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Comic Details

Jason Rouse

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Videos

Jason Rouse Middle East Tour Part Three


More Jason Rouse videos

Jason Rouse Middle East Tour Part One
Jason Rouse Middle East Tour Part Two
On Comedy Blue
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CV

CV

Stand Up: 2005:
Edinburgh show: In My Darkest Hour
In My Darkest Hour
Stand Up: 2001:
Won one of Canada's Gemini awards for his one-man show
Stand Up: 1998:
Won the search for the best new Canadian comic run by Yuk Yuk's club
Stand Up: 1996:
Started stand-up
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Reviews

Bob Slayer's Rock & Roll Circus
Live Review

Bob Slayer's Rock & Roll Circus

Bob Slayer says he put together this ‘outsiders’ comedy tour as an alternative what he sees as an increasingly homogenous mainstream clubs, full of careerist stand-ups seeking to follow the now-established trajectory from circuit to panel shows or televised roadshows.

While he has a point, his rejection of anything that might be considered even vaguely professional results in subjecting audiences at the Rock & Roll Circus to large tracts of indulgent fannying around, in the vague hope something funny might arise. Audiences do get fleeting moments of spontaneously anarchic humour, but they have to endure plenty of drivel to get there.

As host, he aims to create drunken chaos, downing pints and even jugs from punters’ tables and chatting inanely. He clambers around the room, and brings audience members on to the stage, all in search of a laugh – but he hasn’t a plan, nor any jokes, so his compering is without purpose or point. Maybe I’m just a conservative fuddy-duddy to want more but the audience in a freezing Highlight club in Reading seemed to agree, with many a ‘Get on with it’-type heckle. For anarchy, it wasn’t half tedious.

It takes a skill to build a gig in your image – Andrew Maxwell did it with the ideologically similar Fullmooners, and Daniel Kitson, before he got all theatrical, could do it anywhere – but Slayer, a music manager only relatively recently turned comedian, hasn't the knack, or the experience, to get away with it.

This might not matter if the acts were strong, where he could be considered a benign drunk punctuating proceedings, but they were as uncertain as him.

Chris Cross is a sometime street entertainer, and he spent much of his long set employing the sort of techniques that might gather you a crowd in Covent Garden, but feels like padding in front of a captive crowd. And his audience participation, which involved licking their faces and heads, mistook boisterousness for humour.

The nub of his act – involving contortion and escapology – is as entertaining as it is gruesome, but it was a long time coming, as he likes the sound of his own voice too much.

Largely wordless physical comedian Dr Brown was even more of a challenge. In festivals, I’ve previously watched baffled with one half the audience as the other half are reduced to hysterics by his bizarre clowning. Without wanting to appear sadistic, here, where the entire audience hate him, the experience is much more fun.

He comes on, scruffily dressed, and stands silent for a while, absorbing a barrage of heckles suck as ‘Big Issue’ and the perennial ‘Next!’. After a while he opens a bottle of water and drinks it, and another, and, pausing only to emit a watery belch, another, while the volume of vocal disapproval rises. ‘Bring the boring cunt back on!’ comes the cry from one man who’d rather have more Slayer than this…

Eventually, the tension’s broken, but not, perhaps as Dr Brown had planned. As he casually tosses the empty bottles into the audience, one comes back with venomous force. Breaking his silence, the good Doctor coaxes the offender on stage, to empty a full litre of water over him. Then another two litres. The disgruntled punter is drenched, this on a night when the temperature outside is –3C, and not all that much warmer inside. He should be furious. But he’s not. He returns to his seat laughing with his friends. Set over.

These are the unique moments Slayer is aiming for, and it was certainly a memorable routine for the extraordinary interplay between Brown and the mob/audience. Unpredictable – and probably unrepeatable – stuff.

Finally headliner, Jason Rouse, a full-on rock and roll comic: tattooed, pierced and in full metal garb. His routine is a tirade of unspeakable depravity; comedy’s equivalent of Two Girls, One Cup.

But amid all the various excretions and list of inappropriate places he put his dick, the most shocking statement comes when he mentions his age – 39. He’s more the image of a feckless twentysomething waster than a middle-aged man.

In a night of weirdness, he is, however, a clear-cut comic, with defined punchlines, slammed hard. His delivery is aggressive tackling such subject matter as feral drunk English girls and the Americans’ puritanical approach to swearing, while demonstrating a knockout quick wit when it comes to the inevitable heckles.

He lost some momentum towards the second half of the set, but also fleetingly displays a sweet side, which proves funny, not least because it serves as a rare break from the filth. This was the sort of act this audience had come to see, and they weren’t disappointed. .

Date of live review: Friday 3rd Dec, '10
Review by Steve Bennett
Jason Rouse : Original Review
Jason Rouse : Original Review

Tuesday 1st Mar, '05-
Jason Rouse: My Darkest Hour
Jason Rouse: My Darkest Hour

Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2005 -
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Comments

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Jason is superb. Uncomprimisingly excellent. He has chosen his path and he sticks to it with true dedication. Michael McIntyre was afraid to follow him as recently as July 09 and rightly so. If you don't like Rouse, that's fine - it's a genre of humour that divides an audience but his characterizations and charisma make even the darkest of comedy accessible, which is a talent that few comics are brave enough to attempt. Comedy needs Rousers. He's a dying breed. Enjoy him before stand-up becomes as sanitized as the muzak industry.

Cole Parker, August 2010


I thought he was amazing - I would love to see more of him.

Tim. G., July 2007


Saw him at the Glee late show in Birmingham and he was superb. He headlined and ended the night on a wonderful high. Great stuff.

Rich, October 2006


I too caught him at Yuk Yuk's in Vancouver and was pleasantly surprised. I think for me, and particularly my core group of vulgar friends, Jason touched on what we always "joke" about anyways, but with his spin and courage to actually do it in front of a paid audience was what made it great. His act is original to say the least and I would definitely pay to see him again. ...but that's me.

Tommy Woo, June 2006


Saw him @ Yuk Yuk's in Vancouver and was pleasantly offended. Not the brightest comic in the sky but damn good nonetheless. Definitely worth seeing at least once. Tastefully offensive.

Kaine, June 2006


I enjoyed Jason's act, he has some good material, but I'm afraid there's just no variation. It's almost as though he has a list of nouns above his bed to select at random and link with obscenities. Nun, fist, wheelchair...

Paul, June 2006


Utter filth and depravity. And I loved it. Especially where he kep telling one of my friends he was going to take her into the woods and... well, he was great.

Dean B, May 2006


Just saw him for this first time in Belfast last night, so didn't have any expectations. Basically from the moment he came on stage until he left I cried with laughter. This guy is a genius. Yes the material is controversial, and you automatically feel condemned to hell for laughing, but its just too damn funny not to. He was like a breath of fresh air.

Kate, March 2006


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