
Comedy 4 Life
Walt Frasier has 30+ years in the performing arts business, 22 years in comedy and is 20 years day job free thanks to international live perofrmance credits in comedyz theatre and music, TV, commercials and also producing, direction, corporate team building, event entertainment and more. This podcast is a exploration into what it takes to become a working artist, but perhaps more importantly, how to us the skills learned in comedy and theater to better all lives. These skills that make us better live performers transfer to the board room and the bed room.
Comedy 4 Life
Find The Funny Part 2 Stand Up Comedy Writing 101
Comedy 4 Life - Episode 5: Find the Funny Part 2 - Shaping Your Material
CLICK HERE for free tickets to shows, trial classes, and more information about books, workshops, corporate team building, k12 outreach & more! https://comedy4life.us
Hosted by: Walt Frasier
Episode Summary:
Welcome back to Comedy 4 Life! In Episode 5, Walt Frasier continues the "Find the Funny" series, moving beyond just spotting ideas to actively shaping and punching up your comedic routines. If Episode 4 (or previous episodes) helped you find the raw material, this episode gives you the tools to refine it, make it funnier, and ensure the laughs come faster and harder. Learn techniques to cut the fat, heighten the reality, and make your stories truly memorable on stage.
In this episode, you'll learn how to:
- Use Economy of Words: Cut unnecessary setup and exposition. Learn why getting to the funny faster is crucial and how to identify words or phrases to eliminate.
- Punch Up Setups: Don't wait for the end of the story for laughs! Add side comments, quick jokes, analogies, or observations along the way to keep the audience engaged during the setup.
- Leverage the Magic Three & Patterns: Recognize and use the power of threes. Combine common experiences (e.g., three bad dates, three annoying coworkers, three vacation mishaps) to create relatable and structured bits.
- Combine Stories & Characters: Condense multiple real-life experiences or people into one composite character or event for maximum comedic impact (e.g., merging traits of several teachers into one "crazy" teacher, combining multiple travel woes into one disastrous trip).
- Show, Don't Tell: Move beyond simply narrating. Become the characters, reenact the moments kinetically, use voices and physicality to make the scene vivid and engaging instead of just talking about it.
- Exaggerate to the Nth Degree: Take the core truth of your story and blow it out of proportion. Explore the "what's the worst/funniest/most absurd thing that could happen?" angle, but know when to pull back slightly.
- Change History / Solve the Problem: Use the power of "what if?" What do you wish you had said or done in that moment? Turn regrets or fantasies into hilarious alternative scenarios.
Key Takeaway: Refining a comedy routine involves strategic cutting, creative embellishment, and dynamic performance choices. Apply these techniques to take your raw stories from amusing anecdotes to solid stand-up material.
Connect & Engage:
- Which shaping technique are you trying first?
- Subscribe to Comedy 4 Life on your favorite podcast platform.
- Help others find the show by leaving a rating and review!
Thanks for listening!