How NOT to do Open Mic Stand-Up Comedy in 14 Tips

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  • Опубліковано 25 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 108

  • @stephenbillington16
    @stephenbillington16 2 роки тому +14

    Cracking video - deffo guilty of a few of these myself when I had a go at it. Shock humour is an easy go to because you're after a reaction, but it kinda isn't welcome

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  2 роки тому +5

      I actually wrote this video after seeing you perform.............
      Jk, but yeah shock humour doesn't get you far. It may get you one big laugh, but you have just shot yourself in the foot as there is nowhere to go after that, unless you're fantastically skilled, like a Frankie Boyle.

  • @user-yl2ms9bu1c
    @user-yl2ms9bu1c 7 місяців тому +26

    1. Don’t have an ego (be wiling to make mistakes and learn from them)
    2. Don’t get drunk
    3. Don’t be edgy
    4. Don’t expect to be perfect
    5. Don’t forget to learn
    6. Don’t insult the audience
    7. Don’t do crowd work
    8. Structure your set
    9. Don’t rush yourself (maintain comedic timing, delivery)
    10. Don’t go over time limit
    11. Get good at 5 minutes before 10 minutes (focus small)
    12. Remember the comedic point
    13. Learn how to use the microphone (not too far, not too close to mouth)
    14. Don’t leave the gig early (stay for other comedians)

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  7 місяців тому +4

      Thanks for the summary, that is helpful for others :D

  • @ShutUpCatProductions
    @ShutUpCatProductions 2 місяці тому +8

    11 years here’s my tips. Be yourself. Talk to the crowd. Point out the obvious. Have a beginning middle and end to your set. In between work with the crowd to the next part of your time. Open mic night is a pissing contest. Performing for comedians is tough cuz they don’t usually work with people they like to hog the glory and they’ll make you know it. No gross out humor. Shows your inexperience.embrace silence and use it if you can. Point out how unfunny something is and people will tend to agree with you and in return that’s funny. Every gig/open mic is a different experience. No two mics are the same. There’s good times and bad. Even for the professionals. So no one is above a bad performance. Just take the slap on the wrist and try again. Don’t be afraid to fail. You’re gonna fail more than you’ll succeed at first so you might as well get used to it. Lastly practice. Hope all this helps.

    • @JohnSchaeferUNIVERSE
      @JohnSchaeferUNIVERSE 2 дні тому

      🙏 ❤thank you!!! Did my first stand up open mic last night!!!! Really love it but need to learn and dive in!!!!❤

  • @alanhazlie
    @alanhazlie 2 роки тому +21

    As you say, unless there’s a good reason, I can never understand new comics leaving open mic nights early. If you’re learning to do something, then watching other people do it is one of the best ways.

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  2 роки тому +3

      Absolutley, it really used to annoy me. It isn't very supportive and it shows a selfishness and only thinking that what you do is the only important thing. This happens mostly with either comedic genuises or just totally wild comedians.

    • @get8bit
      @get8bit 7 місяців тому +3

      People that leave early also miss out on one of the best aspects of comedy; conversations with other comedians. I hate talking to most people, but most comedians are a LOT of fun to talk to. They understand conversations should be entertaining.

    • @jeremykothe2847
      @jeremykothe2847 3 місяці тому

      @@get8bit also if *anyone* is going to have good advice for you, it's them. They just watched your gig. They're doing the same thing. And, as you say, it's not like it's staying late to talk to your bank manager.

  • @lexi5323
    @lexi5323 2 роки тому +14

    You should do one on networking! Plus what not to do when approaching promoters for gig opportunities, etc
    Great stuff, Matt. Hope you’re well x

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  2 роки тому +2

      Weirdly enough, my next video is ALL about how to talk to promotors and what not to do when you apply for a gig! Thanks Lexi, much appreciated!

  • @anthonywilliams-comedy1326
    @anthonywilliams-comedy1326 2 роки тому +16

    hey Matt. Some great tips here. As a comedian and Learning professional, framing tips as things you SHOULD do are easier for the brain to process. "Don't forget to structure your set" is cognitively more complex than "structure your set". Also the brain has to determine what not to do then figure out what to do instead which is harder. Appreciate this is really geeky but I hope it helps :-)

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  2 роки тому +6

      Hey Anthony, thank you so much for this. It's not really geeky at all, it's really helpful and kindly framed advice. I'm still learning and growing my youtube, so comments like this are great to help me reflect on how to improve. I'll bear this in mind. Thanks buddy!

  • @ms.susandawson14
    @ms.susandawson14 4 місяці тому +7

    I needed this video before last Thursday. I walked off stage crying 😂 I had nerve’s every and thought “I had it in the bag!‼️ I had a tall coke and Jack strong😂 smoked half a blunt O Lord ! Why! I am definitely going to follow all these tips. Maybe all the reactions to Family like being shocked about me doing it 😂 My Dads reaction was priceless. I went out thinking, I owned the crowd the first time. Very Unprepared thinking, I could wing it! I appreciate these tips so much 🌹

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  4 місяці тому +3

      Im so sorry to hear, it can be so brutal! Hope you feel better now. The best tonic is trying again next time. Be kind to yourself and try to use these tips. If I can do anything to help please let me know!

    • @ms.susandawson14
      @ms.susandawson14 4 місяці тому +1

      @@matthosscomedy well Thank You so much 🌹 I really appreciate you ❤️

  • @MM-nq5tr
    @MM-nq5tr 2 роки тому +4

    Thank you, this is really useful for me as a newbie. Very generous of you to share.

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  2 роки тому +2

      My pleasure, thank you for watching. I'll be doing a lot more comedy tips on here, so keep an eye out for my tips and hints!

  • @JACOBHIMSELF
    @JACOBHIMSELF 17 годин тому

    I go to every mic with the idea that I’m practicing for the next one

  • @peterfox7404
    @peterfox7404 2 роки тому +5

    An enjoyable listen, duck.

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  2 роки тому +1

      This means the world to me, thank you Peter

  • @maclawa
    @maclawa 8 місяців тому +1

    Thanks for the great info fella! I'm learning right now about all of these things!

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  8 місяців тому

      Thank you so much, really happy to read that. If I can help support you with anything else, please let me know :D

  • @austinb7772
    @austinb7772 5 місяців тому +1

    Thanks so much. Great stuff!

  • @KevOBrienComedy
    @KevOBrienComedy 2 роки тому +4

    Good advice mate.

  • @cat_city2009
    @cat_city2009 2 місяці тому +1

    How about being moderately drunk? Like not wasted, but solidly buzzed?

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  2 місяці тому

      These are just my tips and you are welcome to do what you want from them, so you are free to do what works best for you. Personally, I would be sober as it helps me remember my script more and you can deal with situation a lot better.

  • @LetsTalkComedy
    @LetsTalkComedy 10 місяців тому +1

    Great video! Nice work.

  • @jorvil.r
    @jorvil.r 6 місяців тому +1

    Great tips mate!!❤

  • @1kirkallen
    @1kirkallen 9 місяців тому +1

    Excellent

  • @sethmathieus4776
    @sethmathieus4776 2 місяці тому +1

    6:00 so you can be edgy, but mix actual humor in with it. A laugh is a laugh, just dont over do it. Dont get attached to your style if it doesn't get laughs

  • @tris7441
    @tris7441 2 роки тому

    Thanks for sharing this, definitely great advice here.

  • @vector4534
    @vector4534 5 місяців тому +1

    There’s some great wisdom here, but you should redo this with limited description and put the tip on screen so I know which ones were on if I skip around

    • @lamackismoi388
      @lamackismoi388 5 місяців тому +1

      that's what the chapter headers are on it for :) - I don't know if it doesn't show them on a phone but I'm watching from a laptop... HTH!

  • @get8bit
    @get8bit 7 місяців тому +4

    Great tips, but I disagree with "Don't be edgy". My first open mic at a real comedy venue, I got ZERO laughs for my clean jokes. I came back in the next week with all new jokes focused on politics, race, and sexuality. Every single joke killed. I think it just depends on the room.

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  7 місяців тому +1

      Thanks! I hear you, it is weirdly my most contentious point on this video, so I totally see where you are coming from. I suppose what I mean is: Ive seen tonnes of acts do edgy material and die an absymal death. If you can write edgy material and it works for you, good for you! I just have seen that it typically (particularlty in the UK) it doesn't land very well unless you are particularly honed in your craft. Hope this bit of nuance helps, but also great to hear you are doing well!

    • @OKDogtownPodcast
      @OKDogtownPodcast Місяць тому

      (Cole) I mostly do shock comedy and I've found those are the most memorable things from my set. I go up there with energy and no filter and the trick about making it last is you have several tricks up your sleeve amd apply them in different rooms

  • @JACOBHIMSELF
    @JACOBHIMSELF 16 годин тому

    I hate watching crowd work tho

  • @katemeadows8073
    @katemeadows8073 Рік тому +1

    Thanks for sharing these tips. i always wanted to get into stand up comedy but always felt i had more funny true stories to tell than actual jokes, so i was never sure how to go about it or if what i thought was a funny story would even be funny to others. There's one i did and it got lots of laughs but maybe it's too long to get to the final punch line that's really targeted to a military crowd and the reason it worked then, i think, is it's really a two person team type of story that's really difficult to tell alone and get the same laughs.

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  Рік тому

      Hey there Warmag! You are more than welcome. I also started out with true stories and that is perfectly acceptable as comedy. The trick is to add jokes along the way to the story's punchline. It's very natural. And comedy doesn't have to be perfect the first time, you can take many attempts to refine it, that's what new material nights are for. If you need any further help, don't be afraid to get in touch!

  • @tieegg
    @tieegg 7 місяців тому +1

    In regards to best joke first, how many fireworks shows start with the grand finale?

  • @dinosanchez8528
    @dinosanchez8528 8 місяців тому +3

    Idk if a british guy should be telling me how to do stand-up. Haha just joking great advice mate. Cheers!

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  8 місяців тому +2

      😆 That is a very good point haha

    • @dinosanchez8528
      @dinosanchez8528 8 місяців тому

      Lol I thought it was a funny joke, I would've said it for any other race/ethnicity. Once I started writing comedy literally everything became a joke. I laugh exponentially more now, and life seems to be much better. Cheers mate

    • @furbz8818
      @furbz8818 Місяць тому

      ​@@dinosanchez8528aren't the British renowned for their sense of humour. Many of Americas biggest comedy tv are remakes of a British show.

  • @wardieleppan8443
    @wardieleppan8443 Рік тому +1

    Sound advice!!

  • @Kybalion868
    @Kybalion868 9 місяців тому +1

    damn, I have to catch a train to get back home beacuse I need to get up for work the next day super early. its wuite a tricky situation. I really hope i'm not pissing off other comics. I wish I could stay... maybe ill try to get the last train next time and hang out with the guys at the end. thank you for the tips.

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  9 місяців тому +1

      Hey! Honestly, If you cant stay, then thats okay! Seems totally reasonable and everyone has a life outside of open mic comedy. The point in the video is if you have means of getting home at anytime and don't need to leave right away, but then you do anyway - that is what would annoy people. Just hearing your brief story, I would find it hard for people to be upset. I used to regularly get the last train home, and people understand! And typically promotors will work around your needs. Its okay if you need to leave early -its on the other acts if they dont understand!
      Basically, you don't need to worry and hopefully my nuance here is helpful! And thank you for the kind words!

    • @Kybalion868
      @Kybalion868 9 місяців тому +1

      Thank you for the reply and encouragement! I'll keep going! even if I have to travel 2h to and 2h back just to get on stage for 5 min it's worth it! I'm loving it and I'm filming it and learning every time! Great channel and lots of good advice. thanks a lot

  • @j031_2
    @j031_2 Рік тому +2

    Good advise, thnx, is it ridiculous to do I paid gig on just my second time on stage,
    i don’t know where to find open mics in the uk, great vid 🛀✨

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  Рік тому +2

      There are tonnes of open mic gigs in the UK. Where abouts are you based and I can give some suggestions. I think that is unusual to do paid work on your second gig, because unless you are some comedy prodigy, you may not be ready to do paid work and you need further work on your craft. And also those gigs wil be harder to do and not necessarily suitable to be learning your craft. Imagine you pay for a ticket to see shakespeare and the lead role is someone who hasn't acted before, nor has had any training or rehearsal.
      Open mic gigs are like rehearsals, as it's the only way to learn.
      Does that all makes sense?

  • @christopherdonovan7631
    @christopherdonovan7631 2 роки тому +1

    Awesome work, what are your thoughts on gong shows if I may ask?

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  2 роки тому

      Great question! I will be doing a video about Gong shows very soon! Thank you so much for the lovely comment.

  • @patch8376
    @patch8376 Рік тому +2

    I wish I'd heard 3 before my first ever 5. I'd been prepping a couple of sets, one edgy the other more personal, in the week leading up to my first time, and made a game day decision to go edgy thinking if I only ever did it once those were the jokes I'd want to try.

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  Рік тому

      Thanks mate! Hope things are going for you now!

    • @daviebluebird1254
      @daviebluebird1254 7 місяців тому

      And did you bomb? I'm doing my first five minute set next week and it's peppered with edgy stuff. After seeing this video I can't decide whether to persevere with what I've got or tone it down....

    • @patch8376
      @patch8376 7 місяців тому +1

      @@daviebluebird1254 I wasn't booed off the stage, but I extracted painfully few laughs while on it (and if anything the awkward silence is almost kinda worse). My advice would be to just keep it as simple as possible your first time on (advice I still have trouble following). It's very hard to remember what you wanted/planned to say if (or when) you're nervous, so the simpler it is, whether it's edgy or not, the better. I still kind of don't regret going edgy my first time out (my first joke was about Ukraine, but targeting self-righteous internet people who post flags to feel better about themselves but don't actually do anything to help, and not the tragedy of the conflict itself) because like I said in my initial comment I wasn't 100% sure that I'd keep doing it so I thought just in case it's a one-off thing I might as well go hard rather than play it safe. I'm still doing it, though, sometimes less unsatisfactorily than others, but last night not so satisfactorily either. I think a lot of aspiring comics (myself included) go into it with a mentality of needing to prove something as the new person, like yeah, I may be the "new guy," but I'm not afraid to go dark and controversial (like an inmate who feels he has to fight on his first day in prison to show he isn't a pushover). But it's not necessary and I agree with Matt Hoss here that it's best avoided (especially if you know you're probably going to do it more than once; I wasn't so sure, until I got home that night and at some point before my head hit the pillow I realized I'd fallen in love with it and was crazy to ever think I wasn't going to keep doing it).
      It's going to be hard if you have nothing to compare it to, but probably the biggest mistakes I made my first time out (and still make if I'm not careful) were structural ones. I was too invested in stringing all of my jokes together and tried to memorize a bunch of stuff to say in between them to connect them, and the connections were loose and tenuous at best. Practice jokes individually. Practice them in different orders. Rehearse 5 to 15 jokes individually that are 20 to 60 seconds each, depending on your style (you might want to tell a story longer than 60 seconds your first time up, but I've seen other comics attempt it a few times but never seen it work too well with new comics). Put each jokes on a card like an index card (I'm 40 so I'm old-school.) and shuffle and move the order around as you practice. (I think this is much better than trying to memorize the whole thing start to finish from second 1 to minute 5 because if you do that but then miss a line onstage it can really mess with you, so have a flexible order so you can think on your feet and work around mistakes more easily.) If you have your jokes down pat, in between them you're more likely to be more relaxed and little lines to add in between jokes (if any are even needed) will come to you in the moment (including mild self deprecation if (or *when*) a joke doesn't work). Also, f*cking make sure to have fun with it, no matter how it goes! My wife advised me that from day one and that's another thing that took me way too long to get a handle on.
      As you can see from this long-winded response, I struggle to keep sets to within 5 minutes, and as one final note that Matt Hoss probably has somewhere in this video as well, don't "run the light." Get off at 5 (or before) even if you didn't finish telling all of your jokes. If your second last joke gets good laughs, it might be better to cut your set 30 seconds short and end on a high note rather than try to squeeze one more joke in the final seconds that doesn't land as well. (Yes, this is also a mistake I made last night.)

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  7 місяців тому

      @@patch8376 Thanks mate!

  • @ComedyButt
    @ComedyButt 7 місяців тому +2

    Thx
    Great tips

  • @MysteriumFX
    @MysteriumFX 3 місяці тому

    at first I thought you were the matt hoss that sued h3h3 a few years ago lmao

  • @anarchyseeds4406
    @anarchyseeds4406 Рік тому +1

    best video

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  Рік тому

      Thanks Anarchy Seeds! Hope you got some help from this

  • @s0lid_sno0ks
    @s0lid_sno0ks Місяць тому

    all the mics in my area are in bars. it's absolute death.

  • @nomnomnommy2955
    @nomnomnommy2955 2 роки тому +2

    5 minutes feels like a very long time for a newbie

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  2 роки тому +2

      It absolutely does feel like that when starting out. 5 minutes is the typical british slot to start with setting out, though certain clubs may offer 2/3 sets when starting out, but honestly, these are very rare. Keep writing and those 5 mins will fill out. Also, time yourself too. Rehearse how long it takes to say each bit. 5 minutes tends to fly by when you are onstage and things are going well.

  • @julietcoates8561
    @julietcoates8561 7 місяців тому

    Im gagging to try standup but im a Brit living in west coast Canada, im worried ill offend lol

  • @dekoningtan
    @dekoningtan Рік тому +4

    I'm Dutch and we don't use Dutch courage, we use actual courage. We also hope you Brits will stop being salty about the fact that we invented Gin😉

  • @saintFNtony
    @saintFNtony Рік тому +1

    Help me out with my set

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  Рік тому

      I would love to help, is there a way for me to contact you best and I can help?

  • @Juan_rivera
    @Juan_rivera 27 днів тому

    I think you were grouping all why humor as shock humor and that's not the case

  • @mestizo3113
    @mestizo3113 Місяць тому

    Rule #1: if you aren't funny, then try and make people think you are
    Rule #2: don't work the crowd. Everyone is expecting you to do it, so don't do it.

  • @MrBigdaddyof09
    @MrBigdaddyof09 Рік тому

    Is it a good idea to bring your friends?

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  Рік тому

      Good question: I think it depends on you. I do not want to bring my friends, especially as I am learning my craft - nothing worse than dying on your bum in front of your friends (something I have done loads). However if you friends are in the room, you have a higher chance of the gig going well, because you already have people in the room who have your back and will laugh more readily at your jokes. So it's your choice, i would recommend taking your friends to a nicer gig. Like there are some rough open mics i would say NO to bringing friends to, but a really fun room which is more comedy friendly (like The stand) i would say YES to. Does that help?

  • @Juan_rivera
    @Juan_rivera 27 днів тому

    Are sure you have the right definition of edgy? Because Bill Burr and Jeselnik i think are consisted edgy and they're funny AF

  • @hoboguru
    @hoboguru 10 місяців тому

    A masters in comedy whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  10 місяців тому

      Yup it's a real thing! They used to run the course at the University of Kent, and they do it in different places now (I think University of Brunel?)

  • @Juan_rivera
    @Juan_rivera 27 днів тому

    Good edgy has other material in it

  • @LikwitSwords
    @LikwitSwords Місяць тому

    Edgy comedians don’t make it? Ari Shaffir, Jimmy Carr,

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  Місяць тому +2

      I didn't say that. Of course edgy comedians can make it. However you need to learn those strong writing skills first; which a lot of open mic comedians lack. That isn't a dig on open mic comedians, but to articulate and pull off edgy jokes for a substantial amount of time onstage requires experience, typically.

  • @jameshutchens1303
    @jameshutchens1303 7 днів тому

    "edgy comedians never make it very far".....dave chapelle? Kevin Hart? Jeff Dunham? Literally eveey major name in comedy is edgy and uses dark and controversial humor

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  6 днів тому

      I hear you, and this is a point that gets repeated often in the comments. The nuance is that those people have the necessary skills and experience to successfully tell edgy jokes in a funny way. Open mic comedians 99% of the time do not have those skills and *they don't go very far*. Also shock humour only goes so far for an audience, unless your audience are coming to you for that. I recommend a vast range of jokes, not just edgy to allow people to grow. That's my take- you are welcome to disagree, and that's okay!

  • @yaakovmoskowitz329
    @yaakovmoskowitz329 9 місяців тому

    Great tips but I would disagree with one point. If your style is dark and edgy, you need to stay true to yourself.

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  9 місяців тому +1

      Thank you so much! I suppose it's important to stay true to yourself and if that's the comic you want to be, then fair enough. I would recommend exploring doing a range of jokes, but staying true to who you are. I suppose if you are purely out to shock, then that won't be helpful in the long run, but If you can craft really interesting, and dark jokes that is in keeping with who you are, then that is great!

  • @MaxwellWurme
    @MaxwellWurme 6 місяців тому +1

    Is it unethical to tell your audience about a funny story that didn’t actually happen

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  6 місяців тому +1

      Oh this is a great question and potentially a whole other video on the subject.
      I would say generally: No you are allowed to make up a funny story. Most comedians stories have been altered in someway to be funnier. It's very rare they are completely truthful depictions, because that's just good storytelling.
      I would say it would only be unethical, if it was dependent on WHAT you were saying. If you made up a story about you meeting a dog in a park, that's absolutely fine. If you made up a story about you having an awful disease just to make a few laughs, then that would be unethical and totally not cool. Does that make sense? Like it depends on the fabrication you are making and why you are making it. On the whole:It's okay just be mindful of why you are making the adjustment: as the audience's enjoyment should be your priority and making adjustments to your story's truth can enhance that

    • @MaxwellWurme
      @MaxwellWurme 6 місяців тому +1

      @@matthosscomedy I appreciate you taking the time to answer my question so thoroughly
      Very helpful 👍

  • @jackgreaves8277
    @jackgreaves8277 2 роки тому +2

    "DONT BE EDGY" TAKE NOTES KIDS!

  • @emanv4690
    @emanv4690 9 місяців тому

    what if you only have like 4 minutes, what then?

  • @jeremykothe2847
    @jeremykothe2847 3 місяці тому +1

    To state the obvious... every rule here can be broken if you're good enough. Don't insult the audience? Bill Burr Philly. Don't get too drunk? Ron White. Might be better considered as: "if you failed, and you did one of these, maybe dial it back, *OR PUSH IT HARDER*". I have never heard of Matt Hoss (no disrespect, just a fact). You probably haven't either. Don't take his advice :D

    • @cat_city2009
      @cat_city2009 2 місяці тому +2

      Good point. In his defence, this might be good advice for inexperienced comics. Don't ape the behaviors of successful comedians and expect to instantly kill. It might backfire.

  • @ciuano5519
    @ciuano5519 3 місяці тому

    Rowan Atwood comedy*

  • @Joebandocomedy
    @Joebandocomedy 11 місяців тому

    There are zero rules to open mics.

  • @qwertyrules
    @qwertyrules 8 місяців тому +1

    Daniel tosh would disagree w shock humor

    • @matthosscomedy
      @matthosscomedy  8 місяців тому

      I hear that, this is purely my stance, and I appreciate others would disagree. I suppose I just would offer caution if people wanted to completely do shock humour. The books and my experience agrees with my point, but you know, people have to do what works for them, and fully back that :D

  • @GauravSharma-lj2ug
    @GauravSharma-lj2ug 2 роки тому +2

    Amazing video Matt I wanna connect with you personally can we connect on social media?