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Interview: Joshua Mills on his upcoming Fantagraphics book about the late comedian Ernie Kovacs

Even though it's often employed innocently, there's an inherent element of tragedy in the phrase "ahead of their time" when it's associated with unsung or overlooked geniuses in a field. If one is "ahead of their time," odds are they'll never live to see the impact their existence inspired or receive the adulation they so richly deserve. — Read the rest

A Stand-Up Comedy Routine Discovered in a Medieval Manuscript: Monty Python Before Monty Python (1480)

A funny thing happened on the way to the 15th century…

Dr. James Wade, a specialist in early English literature at the University of Cambridge, was doing research at the National Library of Scotland when he noticed something extraordinary about the first of the nine miscellaneous booklets comprising the Heege Manuscript.

Most surviving medieval manuscripts are the stuff of high art. The first part of the Heege Manuscript is funny.

The usual tales of romance and heroism, allusions to ancient Rome, lofty poetry and dramatic interludes… even the dashing adventures of Robin Hood are conspicuously absent.

Instead it’s awash with the staples of contemporary stand up comedy – topical observations, humorous oversharing, roasting eminent public figures, razzing the audience, flattering the audience by busting on the denizens of nearby communities, shaggy dog tales, absurdities and non-sequiturs.

Repeated references to passing the cup conjure an open mic type scenario.

The manuscript was created by cleric Richard Heege and entered into the collection of his employers, the wealthy Sherbrooke family.

Other scholars have concentrated on the manuscript’s physical construction, mostly refraining from comment on the nature of its contents.

Dr. Wade suspects that the first booklet is the result of Heege having paid close attention to an anonymous traveling minstrel’s performance, perhaps going so far as to consult the performer’s own notes.

Heege quipped that he was the author owing to the fact that he “was at that feast and did not have a drink” – meaning he was the only one sober enough to retain the minstrel’s jokes and inventive plotlines.

Dr. Wade describes how the comic portion of the Heege Manuscript is broken down into three parts, the first of which is sure to gratify fans of Monty Python and the Holy Grail:

…it’s a narrative account of a bunch of peasants who try to hunt a hare, and it all ends disastrously, where they beat each other up and the wives have to come with wheelbarrows and hold them home. 

That hare turns out to be one fierce bad rabbit, so much so that the tale’s proletarian hero, the prosaically named Jack Wade, worries she could rip out his throat.

Dr. Wade learned that Sir Walter Scott, author of Ivanhoe, was aware of The Hunting of the Hare, viewing it as a sturdy spoof of high minded romance, “studiously filled with grotesque, absurd, and extravagant characters.”

The killer bunny yarn is followed by a mock sermon  – If thou have a great black bowl in thy hand and it be full of good ale and thou leave anything therein, thou puttest thy soul into greater pain –  and a nonsense poem about a feast where everyone gets hammered and chaos ensues.

Crowd-pleasing material in 1480.

With a few 21st-century tweaks, an enterprising young comedian might wring laughs from it yet.

(Paging Tyler Gunther, of Greedy Peasant fame…)

As to the true author of these routines, Dr. Wade speculates that he may have been a “professional traveling minstrel or a local amateur performer.” Possibly even both:

A ‘professional’ minstrel might have a day job and go gigging at night, and so be, in a sense, semi-professional, just as a ‘travelling’ minstrel may well be also ‘local’, working a beat of nearby villages and generally known in the area. On balance, the texts in this booklet suggest a minstrel of this variety: someone whose material includes several local place-names, but also whose material is made to travel, with the lack of determinacy designed to comically engage audiences regardless of specific locale.

Learn more about the Heege Manuscript in  Dr. Wade’s article, Entertainments from a Medieval Minstrel’s Repertoire Book in The Review of English Studies.

Leaf through a digital facsimile of the Heege Manuscript here.

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SNL's Waffle House skit serves up delicious dramedy

Open-all-night diner chain Waffle House becomes the stage for a moving and dramatic goodbye scene in this SNL skit. Marcello Hernandez and guest host Jenna Ortega deliver a heartfelt performance as high school sweethearts saying their farewells before heading off to different colleges. — Read the rest

Looking forward to the third season of I Think You Should Leave?

Triples is best. Triples makes it safe. After a few scattered teasers over past months, Season 3 of Tim Robinson's awkward, sometimes uncomfortable, uniquely hilarious sketch comedy series "I Think You Should Leave" has been officially confirmed. Not only that, we've been given a hard release date: May 30, unfortunately meaning that we have to wait two and a half months to delve into Robinson's mind once again. — Read the rest

Margaret Cho's message to drag show haters: "Take equal rights like a man"

On "Salon Talks," the queer icon addresses male comics, being a crazy cat lady and her hopes for "Fire Island 2"

Tig Notaro questioned about a "Super Bowl gone woke"

In this "Hot Take" segment from the animated Stephen Colbert Presents Tooning Out the News, the Fox & Friends-like hosts question comedian Tig Notaro on her reaction to the wokeness of the Super Bowl and its ads. Hilarity ensues.

Let's make fun of dumb dads

As the hosts, comedians Kevin Laferriere and Evan Kyle Berger explain about their Instagram comedy account, The Dumb Dads, "It's pronounced Dad, the "dumb" is silent." The podcast is "just a couple of dads trying to have a little fun along the way. — Read the rest

New pillow for middle-aged Italian men who just moved out of their parent's house

Pillows and politics are two words that can lead in many directions. Whether scandals between the sheets or, with new textiles and designs, functionalities, and materials for comfort and health, pillows are expanding their range and utility. In this video from Tommy J.Read the rest

Cindy Williams, a role model for working class girls

Williams, who died Jan. 25 at the age of 75, came from a world not that different from her most famous character

If offices had litter boxes instead of toilets

By: Popkin

Comedy Central presented us with a skit where an office has litter boxes instead of toilets for employees. The litter boxes are out in the open, for everyone in the office to see. There's a reasonable explanation for it, too. — Read the rest

Jennifer Coolidge's first TikTok video is a poetic masterpiece (video)

National treasure Jennifer Coolidge joined TikTok and, unsurprisingly, her first video is brilliant. In it, she recites a poignant poem and the author makes a cameo!

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