Naomi Hefter
Nat Coombs
Nat Luurtsema
Natalie Haynes
Nathan Cassidy
Nathan Caton
Nathan Stokes
Nathan Wilcock
Nathaniel Metcalfe
Nathaniel Tapley
Naz Osmanoglu
Neil Delamere
Neil Hamburger
Neil McFarlane
Neil Mullarkey
Neil Price
Niall Browne
Nicholas Cooke
Nicholas Parsons
Nick Cowen
Nick Dixon
Nick Doody
Nick Griffin
Nick Helm
Nick Hodder
Nick Mohammed
Nick Page
Nick Pettigrew
Nick Revell
Nick Saunders
Nick Sun
Nick Wilty
Nicola Bolsover
Nicola Mantalios-Lovett
Nicola Wilkinson
Nige
Nik Coppin
Nina Conti
Ninia Benjamin
Nish Kumar
Noel Britten
Noel Fielding
Noel James
Noise Next Door
Norman Lovett
Norman Wisdom
Nick Hodder
At Outside The Box2008 |
More Nick Hodder videos |
| At Outside The Box |
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Started comedy in 2006 |
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Nick Hodder: Insert Comedy Here |
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As stand-up expands so rapidly, so has the number of comedians who choose the practices of their chosen profession as a legitimate target for mockery. After all, comedy itself is the prime obsession for most of its practitioners, who would be well aware of the age-old mantra ‘write what you know’. So here we have Nick Hodder deriding cliched jokes, stand-ups who want to be E4 presenters and observational comics just ‘describing the obvious’. Yet he – as well as the comedy geeks his show is aimed at – must be well aware that jokes about stand-ups who want to be E4 presenters and observational comics just describing the obvious are pretty clichéd themselves these days. And that’s the inherent problem his debut show, Insert Comedy Here, struggles to overcome. The premise – which is full of potential – is that Hodder can’t be arsed to craft his routine, so he’s gone on the internet and brought a ‘teach-yourself’ CD designed to make him instantly into a successful cookie-cutter comedian. There’s some half-joke that this is both a learning resource for the newbie, yet designed to be played just before taking to the O2 stage, which only adds a discrepancy to the set-up, which you have to overlook. The dismembered voice explains how to glad-hand the audience, break the ice with a joke about who you look like, riff on the differences between men and women, drop in a pat bit of nostalgia or animal-based whimsy and so forth. Aware that simply taking pot-shots at fellow comedians could easily come across as ungracious or arrogant, Hodder has smartly assumed the low-status persona of a nervous, awkward loser, unable to follow the broad instructions. He pulls this off well, making for a sympathetic character, and there are a few, if not enough, decent jokes amid all the deconstruction. But his take on the lazy tropes of comedy isn’t nearly insightful or original enough, with the points he makes almost taken as given. Certainly most comedy reviewers would be expected go deeper their analysis, yet a comedian with supposed insider knowledge can’t. The show is wrapped up with a rather trite cheesy conclusion that by-the-book is no way to do comedy, and it has to come from within – as if we couldn’t have figured that out for ourselves. Only problem is, this offering (still an work-in-progress for Edinburgh, although not billed as such) doesn’t seem to have come from within, and rather seems like a repeat of all-too common opinions, even if expressed with a few flourishes of decent writing. |
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| Date of live review: Monday 6th Feb, '12 | |
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Review by Steve Bennett |
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Monday 6th Feb, '12- Leicester The Looking Glass | |
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