I watched some stand up comedy on the ABC the other night and it was woeful, apparently 5 acts in row discussing their blatantly obvious identities with no punch line is supposed to be funny.
time_to_reset on
I get the article and I get that in an ideal world everyone makes money, but this is the life of pretty much every artist out there. Painters, musicians, actors, whatever. Everyone grinds.
Bradbury-principal on
It’s one comedy show, Melbourne. What could it cost, $10?
RoyKentRichmond on
Me and my partner have been wanting to sponsor a show, looks like we will barely cover marketing 😳
PlasticCraicAOS on
“People will happily pay $12 for a bottle of water”
I’m sorry, what? I’ve never paid $12 for a bottle of water, and if I did, I would be absolutely ropeable.
lorealashblonde on
Oh I was in the comedy festival for a few years! Honestly I was just thrilled if ANYONE came to see us, our audience was almost exclusively friends and family. And let’s be real, they didn’t want to be there.
princess_ferocious on
Tbf, most comedians aren’t doing the festival to profit. They know that’s not how it works. You do the festival for the promotion and the networking.
If you get some buzz, you can get more gigs that actually pay. You might get into the Roadshow and do some regional touring, which will get your name and your work in front of venue management who book bigger shows. You might get some TV work from it, which can get you bigger crowds and make you a bigger draw. You might get an offer from an agent and pick up some corporate gigs from that. You might meet some other comics who can introduce you to useful people, or just offer you a bed in their city if you want to do shows there on a budget (you haven’t lived till you’ve had two comedians top-and-tailing in your spare bed cause it’s free accommodation 😂).
You might even win an award, get a lot of attention, and get a big career boost. Tim Minchin went from barely known to international success off the back of one extremely successful festival run in Melbourne.
A friend of mine did a couple of festival shows. Didn’t make any money from the shows, but did get an invite from the ABC to go in for an audition/interview, and wound up getting a small paid part in a comedy they were filming.
bumbumboleji on
Geez this is a very cranky thread, you guys should go watch some comedy and chill tf out
trueschoolalumni on
Unfortunately the festival has a bunch of stand-ups really hoping for an audience and a few headliners who grab most of them. Token rules the roost in terms of Australian acts, and international names get more bums of seats than lesser known locals trying to make a name for themselves.
Source: I was a judge for the Barry award many moons ago, and went to something like 40-50 shows during the festival.
Jazz_Chickens on
What a joke. 🫠🙃
UslyfoxU on
Kate Dehnert has one of the best shows at this year’s festival, selling out every show. During an extra show that was added yesterday due to popular demand she said that she was finally just broken even. If award nominations and sold out shows are only enough to cover expenses, but venues are charging $14 for a can of beer, the festival really need to re-evaluate who they are putting the event on for.
bonniefuxxx on
It’s the last weekend of the festival – go out and see some random smaller shows
13 Comments
| What about $7,000?
Saved you a click.
I watched some stand up comedy on the ABC the other night and it was woeful, apparently 5 acts in row discussing their blatantly obvious identities with no punch line is supposed to be funny.
I get the article and I get that in an ideal world everyone makes money, but this is the life of pretty much every artist out there. Painters, musicians, actors, whatever. Everyone grinds.
It’s one comedy show, Melbourne. What could it cost, $10?
Me and my partner have been wanting to sponsor a show, looks like we will barely cover marketing 😳
“People will happily pay $12 for a bottle of water”
I’m sorry, what? I’ve never paid $12 for a bottle of water, and if I did, I would be absolutely ropeable.
Oh I was in the comedy festival for a few years! Honestly I was just thrilled if ANYONE came to see us, our audience was almost exclusively friends and family. And let’s be real, they didn’t want to be there.
Tbf, most comedians aren’t doing the festival to profit. They know that’s not how it works. You do the festival for the promotion and the networking.
If you get some buzz, you can get more gigs that actually pay. You might get into the Roadshow and do some regional touring, which will get your name and your work in front of venue management who book bigger shows. You might get some TV work from it, which can get you bigger crowds and make you a bigger draw. You might get an offer from an agent and pick up some corporate gigs from that. You might meet some other comics who can introduce you to useful people, or just offer you a bed in their city if you want to do shows there on a budget (you haven’t lived till you’ve had two comedians top-and-tailing in your spare bed cause it’s free accommodation 😂).
You might even win an award, get a lot of attention, and get a big career boost. Tim Minchin went from barely known to international success off the back of one extremely successful festival run in Melbourne.
A friend of mine did a couple of festival shows. Didn’t make any money from the shows, but did get an invite from the ABC to go in for an audition/interview, and wound up getting a small paid part in a comedy they were filming.
Geez this is a very cranky thread, you guys should go watch some comedy and chill tf out
Unfortunately the festival has a bunch of stand-ups really hoping for an audience and a few headliners who grab most of them. Token rules the roost in terms of Australian acts, and international names get more bums of seats than lesser known locals trying to make a name for themselves.
Source: I was a judge for the Barry award many moons ago, and went to something like 40-50 shows during the festival.
What a joke. 🫠🙃
Kate Dehnert has one of the best shows at this year’s festival, selling out every show. During an extra show that was added yesterday due to popular demand she said that she was finally just broken even. If award nominations and sold out shows are only enough to cover expenses, but venues are charging $14 for a can of beer, the festival really need to re-evaluate who they are putting the event on for.
It’s the last weekend of the festival – go out and see some random smaller shows