Author: laurenne

  • I carried a watermelon? Peaches would have sounded so much better.

    I did my second stand-up show ever last night at The World Famous Comedy Store on Sunset Blvd (I call bullshit on the ‘world’ part. I don’t know if people in Nigeria really know about this place, but that’s how they sell it to you when they ask you to be in a show that requires you to bring paying audience members.) It did not go as well as my first show. People stared instead of laughed. There were crickets. Many of them.

    And it reminded me of a young man who used to live on my childhood street.

    He was older and cool. And every day after elementary school, he would say, “Laurenne is a blobule.” I didn’t know what that meant, but still I would cry. I thought he was wise (I mean, he was at least 12), so I figured I must have been a blobule. And I hated being a blobule. I wanted nothing more than to not be one. Blobules sucked, according to this mean kid.

    But after some years, I realized that blobules weren’t that bad. And, in fact, they didn’t even exist. But the kid had moved away. So, I spent lots of sixth grade recreating that situation. I could have said, ‘No, you’re a blobule” or ‘Blobule Shmobule’ or ‘Dorkface’ or I could have simply made up a story about how Debbie Gibson was my cousin (which I did later).

    This was one of the first of many conversations I would rebuild throughout my life. You know the ones that you rewrite in your head over and over until you almost convince yourself that you actually did sound a thousand times more intelligent than you really did (Otherwise known as an ‘I carried a watermelon’ conversation)? I’m a professional post-conversation rewriter. At least I used to be. Until a therapist told me that if everyone’s so worried about their part of the conversation, then nobody’s really worried about your part.

    Wise, those therapists are. Way wiser than that blobule who invented blobules. (Blobule isn’t even a good name. How naive I was to be insulted so uncreatively.)

    Flubbing your first joke in front of a crowd of strangers at The World Famous Comedy Store can guarantee you some intense in-brain rewriting, no matter what any therapist says. It’s agonizing.

    I have mentally rewritten my set about 4,352 times since I said it on stage just 24 hours ago. (If only I had added the word ‘Jesus’ more often, etc.) And before that I probably told my jokes to the invisible passenger in my car about 6,412 times. And neither made my performance any better. This whole anxiety-ridden journey has led me to some revelations:

    *A surefire way to tell whether you performed badly is if the very first thing your friend says afterward is: It was not you. Totally the crowd.

    *Not everyone thinks jokes about dead dads are funny.

    *The ‘comedian green room’ sounds cool but really means a roachy box with stained couches and stale snacks. Still, I felt pretty cool.

    *Taking anything too seriously makes it not worth doing.

    This stand-up thing could be really fun (jokes are fun!) or it could be this thing I do that is stressful and hard and has to be done perfectly for fear of my bastard ego, Lawrence, showing up to tell me how I could have done better, looked better, or made more people laugh, which is no fun at all.

    And, since I’m one who learns lessons, I should probably take this one and use it in as many aspects of my life as I can. I should have more fun. Always. And you should too. Because why not? Stuff without fun is so much less fun than stuff with fun.

    From now on, I must remember: It’s okay to suck at something. As long as you’re having fun while sucking. Jenna Jameson agrees. That joke wasn’t at all funny. But at least I had fun while writing an unfunny joke. Man, I’m a fast learner.

  • As long as they laugh, it’s all ok.


    When I was 13, I was deathly embarrassed of my mom. Not because she wore puke green dresses and too big eyeglasses (she did). But mainly because, no matter where we went, she talked too much. It wasn’t just that she brought up the weather in every single elevator or complimented someone’s shoes in every line for popcorn. She also told strangers all of our business. Someone would comment on how we were dressed up, and she would tell them all about how I had just graduated from junior high with a 4.0 GPA and that my grandmother was in town and that we deserved a treat and we were going to get pineapple shakes right after the car wash and the video store. She told every detail to surely uninterested strangers. I would cower. I wasn’t a comic book nerd, but I still pretended to put on an invisibility cloak. How. Embarrassing.

    The other day I told the story of my first blowjob to a room full of strangers. And I write this blog where I recently wrote a story about how my dead father’s rotting body smelled like Korean leftovers. I have clearly surpassed my mother in the lack of discretion department. My 13-year-old self would be mortified. And have braces.

    Now I’ve found a way to be even more revealing, even more honest, and even more embarrassing to any future children I may have. It’s stand-up comedy. And I think I love it. It’s like welcoming hundreds of people inside the chamber of the brain that holds all the secrets. And damn, it’s liberating. I’m seriously hooked. I walked off stage Monday night, and I wanted to immediately walk back on.

    It took 12 weeks of class with 8 other students under the direction of Gerry Katzman (who teaches the best stand-up class in LA) in order to get our sets in order. On the first day, Gerry asked us to come up with a personal topic around which we would write 16 jokes. I thought the fact that I drive a scooter was interesting. No. That’s not what he meant. He was more interested in the fact that I only date unmotivated men who don’t have jobs and make me pay for them and how I do so willingly because I feel like I have to take care of them.
    Oh, that.
    Then, he wanted to know why and when and how. And THAT’s when the jokes got funny. The deeper you dig, the better you get. I was into it. A scooter? Ha.

    After that first day, I knew I’d love peeling off more and more layers of myself in order to get to the jokes. It was easy for me (the being honest about myself part) since I grew up with a mom who talked too much and have a blog where I already share everything. This blog made it easy. Thanks, everybody. I wrote jokes about dead dads and trying to be spiritual, and how it’s hard to be single and/or masturbate, and my mom, who has since stopped buying clothes in puke green (for the most part).

    After writing and rewriting every tiny part of every joke, it all came out on stage on Monday night in 9.5 minutes. There’s a silence you can feel while you’re telling a joke where you realize that you’re holding a microphone and everyone is waiting to hear what you have to say. And then you say something important about your life. And it’s out there. And it’s accepted. And it’s ok. You can admit anything up there, and it’s ok. Because you’re on a stage. And because even the deepest darkest secrets find other people in the audience who can relate. That’s what comedy is all about: Saying things that other people feel but are too scared to admit.
    Once the people laugh, it’s all really ok.

    So I’m hooked. And excited. And ready to do it again.
    But I’m not so sure how I’ll feel when I get up there and share my secrets and nobody laughs. I know that’s going to happen. Any day now. Probably as soon as I start performing without my friends in the audience. And that’s going to be hard. And painful. But probably still pretty liberating. We’ll see. If anything, I’ll just quit and be that lady who unloads information on strangers in elevators. Whatever the case, I still won’t be like my mom. Because I do not wear puke green.

    Stand-up class 2010 in post-show bliss. We know everything about each other now.
    We can only become either best friends or sworn enemies. We’ll see. Not so sure I trust the Koreans.
  • Yes, this thing is on.


    Today is big. It’s the culmination of summer nights spent indoors, neglected friends who think I hate them, and randoms in LA coffee shops who’ve helped me answer the big question: Is this funny?

    It’s my stand-up comedy debut.
    On stage.
    Under lights.
    In front of people.

    I have jokes that will offend the men I’ve dated, jokes that will offend hippies, jokes that will offend all religions, and, mainly, jokes that will offend my mother. The one thing that all these jokes have in common is that I’m not sure they are funny.

    I have spent the entire summer writing them. And rewriting them. And then second-guessing them. And then rewriting again. And I still don’t know if they’re funny. I guess we’ll see when I’m on stage in front of 50 of my friends. If they don’t laugh, then I’ll finally know that my friends are dumb.

    One thing I know that’s funny for sure is that, while absent-mindedly eating a PBJ sandwich today, I chewed it into the shape of a terrier. This was not intentional. My teeth are just natural artists.
    That’s funny, right?
    Is it? I don’t know.

  • The Paradox of Books About Paradoxes


    I hate choosing shampoo. Or toilet paper or rice or jeans. I’ll even wear the same crusty boots into the ground because I can’t stand the idea of picking out new ones. The thought of making decisions truly immobilizes me. And with more and more to choose from every day, capitalism is causing me to panic at the grocery store.

    This Pantene says it’s for normal hair, but mine is not really that normal. It’s more dry, but Suave for dry hair is too cheap to actually work and the bottle is pink. I hate pink. The Aussie shampoo smells good, but I don’t want to buy it because they’ll think their advertising is working and then they’ll make more of those horrible commercials that make me want to kill every kangaroo and hate every Australian. I should actually just stick to natural formulas. I’m gonna go Burt’s Bees. No, wait. I’m not paying thirteen dollars for that tiny tube of shampoo. Actually, I don’t even need to wash my hair. Forget it.

    The same thing happens with cars and apartments and men. Sometimes I choose out of exhaustion, sometimes I talk myself into the wrong thing, and sometimes I just close my eyes and pick, which has gotten me into some really damaging relationships. There’s a constant pros/cons list writing itself in my head along with a looming fear that I’ll miss out if I make a bad choice. If I go with the veggie omelet, I’ll forgo the french toast and the french toast might be better. If I choose Luigi from Chicago, then I’ll miss out when Javier from Buenos Aires comes along, and everyone knows he‘ll be better.

    And then there’s that whole job dilemma. In the sixties, women’s career choices were limited: Teacher, Nurse, or Secretary. Now, I could give manicures to dead people or bathe apes or run for president (ok, vice). Is it really that great that we have so many choices? Everyone I know seems to be wondering what to do with their lives.

    This topic interested me so much that I bought a book on it: The Paradox of Choice.
    I couldn’t wait to read it, but I put it on my shelf while I finished another. And that was five books ago. I still haven’t read it. And that’s because every time I saddle up to my bookshelf to pick out my next read, there are so many books from which to choose.

    I bet there are some really good insights in that book about how certain things are overlooked when there are too many options.

  • 5 days. 17 emails. I have a stalker. And validation.

    I have a stalker. And I have to say I feel pretty good about it. Nothing like a stalker to fix up the old ego. I’ve never really had any out-of-line unwanted male attention except for in Cancun, and everyone knows that doesn’t count. I’ve always been a bit offended that I’ve never been raped. No uncle has ever tried to fondle me. Am I not fondle-worthy, uncles? Now I finally have the validation I need. I’ve got myself a stalker. My ego, Lawrence, can now bask in the uncomfortable attention.

    I met him in line for a $5 footlong. I guess even stalkers need a good lunch deal and/or want in on a rare weightloss plan that includes bread and mayo.

    “You look like a hot nerd,” the soon-to-be stalker said as he saddled up beside me.
    I laughed. What a good line. None of this Whole-Foods-complimenting-my-aura crap. Yeah. I’ll take hot nerd. I could be a hot nerd. Right?

    I turned to see that this bold pick-up line sprang from the mouth of a wee youngen just barely able to buy his own beer. About 5 feet tall. Almost a teenager. And hanging out on The Promenade. [we all know how I feel about teenagers on the ‘Nade] Great. Fine. I’ll take it. Why not? An almost teenager thinks I’m a hot nerd. At least he’s not in line for an abortion. Progress.

    Then he asked me to take him out to dinner. I chuckled and declined. But before I bid him adieu, I gave him my card. YES! I did. I gave him my card. Why? Because it only lists my name and blog, and I take any chance I can to let more people know about my blog. I know. I’m desperate. My insane narcissistic desire to have my writing be read by all has now bit me in the ass. For punishment, I am forcing myself to write ‘bit me in the ass’ instead of a more creative idiom.

    Lesson #1 Don’t give your card out to men in line for a $5 footlong. Ever.

    Lesson #2 Maybe you don’t need everyone to read your blog even if you secretly hope that all new acquaintances are related to some literary agent who’s dying to contract a blogger to write a new book franchise.

    I was planning on posting the entire stalking exchange here. But now there is too much to post. 17 emails in 5 days. This does qualify as stalker, right? RIGHT?

    Here is a selection of choice tidbits (Direct quotes. Please excuse the grammar):

    “This place [no idea to what ‘this place’ refers. LA? Earth? His van?] is full of sex starved, males with little or no skills to really satisfy a woman sexually or emotionally. I should take these chumps to school, but I got better things to do… I’m latin so it’s my blood.”

    “Are you going to fucking reply or should I just stop emailing you?”

    “reply you arrogant white bitch.”

    To which I DID reply (I don’t know why!) in Spanish: “Fuck off. Actually, I’m Hispanic. And I prefer not to speak with people like you.”

    To which he replied: now we’re talking mami.

    Then he must have read some of this here blog and found [this article]. Because he came at me with this one:

    “you’re half spanish you fucking liar. you’re like a strawberry milkshake except you’re not very sweet. have a miserable day.”

    And it got better:

    “I think spain is great you guys have great people.. world cup champs, nadal, tour de fance champs, picasso, dali
    but get off your high horse bitch cause the world will soon be dominated by the”peasants” … so be nice or I’ll tell my grandkids to make your grandkids clean toilets for a living.”

    AND BETTER:

    “I got bored so I read your blog.. like half a post at least. couldnt do more.
    then i checked out your [professional advertising] site… so you’re the one to blame for the annoying art in jack and the box… I couldn’t figure out what the hell to do when I first got there.. just a big black box and your name..no click here or nothing – not very good marketing if you ask me.”

    AND when I still refused to reply, I got this one:

    Listen I’m sorry for being such a dick. I was wondering if maybe we could be friends?

    Lesson #3 Stalkers can be hilarious. As long as they don’t know where you live. Hey wait, is that bush rustling out there?

    Lesson #4 In the end, everyone just wants to be friends.

    My plan was to post his email here and encourage all of us arrogant white folks to email the Latino for some sexual advice. But then I thought I might get arrested. And then I realized that the five people who read this blog don’t have time to send out emails to a random crazy, potentially inviting him to stalk them. So, I refrained. But, you know, if you’re bored or something, just email me and I can pass you that address. In the meantime, Lawrence and I are off to get some sleep. We can finally rest knowing that we’re worthy of stalkage.