Many of the more physical jokes were also quite funny, such as when he makes a fool of himself at a party in "I Love Art!" and the over-exaggerated expressions in "No-Nonsense Judge" and "Mules/Sense of Humor." I also liked his take on "Cooking Shows" and his section on the law. Nip and all three of us chose "franchise in Pensacola" as our absolute favorite joke from the show. I watched Brian Regan: The Epitome of Hyperbole with Psibabe and J.R. Specifically, I found his "franchise in Pensacola" to be absolutely brilliant. Actually, some of his jokes are quite smart, indeed. He jokes that getting out of nightclubs and into a theater lets you do your smart jokes, rather than your more physical jokes, but he's come to realize that he doesn't have any smart jokes. Not that Brian Regan's jokes need selling. Sure, you can "get" his jokes when you hear them on the radio, but it's Brian Regan's rubber-like, over-exaggerated facial expressions that really help to "sell" the joke. Brian Regan has facial elasticity that reminds me of Jim Carey's earlier, heavily physical work. Secondly, I realized just how much of Brian Regan's comedy is physical and must be seen to fully appreciate. First of all, I realized that I was, indeed, familiar with Brian Regan from XM Radio, I had heard some of the jokes before, and his voice was definitely familiar, beyond that. As I continued watching Brian Regan: The Epitome of Hyperbole, I realized a couple of things. Also, his face looked somewhat familiar, but in that "Hey-don't-I-know-you-from-some-place" sort of way. I know some comedians by name, while I am only familiar with the routines of others.īrian Regan was a familiar name to me, but I couldn't place a joke to the name. This means that I hear a lot of stand up routines, but don't get to see them. I have XM Radio in my car, and the channel I listen to most is XM Comedy.
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