and take the safe route. With a family to support, that's got to be tempting. As someone has already pointed out - to be totally frank about how the financial side works cannot have made him many friends. I haven't read his books (I will) but I am hopeful that Tractatus-Illogico Risus will be possible. 'A serious and good philosophical work could be written consisting entirely of jokes' - Wittgenstein Of course, I could be totally wrong.
BTW The Independent wrote an article about the lecture. If people are not aware, journalists always offer a right of reply to a piece. In their words 'No one was available to respond to the claim at McIntyre’s agents, whilst agents for Osho, Whitehall and Boyle all declined to comment.' To be fair, he didn't say they were wrong to use writers, he noted it as a possible new era. While musicians cover other artists songs, I cannot think of a musician of global standing who JUST covers other peoples material. We don't know how much material is written by others. On reflection, I would say that the fact articulated a feeling about a number of stand ups.that I've held for a long time. No real stage persona so no obvious situations where you would think 'that persona would not make that joke'. Some of the jokes have been very funny but the person delivering them is a golem (in the traditional Jewish meaning of the work). Not something of flesh and blood but just an automaton with a limited, pre-learned stage craft. There are plenty of stand ups in SLs league but most of them are not as well known. Simon Munnery, Kevin McAleer, Kevin Eldon. The only people who will intentionally lose the audience at the start of the act. I mean keep going until not 1 person is left laughing. Only then do they win them back. What confidence - most stand ups want a joke in the first seconds. What ability - to knowingly lose the whole room and reliably get it back. With all of them, the box marked stand up isn't a perfect fit. I'm not simply fawning over a few stand ups, I've seen and enjoyed dozens but it's in retrospect, watching someone kill the room (having been in the room and then watched same on DVD), it's not something many would attempt. I would like to see some more acts develop who tread that fine line between losing the room for a while and still knowing you can get them back. I have seen it done, but watching alone shows the laughter squeezed out of the audience and filled from a different well. Or I could be totally wrong.
Yes, but when he tells the joke, he (correctly) leaves out the possessive apostrophe (you have to slow down the audio, and use a very accurate timing device, if you were wondering how I know.)
The fourth wall as a performance convention in which an invisible, imagined wall separates actors from the audience has let itself go.
And BK gets 14 likes......!
Whilst I think the comparison joke has….
The fourth wall post when read properly - as opposed to….
Is well thought through.
congratulations!
Your cheque will not be in the post as I can’t find the button on the you tube.
👏
Convoluted posts evoking Brechtian alienation that lull the reader into a false yet somehow uneasy sense of security before delivering a punchline comprised of a rehashed version of an old catchphrase have........
He’s giving it to us straight
Like a pear cider ...
@@Jesse__H Made from 100% pear...
Like a pear cider-made out of 100% pears!
@Midnight Son unnecessary apostrophe.
@@AA-hg5fk unnecessary unnecessary apostrophe
The more Stewart Lee 'lets himself go' the better he gets, middle-age has given him a lot more to say. The last few years have seen him really hit his stride imo, no one makes me laugh more
TheDaddyO44 carpet remnant world is him at his very best. doubt he will top that.
+Chris “cd” D Couldn't agree more :) For example his routine about the Ukips (Ep 2 'England', series 3 of Comedy Vehicle) is not only hilarious and brilliantly delivered, but quite profound. It's a million miles ahead of the likes of Michael McIntyre 'spoonfeeding you his warm diarrhea'!!!
ivorbigonee I know this comment is 2 years old, but I've been to his current Content Provider tour, and can confirm he's topped CRW
One more expensive medical emergency and I think he’ll *really* hit his stride
TheDaddyO44 I saw content provider live and I’ve seen bits of CRW, but I think I prefer CRW (cp is still amazing tho)
Unfortunately due to government funding cuts, Darlington Arts center had to be closed and was derelict for a few years before it was sold off and turned into apartments. The staircase Stewart is referring to also used to have a classroom on it where we used to do our music 'listening' lessons as the sixth form college is next door and they shared spaces. Spent many hours sat waiting for lessons in that corridor looking at the posters. Its a great loss to the town and was an incredible hub of creativity.
Yeah.. But..Darlington.?
@@biggusdickus5986Head
Tory cuts! 😆
Austerity has taken the soul of working class communities
@@markdrury4287absolutely yes
It's really wonderful to just listen to Stewart Lee describe the beauty of the comedic art-form. He's extremely eloquent and thoughtful.
Yes...but he’s not funny in real life
Still haven't forgiven him for promoting the Johnson government.
@@artphong9908 he did what?
@@artphong9908 how so?
@@graypaul4 I'm under the impression he was a furious Corbyn critic, HIGNFY and Twitter, part of the Corbyn pile-on. Can't find examples now, hope I'm not wrong.
Stewart is so impressively knowledgable and fluent. Really good to hear him speaking like this, away from his stage shows.
Its the level of commitment ,actual research and amazing detail that defines everything he does ! Whatever he does or say you can bet it’s going to be complete!
Who doesn't want to know who's on a toilet and where?
I came to this video because I love Stewart Lee, I watched it from the viewpoint of an aspiring musician and I leave with a clearer view of the direction I'm stumbling in.
"Many are prepared to suffer for their art; few are prepared to learn how to draw"
I could listen to Stew talk about comedy all day.
How man I was bored
Love this interview, beautifully human, open and honest.
I am and always will be impressed by this mans genius. There is no comedian out there previously or even presently that manages to hold your hand, take you on a completely random journey and places you never imagined being funny and still holds your attention throughout. He's not only clever, hes challenging, self deprecating and clearly a cut above some of the moronic comments on here.
Penis
well said Sir.
Norm Macdonald
@@Jordannadroj20 Norm and Stew are my two favorite comedians for exactly this reason. They play opposite characters to achieve similar results (Norm plays the dumbest guy in the room and Stew plays the smartest).
@@0228christian
That's exactly it
Dan Abnett and Stewart Lee, by coincidence my favourite examples of the things they are. Top blokes.
Being clever and being elitist aren't mutually inclusive. He's a much-needed antidote to the Michael McIntyre school of prancing, observational bollocks. Lee describes his comedy as sometimes being overly clever as a device to appear self-conscious - "smug" even - 20 minutes into this video. It's all part of the act. He's obviously a very humble human being and not part of any elitist Oxbridge favouritism. I see huge optimism in his so-called bitterness.
9:55
Spot on! I can't believe that McIntyre has been getting away with "spoon-feeding his warm diarrhoea" for so long. And "antidote" is such an apt description. When I first heard Stewart Lee voice the oblique derision, having long been bemused by the incredible success of "prancing, observational bollocks", I mentally punched the air and shouted "YES!"
For anyone who's interested, "you can't step in the same river twice", isn't a zen saying, it's Heraclitus. (i.e. Greek).
Max White it is Zen in essence, not in origin.
@@Koreviking Actually it's a quote from Heart of Darkness by Conrad.
@@Johnconno Where did Conrad get it from? It's probably one of those universal 'thingys'.
@@kenhutley971 Conrad thought it up and then wrote it down.
No Zen. No Greeks. No Thingys.
The End. (Beautiful Friend) ; )
@@Johnconno I am in awe sir, of your certainty. You knew Joseph well then? ( ;
I'm watching this yet another 10 years later
Funnily enough I remember reading Stewart Lee locked himself in his flat for 6 whole months watching back to back Monty Python, the whole experience only came to an end when he let himself go.
I have just discovered this guy and let myself go.
Really enjoyed this, despite not being a graduate or knowing many of the references Stewart uses. It's a joy to be entertained and educated at the same time. I'm unsure if you'll see these comments Stewart, but if you do, thank you! I look forward to seeing your next tour.
Fascinating and absorbing. I have always had massive respect for Stewart Lee but I have even more now due to his candid and articulate way of unpicking a very personal process. One I will watch again and be sharing. Thanks so much for posting this.
what a wonderful comment.
Excellent talk, Stewart Lee rocks my world
Honestly, this is so important. His views are learned, they can be argued but he has a lot to say from his own personal experience and research. I gather, from his vast knowledge, that we were always progressing, humanity was moving. Social media came along and really fu3ked everything up.
I stand by this.
I mean it...
Very smart man, enjoyed his comedy in the nineties, the curious orange was brilliant!
The Space Battleship "Yamato" has let itself go.
Jesus I could listen to Stewart for hours. Tell me once more about these pint size Ninjas.
I realized I enjoy his style in a way that's like enjoying that Ansel Adams picture of the Grand Tetons: the subject's alright, but the real satisfaction's in the dynamic range. Astonishing how one could think they're looking at some snapshot when what they're witnessing is more like a master craftsman stretching out the medium.
You ever see Stewart Lee live? It's like watching a man slowly dismantle society with a teaspoon. You sit there, thinking, "Is he still going?"-but then you realize, you’re the absurdity he’s been talking about the whole time. Absolutely brilliant.
An hour of my life incredibly well spent.
Stewart Lee is much better than it is necessary to be given his typical audience.
As someone from Doncaster I would have loved to have seen you from that time, but I do see your point. There are some of us with the same ideas questioning society and norms that you speak of, but so many people from my hometown are happy to just get along without any issue
Your description is totally accurate but that's why some of us like him. I think at some point in his long career, he thought I'm bored of telling jokes, I'm going to see if I can do a whole set on Crisps or stretch out a mediocre punchline (which everyone already knows) for ten minutes. Some how, he pulls it off. That said, he's definitely not for everyone. Sun readers for example.
Got to admire the art, even if its not funny.
A really good lecture with a good insight into contemporary culture, there's not enough of this.
the cultural insight was huis weakest game... where as his artistic one was birlliant. his cultural "insights" seem saomewhat standard left wing tho liberal, partyline.
and therefore how i dont agree with his otherwise valid and somewhat important comedy
@@beakfordflappering4647 Shush now
Wow I think its incredibly fearless the way that he goes for his 'peers' calling them out for using writers. I wonder if that had a backlash for him (forgive my ignorance). I used to think of comics as these scrupulous artists who were terribly jealous of their own material. But now...
Fantastic to see that this online now - I watched it at the event where this was filmed and in an earlier form at the previous writing event. Excellent both times, and I'm glad I can now share a link to it instead of enthusiastically misquoting it to my friends. I'd recommend Dan Abnett's talk from the same day as well.
In answer to the comments below, the audience were fascinated, enthusiastic and much louder than you can hear on that recording (probably because only Stewart was mic'd!)
"I begin to assemble a facsimile of a person's ideas at the point of conception rather than at the point of perfection" is an amazing insight into his process.
the "let himself go" is a bit of a long-running stewart lee gag, where he talks about how comments online say things like "KD Lang's let herself go", "Morrissey's let himself go", etc.
This is brilliant. Stew is a national treasure who's material ages like fine wine.
whose
Or 100% pear cider
I really enjoy listening to him talk, as much as I do his comedy, which is meant with full respect. His intelligence is so tangible, fascinating man
I didn't think that Stewart Lee would be the sort of person who comments on RUclips videos. But now I see that I am wrong. In order to gather more material for a forthcoming show, he has adopted the persona Stefan G, someone who supposedly hates his stuff and resents his Oxbridge education whilst paradoxically loving Monty Python and ignoring their Oxbridge educations. It should be a promising routine.
i doubt he knows how to work an ipad
George Carlin is my favorite intellectual comedian
Yes but has Stefan G let himself go ?
Bumgardener Kreme I’m Stephen G and certainly have.
I've watched this several times. So brave to unpick this stuff. Oh, our Stu ... gotta love him. and fun too. thanks for the brain food.
Marc Walton I was going to write some words but I'll just agree with you instead #perfect
Stu? Is this not Morrissey?
If it is he's let himself go
Is Ali Campbell?
Really fascinating, love when he reads that he's 44 then realsises he's actually 45 now! Gonna have to watch that economics episode of Comedy Vehicle now!
The little "scams and tricks" he mentions were the ways that our society in the UK used to nurture artists. Now we don't and we are reaping the rewards of neglecting our culture: a devastated cultural wasteland. Such a shame. :(
What a wonderful history piece by a master!
I envy the only guy in the audience who seems to get it, no doubt he had the time of his life...
RUclips commenters are unwilling to let go.
+
Exactly. Endlessly recycling an old Lee joke is not very funny.
The battleship Yamoto one did make me giggle though
Sort of like a pear cider then
If I'd had professors like this I might have finished college.
At least you can form a third conditional correctly.
You must own your failings - the shame is yours - attributing it to a convenient scapegoat is just another of your failings. Take stock, take responsibility & take back your life - best foot forward now.
@@cahillgreg God, you must be fun at parties.
@@cahillgreg It's in no way your "failing" if you quit school because your professors are pedagogically unsound or socially irrelevant. In reality, that's their problem.
@@Rufusdos People who type this are ironically usually not very fun at parties.
Stewart Lee, what a boss.
I was convinced,that he was pretending to read his old speach,in fact memorised the whole thing,just acted reading out!!!!And laughed lots through out,turned out he was reading ,Facinating suff cheers kid.
Marvelous. Simply marvelous.
Totally agree with stewart lee. If im gonna watch a comedian i wanna hear him talk about his view on life like, pryor, carlin, hicks, cosby, stewart lee, and a few others.
Sadly the Darlington Arts Centre has been empty for the last couple of years, it's being sold to be converted into flats. Same as the beautiful library. :-(
Nirvana Sanctuary that's a shame :(
That's what happens when you lose God. Planet of the Apes incoming.
Please tell me you're joking. Arts centres closing are a result of government cuts, absolutely nothing to do with God. Planet of the apes is a satire on society using blind faith as a tool of oppression. That should have been obvious, it had animals in it!
@@rowanmorrison7022 Man without acknowledgement of the divine is but an animal. It's why the devil and the evil things in religious iconography have horns, tails etc - beastly qualities.
Art is about forms, forms are transcendental etc this all plays into a higher power.
Oh I am sorry, I didn't realise you were logic challenged. Be well x
The best, funniest comedian of the last 50 years at least. Utter genius.
He doesn't mention Eddie Izzard, whose autobiog. I have just read, but he also is a stand-up who learned to write his own material and how to make the most out of it. Now he is an actor/entertainer. They are clever people. I am a snob with my stand-ups; I only want to see the ones who are smarter than I am; who say things I haven't thought myself.
This was so interesting. I need to listen to this again.
Hi Stewart, came to see your latest show in Nottingham with my son, then Salford with my mate. Both shows were superb. Keep doing what you do, it’s inspiring and also funny!
Wonderful to have an insight into his writing process. He's also quite insightful about the history of comedy too. I've always favoured writers as comedians from Beyond The Fringe through to Python, the Young Ones and Mitchell and Webb (for example).
Brilliant . . . a masterclass this.
Great talk.
Subtitles for the audiences questions would have been nice.
By "let himself go" I presume you mean "is acting naturally without pretense of an inflated ego, one which might cause someone to dye there hair and wear fashionable clothing at the expense of their credibility." In which case I can but agree with you.
That was wonderful, I'll be referring to this a very lot.
Looking at him from almost a decade ago I can't help thinking "Stewart Lee's made himself come".
it was an informative and entertaining lecture. the fact you didn't like it says a lot more about you than it does about Stew.
Every time Stewart Lee looks at his watch the audience should start asking their question again.
This is great- thank you for uploading and sharing.
I didnt even know Billy the fish had such an eloquence with words and timing
I used to think i wanted to be a stand-up... but the fact that i keep laughing out loud whenever the audience isnt laughing at lines that arent apparently funny leaves me thinking i should be a writer... or a fireman.
Thankyou Steven Lee, ill remember this lesson.
"On Not Writing", which is accidentally verbose. Love this Man!
good call. i really really enjoyed watching that. i've been a fan for years and even i was somewhat cautious when i saw how long it was, however, loved it
I've let myself go. Although at 54 there is no other option really.
I don't find the video quality lacking in any way for the purpose of a talk like this.
That was great... He should also do one on 'Not Being Funny".
Good to see Mark Kermode doing so well.
He's actually the 41st best standup.
41st best in based on what measure? Certainly not based on intelligence. He's much smarter than that.
@@thinkingsincerely7260 According to some Channel 4 poll. He's made reference to the ranking a few times and even used it to name one of his shows. I made this comment before RUclips had direct replies. It was a sarcastic dig at a hater so is out context now.
The comments re: further education - and particularly with regard to arts courses - is even more true now than it was then. This is especially true, I think, in the Performance arena.
thanks! this looks great; looking forward to watching it.
this was absolutely fantastic, brilliant upload
Slobodan Milosovic has let himself go
But he's still a much nicer bloke in real life. :)
john smith
At least Slobodan Milosovic lived his life by a consistent set of moral principles.
hexonatapeloop Jesus christ.
a
a
ALL COMMENTS (330) has let himself go
Letting yourself go has let itself go.
Sergei the meerkat has let himself go
This was made before my life fell apart. I didn't see it coming.
...very comical. How many times is he going to turn his one page upside down?
lenny henry's completely changed his appearance
15:20 Daniel Kitson - now that’s a comedian! I saw him down the Comedy Store about 20 years ago. Holy moly!
28 years old! Yesss!
Just give it to them straight like a pear cider thats made from 100% pears
s
no S its 100% pear.
That henny youngman line is from the goodfellas
An offensive 1950's cartoon of a Chinaman has let itself go.
Eskimo face from the 90s
some gleaningful gems, whatever that means.
That is one thing comedy can be about.
That is what comedy is about for you.
enjoyed this so much
GET ON WITH IT!!!
Not one minute of this made me Ang Lee
Just as well; I wouldn’t have liked you if you were.
And his fingers have grown back nice one terry
Stan laurel has let himself go
Stewart looks simultaneously like.. Actor Martin Shaw
(The Professionals),
Terry Christian (The Word)
Absolute Gentleman.
There's an obvious disparity between 'hooting and hollering' and laughing at the right moments - one you're ignoring. There were defined points where the audience didn't laugh at standard jokes. Stewart remarked on these points. Maybe for self confidence you choose to define silence as the best response to a typical joke, but most people think it's laughter.
I suspect when he mentions the woman "waffling" would be the instance at the end of "Give it to me straight"
I thought Terry nutkins had passed on ..nice to see him on the telly again..surprised he hasn't brought an otter
Taking someone else's old material, changing the noun and presenting it in a written form is as funny as it ever was, or ever will be.
I've always found that being at a recording of a SL set and then watching it again in isolation means you hear a whole lot of lines you missed. A comedy audience is so keyed up to laugh that twists that need to be right after the punch are lost in the laughter. Learning that several big-name stand ups use writers might go some way to my feeling that their material didn't seem to come from some fixed point. I admit I have laughed at a few Frankie Boyle one-liners but not constantly. Only a few stand ups invest in a real on stage persona. One one hand, they feel more real but on the other hand people seem to believe that they are seeing the real person.
Les Dawson did have a gift that went mostly unrecognized. His writing was amazing, the only better thing being his delivery. Dave Allen actually did some quite harsh lines. DAs tiny bits that were aggressive were all the more potent because it was in such stark contrast with the rest of his set.
I've always been impressed by SL continuing to evolve. After a couple of decades, it must be easy to work out a demographic and pander to them. Easy to judge opinions of the many and take the safe route. With a family to support, that's got to be tempting.
As someone has already pointed out - to be totally frank about how the financial side works cannot have made him many friends. I haven't read his books (I will) but I am hopeful that Tractatus-Illogico Risus will be possible. 'A serious and good philosophical work could be written consisting entirely of jokes' - Wittgenstein
Of course, I could be totally wrong.
BTW The Independent wrote an article about the lecture. If people are not aware, journalists always offer a right of reply to a piece. In their words 'No one was available to respond to the claim at McIntyre’s agents, whilst agents for Osho, Whitehall and Boyle all declined to comment.'
To be fair, he didn't say they were wrong to use writers, he noted it as a possible new era. While musicians cover other artists songs, I cannot think of a musician of global standing who JUST covers other peoples material. We don't know how much material is written by others.
On reflection, I would say that the fact articulated a feeling about a number of stand ups.that I've held for a long time. No real stage persona so no obvious situations where you would think 'that persona would not make that joke'. Some of the jokes have been very funny but the person delivering them is a golem (in the traditional Jewish meaning of the work). Not something of flesh and blood but just an automaton with a limited, pre-learned stage craft.
There are plenty of stand ups in SLs league but most of them are not as well known. Simon Munnery, Kevin McAleer, Kevin Eldon. The only people who will intentionally lose the audience at the start of the act. I mean keep going until not 1 person is left laughing. Only then do they win them back. What confidence - most stand ups want a joke in the first seconds. What ability - to knowingly lose the whole room and reliably get it back. With all of them, the box marked stand up isn't a perfect fit.
I'm not simply fawning over a few stand ups, I've seen and enjoyed dozens but it's in retrospect, watching someone kill the room (having been in the room and then watched same on DVD), it's not something many would attempt. I would like to see some more acts develop who tread that fine line between losing the room for a while and still knowing you can get them back. I have seen it done, but watching alone shows the laughter squeezed out of the audience and filled from a different well.
Or I could be totally wrong.
Stewart! The old "28 years old" gag? You'll be saying "and then I got off the bus, aah" next.
Delightfully interesting. My actual comment.
that never judge a book by it's cover joke is in his most recent comedy vehicle
Yes, but when he tells the joke, he (correctly) leaves out the possessive apostrophe (you have to slow down the audio, and use a very accurate timing device, if you were wondering how I know.)