

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff


Well he sure was fucking funny to me and my small choir of apostates.He preached a cultural black mass to a small choir of apostates.


We are extremely proud to announce that AMERICAN The Bill Hicks Story has been invited to hold its North American premiere at SXSW!
Bill has a very strong cult following in the US, but nowhere more so than Austin, and as British filmmakers, we are very excited to be taking the story of one of America’s most important cultural icons back to his homeland.
The SXSW festival is one of America’s leading festivals, and runs from the 12th – 20th March. We are pleased to be mentioned in their opening paragraph, alongside Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s Micmacs, Michel Gondry’s The Thorn in the Heart, and Steven Soderbergh’s And Everything Is Going Fine.
http://www.sxsw.com/node/4208
Well, I'm neither and he didn't/doesn't make me laugh. That's just how it is.The only people I've ever shown his routines to who didn't laugh were either hard core Christians who can't laugh at themselves or folks who despise "foul language".
I think he was a bit more of a complicated customer than that. I have a book of his routines and writings, whose name is a quote by him: Love all the people.brainpanhandler wrote:I think he'd be happier if you went and pissed on his grave, rather than sing his posthumous praises, as though he was some sort of latter day anti-saint.
Hi BPH.brainpanhandler wrote:Well, I'm neither and he didn't/doesn't make me laugh. That's just how it is.The only people I've ever shown his routines to who didn't laugh were either hard core Christians who can't laugh at themselves or folks who despise "foul language".
I just can't believe the guy would've wanted people placing tacky plastic tulips on his grave.
elfismiles wrote:
Just outta curiosity, what standup comedians do you like?

"Wocka Wocka Wocka?"IanEye wrote:elfismiles wrote:
Just outta curiosity, what standup comedians do you like?


It seriously wrenches my guts to hear his act. I barely knew of him outside of inclusion in stand-up mix shows on Comedy Central, and he makes me wish I had lived in Austin during his prime. Watching some of his old specials recently has made me laugh pretty hard in a few places, but not really the places it counts.brainpanhandler wrote:Hicks was not funny. He didn't make me laugh. He made me cringe. He made me recoil in horror. He made me nod my head knowingly. But he didn't make me laugh. He wasn't funny.
True or not, who now fills this void? Is there an apt heir to the black throne of the dark and bright truths of the world?brainpanhandler wrote: And he was hardly a threat to any entrenched power. He preached a cultural black mass to a small choir of apostates.
Alex jones is using NLP with the pauses he uses.
His first "yelling" was setting the stage, knocking people out of their comfort zone. That is great a NLP job! He must have been trained in this man...
'Here's the deal, ladies and gentlemen. I editorialize for forty minutes- the last ten minutes we pull our chutes and float down to Dick Joke Island together. 'Kay?psynapz wrote: How the hell did Hicks make it as a nightclub act talking about spiritual unity, taboo civil rights and pop-culture conspiracy? Was it the other stuff, the relative fluff material, that gave him the audience equity to spend on social messages? Is that how Carlin worked?
Goddamn, that's brilliant.IanEye wrote:'Here's the deal, ladies and gentlemen. I editorialize for forty minutes- the last ten minutes we pull our chutes and float down to Dick Joke Island together. 'Kay?
And we will rest our weary heads against the big, thick veined trunks of dick jokes while we sit in our big, cushiony bean bag scrotum chairs and giggle away the dawn like any good American comedy club audience.' - Bill Hicks
To be fair it's difficult to make me laugh and by laugh I mean spontaneous, irrisistible endorphin rush guffaw. Hicks could make me grin in spots.smiles wrote:Just outta curiosity, what standup comedians do you like?
Making people laugh is a high unlike any other. I'm addicted to it. If I wasn't able to occasionally make my friends and loved ones laugh they would not want to have anything to do with me as the rest of the time I tend to make them depressed.psynapz wrote:Do any of you even harp on your friends and loved ones anymore? I've nearly given up. It almost physically hurts to bother trying. I can hardly imagine investing energy into developing, crowd-testing and promoting a comedy routine around it.