Quotes on the topic: Comedy


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When you do comedy, you get impervious to good and bad reviews.


Well, a lot of politics is communicating with people, and obviously comedy has something to do with that. I've been a producer and led people. Also, being a comedian, you're under pressure.


Well, I think that there's a value to comedy in and of itself.


Comedy to the Senate? Well, there certainly hasn't been a satirist or a political satirist who's done that. So, that really was uncharted territory during the campaign. But I think it's a good thing. Some people thought that it was an odd career arc, but to me it made absolute sense.


People want their actors to do comedy, too. They don't want any comedians next to the actor. They want one solo hero and want to see everything in him.


New York State is giant and has some of the most beautiful landscape on the Eastern seaboard. There is so much history in New York State, from the Erie Canal to the Catskills, the birth of American stand-up comedy.


My comedy is different every time I do it. I don't know what the hell I'm doing.


A lot of critics object to what I do, but I got into comedy to make people laugh, and I've always worked hard.


For my money, I don't think there's been a better comedy than 'Kung Fu Hustle' in a lot of years. That movie just knocked me over.


Anyone in the comedy world knows that Horatio Sanz and Chris Parnell are two of the funniest guys around.


I think comedy has evolved like every art form, and people probably do less standing around and telling jokes, and more things that have to do with reality.


First and foremost when you're doing comedy, you gotta be relevant and applicable to the times that you're living in. When you try and just do comedy about who is dating who and lifestyle jokes, it gets tiring after a while. It's hard to be funny in that realm.


I'll tell you one thing... no doubt about it, my favorite kind of comedy is talking head comedy. I mean, if it were up to me, I'd do a whole entire movie that was just around a dinner table.


The stuff that's going on is just so over-the-top, with the banking crisis and destroying the Gulf of Mexico, and the outrage hasn't quite caught up with the people yet. But when it does, I think you're going to see really virulent anti-authoritarian kind of comedy coming out.


We, Will Ferrell and I, were approached by Sequoia, which is a big financing firm up in Palo Alto; they do a lot of Internet stuff, and they came to us and said they had an idea for a comedy site, and Will and I were sorta like, 'Yeah, we don't know. It's the Internet, we've seen it come and go.'


First off, no one award-wise ever rewards comedy, which is... whatever. I don't care about that.


I was a huge fan of comedy in high school.


It's one thing to break stuff and damage people's possessions, but when you start aiming at the ideology of America, that's dangerous comedy.


As far as what makes a viral video, then it's gotta be something that you've either never seen before, a fresh piece of comedy, or something that relates to something topical.


I am actually talking about possibly adapting 'The Boys,' by Garth Ennis, which would not be a comedy, but an action movie with comedy elements to it.