Hack noun [hak]
1. A comic whose work is low in quality or does not have much imagination.
2. A mediocre and disdained stand up comedian.
3. A professional comic who renounces or surrenders individual independence, integrity, belief, etc., in return for money or other reward.
4. A comedian, who exploits, for money, his or her creative ability or training in the production of dull, unimaginative, and trite work; one who produces banal and inferior work in the hope of gaining commercial success in the arts.
In the comedy scene a conversation is often had about what a hack is. This conversation is usually held at a volume no louder than a whisper because it tends to be a very touchy subject. Why? Because as soon as the conversation comes up… you are asked to name names. Everyone starts getting nervous, that perhaps the next finger pointed will be at them. Especially the hacks.
And so it goes… comedians in dark corners telling the other comedians in their click that ‘so and so is a hack’ or ‘any joke about race or relationships is hack’. All the while ready to shoot someone in the face if they would even dare to accuse them of being hack. You can tell a comedian that their mom upside down is wow and they won’t care. But you say that they aren’t funny and they may stab you. If you go further and say that they are a hack… then you had better sleep with one eye open. It’s not a matter of if there will be an attempt on your life, it’s only a matter of when.
I must confess I’ve used the word hack to describe a comedian or two. OK, maybe more then two comedians. Maybe even at a volume louder then a whisper. Because in my opinion there’s a lot of hacks out there. For the most part you can refer to the definition above, but for instance I have a particular pet peeve that drives me crazy.
Whenever I see a comedian onstage who relies on stock jokes to get their laughs, my blood boils.
What’s a stock joke? It’s a joke that anyone can tell. It’s a knock knock joke you heard, or a bar joke you tell your buddies, or a funny email joke on rotation around the world wide web. Now if a comic gets onstage and tells a joke they heard somewhere, read in a book or got online to get a laugh… Then any other comic could just tell the same joke, and they can’t be accused of stealing the act. THE FIRST HACK STOLE IT IN THE FIRST PLACE.
We won’t even get into joke thieves. There’s a special place in hell for joke thieves but think of it this way. Someone wrote that joke. Just because you didn’t hear it onstage doesn’t mean you aren’t trying to profit from someone else’s intellectual property.
Or chew on this. Everyone has a friend that is funny, maybe a co-worker or relative that is really good at remembering jokes. Why should an audience sit and listen or heaven forbid PAY to see to a comic who’s telling stock jokes when they could have just had a beer with their funny friend? At least the drinks would be cheaper. The reason that audience came out to support live comedy is because they wanted something fresh, they came to see the art form known as stand up comedy and instead got a poser, a hack, a warm body wasting good stage time that real stand up comedians who toil at their craft could have used.
As a professional comedian I take it personally when hacks pose as one of us. They are the greasy used car salesmen, the unlicensed contractors, the untalented, unscrupulous lazy few who give the rest of us a bad name. Those hacks give audiences the idea that we all take short cuts, or lack true talent. They are the ten percent who ruin it for everyone. Black people call that 10% niggers. Latinos call that 10% wetbacks. And white people call them… well niggers. Comedians call that 10% hacks… stock jokes are a good indicator.
Young comedians, EVERYONE IS NOT DOING IT. It’s not a dirty little secret. Don’t listen to hacks that do it and tell you everyone else is too, or that every thing that can be done has been done and there’s no reason to try and be original… of course they’ll tell you that, THEY ARE HACKS. If you hone your writing chops and perfect your performance skills then very quickly you will surpass all the hacks. You will be a fresh and original stand up with your own point of view that can contribute to the art form and maybe, just maybe… if you are talented and committed enough… even further it.
Now I know hacks are reading this and instead of taking a long look at themselves and owning their shame they want to attack those around them. Especially me because I have the audacity to bring up the subject. They want me to name names. I won’t. They want to attack me. I welcome it. I’m ALL FOR HAVING A PUBLIC CONVERSATION with hacks and comics alike on what a hack is.
It’s a conversation that needs to be had more often. It’ll cast a spot light on the hacks and drive them from the stage. Freeing up a mic for the starving artists who slave with pen and paper to bring willing audiences a laugh to relieve them of the stress of the human experience, or at the very least distract them for 30 minutes with dick jokes. To those men and women who reach within themselves for the truth and pull out punchlines, I salute you. I am proud to walk amongst you, and call myself a stand up comedian.
If we shy away from the subject because we are afraid of confrontation or afraid to be attacked ourselves, we are only hurting ourselves. ATTENTION COMICS, IT’S OUR JOB TO SPEAK UP. It’s our role in society to speak up. We put a little sugar on it to make the medicine go down smoother… but the medicine must still be taken. And the way to root out hacks, as with every evil in the world no matter how major or minor, is to talk about it.
If we can’t talk about the issues in our own community, how can we say we have the integrity to give our opinion on anything? Why would an audience listen to us? Or even more importantly… why should an audience listen to us?
I’m not calling anyone in particular a hack. I AM NOT SINGLING OUT ANY COMEDIANS AND CALLING THEM HACKS. I will not name names. That’s not the conversation I want to have. But I will say this. Maybe you are a comic, you read this blog and you think that when you ‘remix’ a stock joke, or take someone else’s premise and write over it, or simply recites some old pun you heard a long time ago that you are ‘making it your own’. Maybe you reject my blog. Maybe you misread what I wrote and YOU THINK… that I THINK… that stock jokes have no place in stand up. Or that I’m saying that I never use stock jokes. Or that stock jokes are the definition of hack. Then you missed the point.
“Whenever I see a comedian onstage who relies on stock jokes to get their laughs, my blood boils.”
Let’s have that conversation. Seriously, let’s do it. And then own your opinion on what you are and what you do. I can respect that.
But if you agree with me… If you can’t find any stock jokes on Bill Cosby’s albums, or Richard Pryor’s, or George Carlin’s… maybe there’s a reason. Maybe it’s a lazy way of doing comedy. Maybe you’re a hack.
Being misinformed or ignorant can happen because this conversation is always had at a whisper in the back of comedy clubs. Maybe you didn’t know. But if the truth is now apparent to you, staring you in the face and you still choose to do it, then you are purposely stealing, from yourself, from comics, from comedy.
You are stealing from yourself any chance you have of become truly successful or respected in this business. You are robbing real comics of stage time and plagiarizing their material. And worst of all you are cheating stand up comedy herself… from being better because you contributed, because you GAVE… instead of taking, taking, taking just to sooth your own ego. I don’t have to name names. Hacks know who they are… trust me. WE ALL KNOW WHO THEY ARE. Choose to do better, and you are not a hack. You are a comic… and I can’t wait to hear your set. I could use a good laugh. I haven’t heard a fresh joke in a while.
Hack noun [hak]
1. A stand up comic without integrity.
