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The Comedy Bible

by Judy Carter

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"I took Judy Carter’s stand-up comedy class when I finally decided to get into stand-up comedy. And this book is more for people who want to do stand-up comedy or maybe someone who is going to be speaking in front of an audience and wants to have some jokes for a business presentation. The main thing I learned was that the secret of stand-up is simple: you need to get on stage as much as possible and write as much as possible. Another thing I learned from this book and her class was that every comedian has a point of view. She says every comedian is either saying, ‘It is hard to…’ or they are saying, ‘I love being…’ and you need to fill in the blanks. And breaking it down like that really helps you to write because you have some kind of structure to follow. So if you want some guidance for this kind of thing it’s not a bad place to start. Well, the Comedy Store’s owner, Mitzi Shore, actually had put me and a couple of other of the Middle Eastern comedians together, and she called us ‘The Arabian Knights’, and then in 2005 me and a couple of the guys [Ahmed Ahmed and Aron Kader] changed our name to ‘The Axis of Evil Comedy Tour’ and started touring. “The main thing I learned was that the secret of stand-up is simple: you need to get on stage as much as possible and write as much as possible.” At the time it was during the Iraq war and we figured that the people that got it were going to love it and those that didn’t would stay away. It was received very well and it really was a big step for all of us in our careers. It premiered on Comedy Central and then people started putting clips on You Tube and that is when I started getting recognised as Maz Jobrani the comedian. We took that tour to the Middle East in 2007 and it was amazing. We did five countries with it, 27 shows in 30 days and the rooms were packed. In Jordan the king came to the show. All the audiences understood and got the jokes because, first of all, those attending spoke English very well and secondly, with the internet, they got the references. The world is much smaller nowadays, so if something happened in Los Angeles you could talk about it in Cairo and they would have heard about it. What was interesting to me was if someone had asked when our Comedy Central Special came out, ‘Where do you think you will be performing in a year from now,’ I would say somewhere like Australia, Canada or England – English-speaking countries. I never would have dreamed that we would have been touring the Middle East. I had no idea we would be in places like Kuwait and Dubai, and on top of that we were received so well. It really ignited a whole new movement of comics from that region, which is something I was really pleased about but not something I intended. It just fell into place, which was cool."
Comedy · fivebooks.com