From the moment the Golden Globes added a category for best stand-up comedy performance, cynics like me had doubts. Globes voters have a longstanding tendency to reward celebrity over quality, and last year’s inaugural comedy nominees and eventual winner Ricky Gervais proved that. In its second year, the Globes made more defensible selections. Or maybe the very famous comedians they selected simply did better work.
Either way, it’s tough to find much fault with a nominees list that includes Jamie Foxx, Nikki Glaser (who’s also hosting the Globes telecast), Seth Meyers, Adam Sandler, Ali Wong and Ramy Youssef, save for the gender imbalance. Each of their specials deserves appreciation. Wong, Glaser and Youssef evolved their work beyond what we’ve come to expect of them. Meyers is consistently sharp and amiable and, yes, famous, but perhaps slightly less than Sandler and Foxx.
Yet there’s a wealth of more creatively adventurous comedy out around that doesn’t have “for your consideration” campaigns behind it. Too much, really, to be encapsulated in one brief category or any person’s highly subjective short list. Here are a few extraordinary 2024 specials you might have missed, along with an upcoming one that you shouldn’t.
Bloom’s special wasn’t supposed to be . . . this. She opens with a weird ditty about trees that smell like male ejaculate while dancing under a parasol. But then Death interrupts with a heckle – no really, he’s played by David Hull – to remind her, and us, that we can only pretend to ignore the pandemic’s lasting toll for so long. Bloom lands on the wisdom, set to an appropriate if ludicrous closing number, that we need to acknowledge the inevitability of death while continuing to live fully for our loved ones.
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