I recently heard an entertaining and informative interview with Demetri Martin on NPR the other day and I thought I'd do a quick write-up on him. Martin recently premiered an amusing comedy special on Comedy Central called "Person." He attended Yale and went to NYU law school (one of the country's best) for two years before dropping out and devoting his life to comedy. It takes balls to give up a sure thing for a shot at your dreams, and I salute Martin for trying. His success has yielded him a gig on the Daily Show and apparently there are talks for him to get his own series soon.
I wasn't always a fan of Martin; his style was a bit too aloof, a bit too smug for my tastes, and I questioned his use of musical instruments to his act. Does it really add that much? I, for one, am a bit of a purist when it comes to these things. If I'm going to see a comedy show, I expect one guy to talk for 90 minutes without the aid of props, damn it! But over time, Martin has found himself in my good graces; I now consider myself a mild fan.
Martin has a rapid-fire style of comedy that is very similar to a beloved, recently-deceased comedian called Mitch Hedberg. It's an observational humor, a blink-and-you'll-miss it type of humor that makes light of our every day conceptions and experiences. There's no other way to describe it other than to show you, so here's a clip:
Click here for the clip
What I like about Hedberg is that there's no pretension to his work. By all accounts, it's just a guy sharing about some hilarious things he's noticed during the course of his life. Here's another clip:
Click here for the clip
Martin has a similar style, but with an air of elitism that comes from a privileged background (and not one that was a result of a massive intake of drugs). Martin also infuses his character with a social awkwardness that belies his mastery of comedy and the crowds that he performs for. Check out this clip from his recent comedy special:
Click here for the clip
Am I just imagining things, or are their styles strikingly similar? Here's one more clip:
Click here for the clip
None of this is to complain. We could all used a bit more Mitch Hedberg in our lives and I feel like Demetri Martin provides it for us, in a slightly tweaked and personalized form. But the striking similarities suggest some degree of inspiration going on behind the scenes, and is definitely a fascinating process.
Saturday, October 20, 2007
Demetri Martin: Spiritual Successor to Mitch Hedberg
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8 comments:
none of the videos work on that...
mitch hedberg is a thousand times funnier than demetri martin will ever be (dare i say infinitely funnier) they are not in the same league, man...hedberg's style and delivery is punchy and hysterical, martin's is mediocre and self-conscious. it's very sad mitch hedberg is no longer here to keep us laughing...
I agree that Demetri is similar in that he has pithy one-liners that observes life in its absurdity, but I would say the similarity ends there. There's an aliveness to Demetri's work that Mitch did not have. A sweetness and an intelligence which is entirely his. If you just like silliness, I get why one would prefer Mitch. But Demetri is silly+thoughtful... I prefer that. he's more Wes Anderson, and Mitch is more Farrelly brothers...
the only thing similar between the two is that martin stole mitch's escalator joke.
I've also noticed a bit of sampling from Steven Wright's material. I've met Mitch and he was very unpretentious. Demetri does stand out from a lot of comedians out there, but I still feel, at least at this point in his career, that he is is not to the level of either Wright or Hedberg. Plus, he has a real Emo Philips vibe to him.
I'm definately a hardcore Mitch Hedberg fan. That man was a genius of comedy, beyond belief amazing!
Demetri Martin is a different comedian, but certainly not a bad one. I agree with this line that one person on here wrote: "Demetri is similar in that he has pithy one-liners that observes life in its absurdity". They're both out there to entertain us. Mitch lives on through memories, cds, recordings and shows. Martin is rising up to the challenge of Hedberg's shadow, and doing just fine.
It's all just a big blatant rip-off of Steven Wright meets Mitch Hedberg!! PERIOD! He should really work on originality.
A well-observed and well-put musing on the similarities... AND the differences, which many of us who follow standup have noticed. I have some trouble with the idea (which some commenters here seem to espouse) that any one artist stands as a totally unique island. Anyone who honestly practices their art will acknowledge its a melding of influence from the greats who have gone before with one's own unique experience and style. In that sense I think DM does us a little favour in that his work brings back memories of Mitch, but with his own personal (Yale, etc) spin. Just think what Mitch might say today about people dissing Martin's work in his "defense"... I bet it'd be a shitload funnier and kinder than some of the comments here. :)
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