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Hi-Tech Comedy: Greg Aidala

Today I’m interviewing Greg Aidala.

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Greg is a National comedian who has performed from New York City to Los Angeles with comedians such as Colin Quinn, Nick DiPaolo, Kathleen Madigan and Charlie Murphy. In 2005, Greg formed his own entertainment company, Radial Gage Entertainment. Aside from performing around the country, he teaches stand-up comedy workshops in his hometown of Albany, New York. Greg is a regular at the New York Comedy Club in New York City and has been featured in commercials and short films. Learn more about him by visiting his website.

1. How are you using the internet / social media to promote your career?

Aside from having my own website, I use Facebook, MySpace and LinkedIn. Over the past 8 years of performing, I have also amassed quite a large e-mail list. At shows, if people are interested, I ask for their e-mail address to be placed on my mass e-mail list.

2. Have you noticed the payoff yet?

Absolutely. Aside from my e-mail list and website, the other networks have given me great exposure. Every time I post a show on the social networks, people come out to the show(s). They have proved very valuable to my career.

3. What do you think about posting videos of your sets online?

I do post sets online, but not the entire set(s). You don’t want to give too much of your act away – I find its good to pique the interest of the comedy fan, in order to have them come out to a live performance.

4. How do you think digital tools will change comedy?

I feel they have helped legitimate comedians spread the good word of the comedy community. I have seen a great growth of awareness even within the past 8 years of my career. Although I must say, that sometimes there are people out there that claim to be comedians and they are far from it. With the new technology, almost everyone can post a “funny” clip and consider themselves a “comedian”.  This dilutes the comedy community – but the cream rises to the top. I’m not a hater, I’m a supporter of anyone who is willing to attempt stand-up comedy…anyone who is willing to work hard and realize that it is indeed a business too.

5. How much information do you tend to share on the social networks?

Honestly, I use the public network’s for comedy business only. I only post when / where my next performance is. As much as I dig the world of the Internet, I feel one must be careful how much information is divulged. There is some crazy folk out there!

6. What’s the weirdest stuff / “perks” that you’ve experienced due to your combination of technology and the internet.

Well, I’m not into drugs (not against them either) and I’ve never had anyone one send me naked pictures of themselves (although I’m not opposed to that…wink, wink to any women reading this). But I have been threatened via an e-mail. I was performing at a show and there was this “gentleman” at a table with his friends, and they kept talking during everyone’s set. I asked the manager if they would please quiet him down prior to me taking the stage. Now usually, a manager will do that, which this one did – but manager’s don’t usually point out the comedian who asked this person to be quiet. My set went well – and after the gig, I was checking my e-mails and received a death threat from this patron. He had visited my website and left the message there with a phony e-mail address. For the next three weeks of my shows, I seriously scouted the audience for this wacko thinking he may show up in any city in which I was performing. I learned later on that the guy was banned from the club because he was trying to sell cocaine to other members of the audience that night! I’m glad this douche bag does cocaine, because I think he forgot about me – I haven’t received a threatening e-mail since.

Hi-Tech Comedy: Josh Spear

Today I’m interviewing Josh Spear.

Josh Spear

Josh has been on Last Comic Standing, Bravo and has had sketches on the Conan O’Brien and Chris Rock shows.

1. How are you using the internet / social media to promote your career?

I have used or do use MySpace and FaceBook to promote live shows. I use you tube as a place for industry people to be able to refer to my act or other video projects I’ve done

2. Have you noticed the payoff yet?

I have seen payoffs but like anything you need to concentrate and maintain a high visibility on these sites and you find the cliental isn’t always up to par.

3. What do you think about posting videos of your sets online?

Sets online work for me because I can perform more then one set and I don’t loose all my work in one video, but I don’t promo them. I let them be found. If for no reason one became viral I’d love that, yet I will not just keep posting it over and over on different networking sites trying to drive up views and pretend I have fans, as do most internet comics as opposed to actual performing pro comics.

4. How do you think digital tools will change comedy?

Digital tools will not change comedy, they will change the output quantities therefore watering down comedy and in very rare cases bring one lucky performer to the public eye who wouldn’t have a had a chance any other way.

5. How much information do you tend to share on the social networks?

I used to share every moment in 2007, but at that time I traveled the USA for 40 days visiting MySpace friends in person and staying with them.

We would always joke as comics that Tom Anderson and MySpace friends weren’t real so I put it to the test and we started putting out bulletins and video commercials that we were going to hang with any and every MySpace friend we had.

I learned that in very rural areas people are very lonely, that you can make SOME lasting real life friendships and to be careful who you ride in a car with for 40 days & nights.

6. What are the weirdest “perks” that you’ve experienced due to your combination of technology and the internet.

I’ve received food, shelter, coffee, woman (sex), drugs (weed only) and friendship.

Hi-Tech Comedy: Jonesy

Today I’m interviewing Chris “Jonesy” Jones.  Jonesy is a New York City based actor/comedian/writer/musician with a mild acquaintance with technology. His viral videos have received hundreds of thousands of views. He runs a Friday night comedy show in the East Village and sings in a Red Hot Chili Pepper cover band. You can find out more about him at www.funnyjones.com

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1. How are you using the internet / social media to promote your career?

I have my own site www.funnyjones.com, Myspace, Facebook, Twitter, and a whole potpourri of video hosting sites. I also use a web-based mass email subscription service called Fanbridge.com  that allows me to send thousands of emails at once.

2. Have you noticed the payoff yet?

I depends on what your definition of payoff is. Has my website or myspace garnered a following a la Dane Cook? Definitely not. Have I made money off my web presence? Not much. My site (s) act as a sort of business card for me in that one can go there, see what I do, and contact me if they need to. In that sense it has been helpful and, I feel, completely necessary for every performer/artist. I find that most of the people that have been to my site (s) have enjoyed my videos – not of standup – but my comedic sketch videos.  I have used the social networks Myspace and Facebook to get people out to my Friday night comedy show at Eastville Comedy Club and that has paid off a little, not quite as effective as I’d hoped it owuld be.

3. What do you think about posting videos of your sets online?

I don’t really think it’s a good idea to post ENTIRE sets per se, but there should be some sample of what it is you do if you’re trying to build a following or obtain work as a comedian.  Lately I have posted a couple short videos of jokes I’ve told on stage, called “Under a Minute Standup”, and I’ve found their much better recieved because the viewers are only commited to under a minute – a perfect length in my opinion for viewing standup online.  I’ve even Twittered Tiny Url’s – links to these videos, and posted them on Facebook.

Ben, you and I have talked about this issue in the past and I’ve expressed that I believe that it isn’t that smart to post videos of your standup if you aren’t a somewhat polished comic. I’ve booked some first timers on my show and I’ve seen them immediately put up an entire 8 minute video of themselves performing an under-developed act.  I mean this is fine if it’s not going to be a CAREER for you, some guys just do it for fun only and post a video of it in an un-serious way so Mom can watch it. But if this is a career choice then I think you need to think about not releasing the product until it’s in some sort of professionally acceptable shape, and even then I recommend small chunks of no more than two minutes. If it’s a Live at Gotham or a Conan set then obviously put the whole thing up.

4. How do you think digital tools will change comedy?

Digital tools and comedy are very vague terms. One could talk about this all day. I will just suggest two things that I canl see in the world of STANDUP. Perhaps we may see a little streaming of live shows via web video. I also think we will see more usage of video tools WITHIN the standup act as the younger generations of standup spectators become bored with a talking head on stage. This could be in the form of video and audio or even web participation or webcam participation from satellite viewers or even other performers. I’m just throwing ideas against the wall here of course. At that point I don’t even know if we would even call it STANDUP per se, so maybe I can see digital assistance transforming standup into some technological hybrid performance.

5. How much information do you tend to share on the social networks?

Because of the private (relatively speaking) aspects of Facebook I will share more information than I have on any prior social network.  I will occassionally utilize Twitter and Facebook to anounce a show. (I also use FB’s “Event Invitations”) but I normally won’t post what I feel are mundane anouncements about my daily comings and goings unless I think they will get a laugh.  “Went to pick up the kids” I think is a completely dull mis-use of Twitter and/or Facebook status updates. “Just played double-dutch with a crack-head in Harlem”, on the other hand… pretty damn funny. People would enjoy reading that, I feel.

6. Have you ever gotten laid by a fan from your facebook?

Once in Boston (I’m originally from Mass.) I did a show at a very popular downtown venue. The show wasn’t over more than a half hour when a text message from a girl who had been in attendance at the show – a sailor actually (a female Navy Officer) – she’d gone to my site and retreived my cell number ( I no longer make my # available on my site) and texted me asking me where I was and if she could come and meet me for a drink. She did. I later asked her to take me onto her ship but she told me civilians weren’t allowed so I settlled for making out in the doorway of some closed fish market.

Hi-Tech Comedy: Aaron Haber

This week I’m honored to interview Aaron Haber. 

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Aaron was trained in improv comedy by the legendary Del Close and studied, performed and taught improv in Chicago for a while before missing his hometown NYC. Once back in NYC, he took a break from improv and started performing Stand-Up Comedy.  Aaron has since appeared on Comedy Central’s The Watch List as well as taped sets for Comedynet and National Lampoon.  In addition to performing stand up comedy, Aaron also books stand-up comedy shows 7 nights a week at The Broadway Comedy Club under the World banner as well as Improv and sketch comedy shows and classes under The City banner.  When not performing by his lonesome, you can see him performing with his lovely wife Shannon Sutherland in their Haber & Sutherland comedy team. 

1. How are you using the internet / social media to promote your career?

Well, I have a twitter account you can follow me on, a facebook page where you can be my friend and learn about where I’m performing and a myspace page where you can go if you’re an unsigned band or a whore from New Jersey in a bikini. I also promote all my NYC comedy shows at The World (where Ben also currently performs) as well as the improv classes I teach at First City Comedy.  I’m also not afraid to put my personal email out on the internet for people to get in touch with me.  

2. Have you noticed the payoff yet?

I have literally. People from all over the world find my www.worldnyc.com website when they’re traveling into NYC and looking for a comedy show and they buy tickets online. Many people find out about my improv classes through our website and sign up online as well. That and I’ve been able to start an online dating service hooking up unsigned bands with bikini whores from New Jersey. You can check it out at www.ihookupunsignedbankswithbikiniwhoresfromjersey.com/fakewebsite 

3. What do you think about posting videos of your show online?

I actually don’t think it’s a brilliant move for a comedian. Unless you are 100% sure that it’s a video you want to represent you throughout the entire universe, forever, I would hold off. It’s way too easy for a booker, club owner or TV casting person to look you up and see what you’ve got online. Unless you’re killing with A material and the sound and video are perfect, I say leave it off the internet. Which reminds me I have a couple of videos to take down. 

4. How do you think digital tools will change comedy?

One day people will be able to watch live comedy shows streamed to them through the internet at home…on the moon!

5How much information do you tend to share on the social networks? 

I’ll share various tidbits on my twitter and facebook, myspace I’ve given up on. As to your “what agent slighted you” question, I’ve seen comedians burn many bridges online by “flaming” other comics and bookers/club owners etc. It is the height of unprofessionalism, not to mention stupidity, to talk smack about people who might GIVE YOU WORK in the future.  

6. What’s the weirdest thing that you’ve experienced due to your combination of technology and the internet?

Once I plugged a toaster into an Ethernet connected USB port and was able to burn an entire issue of The New York Times into my Thomas’ English Muffin. “All the news that’s fit to print” in my mouth, yo!

Hi-Tech Comedy: Slava Yaryshkin

This week I’m honored to interview comedian Slava Yaryshkin who has created the most popular listing of open mics in the comedy world. Slava is also a funny comedian and interviews lots of comics on his site.

1. How are you using the internet / social media to promote your career?

slavaWell, for starters I have my own website, badslava.com, which I am turning into the most reliable and curent list of comedy open mics in the nation.  I must have spent at least one hundred hours on it by now, but I can’t help myself.  As far as my career, I believe the first step in comedy is to become famous, which is partially why I built my website.  Everything else should work out as a result.  Maybe.

I am a big fan of facebook, mostly because I am always interviewing comedians and it is the best way to find and contact them.  I check it about every other day.  I am planning to cancel my myspace account sometime soon.  The war is over, facebook won.  As far as twitter, I’ve tried it and quit it a long time ago, and I can’t wait until the media moves on to “the next big thing” and stops talking about it incessantly.  I really, really, really hate twitter.  To me, it symbolizes everything wrong with our self-absorbed, celebrity-obsessed culture.

2. Have you noticed the payoff yet?

In my three years of comedy, I’ve only done two paid shows, so I haven’t noticed the “pay” in payoff yet.  But I have met so many interesting people and made so many friends, that I consider myself a very rich man.  Everything I have accomplished I owe to my friends and I am sure this will be the case with everything I have yet to achieve. 

3. What do you think about posting videos of your show online?

I think it only makes sense to post videos online if you can do so regularly.  I have yet to figure out a way to produce quality comedy on a regular basis.  Plus for the last three years I have spent too much time on material and not enough on stage presence.  That’s my next area of concentration. 

4. How do you think digital tools will change comedy?

I don’t think I can talk about digital tools and comedy without mentioning Dane Cook. I feel there is a huge disconnect between what comedians think digital tools will do for them and what actually happens in real life.  I signed up for MySpace because I thought it would magically make me as popular as Dane Cook.  Nothing like that actually happened.  MySpace didn’t make Dane Cook popular.  What made him popular was staying after every show, shaking every hand, signing every autograph, being in every photo and then going online afterwards and talking to every fan that instant messaged him.  You have to make every fan feel special and appreciated.  MySpace is just another tool that helps you do that.  I think many comedians don’t realize how valuable the fans are and how little the tools matter.  I think in the future comedians will make very little money from CDs/DVDs and all the income will come from live shows. The successful comedians will be the ones with the biggest tribes, and the best example of this is Dane Cook.       

5. How much information do you tend to share on the social networks? 

I share very little on facebook, because right now my life isn’t all that interesting.  That should change very soon as I have a couple of projects under wraps, but first I have to finish grad school.  Also I’m a big believer in sharing only that which may benefit the other person, that’s why you will never hear what I had for breakfast this morning (apple, pear, orange, grapefruit.)  Part of the reason I interview other comedians on my blog is because I am more interested in others than I am in myself.

6. Have you ever gotten laid by a fan from your facebook ? What’s your weirdest online experience involving your comedy career?

Well, building a list of open mics doesn’t exactly drive women wild with desire.  My weirdest experience yet was when I wrote an abortion shower joke on my blog.  Some guy out there who started a band called “abortion shower” sometime ago found my blog, accused me of stealing his idea and told me he wished I died.   So I’m really looking forward to all the other feedback that is waiting for me in the future.

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