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June 7, 2007

Still Wright

06_06_07_Wright.JPGEven before our scatterbrained, ADHD world began over-prescribing Ritalin, we giggled at Steven Wright's one-liners on SNL during the ‘80s. If you're like us, maybe you even stayed up late into the night listening to albums like I Have a Pony. His brand of comedy, as something of an intellectual punster, appealed to us as kids just as much as it does today. Jokes like, "I was walking in the woods all by myself. A tree fell down right in front of me and I didn't hear a thing," or, "I put my instant coffee in a microwave -- I nearly went back in time," are typical of his lines -- they don't make any sense, except in that they make perfect sense.

Wright's eight-second or so “jokes” may be closer to nonsensical non-sequitors, but his status as a hero of cult film is unparalleled—over the past twenty years he's appeared in Reservoir Dogs, Half Baked, So I Married an Axe Murderer, and so on. That groggy voice and deadpan delivery haven't changed over the last two decades, and besides the growing bald spot -- covered with a classy fedora in the DVD-- neither has that trademark frizzy, shoulder-length hair. His first TV comedy special in 16 years aired on Comedy Central last October, and was released as a 78-minute DVD a couple months ago. Since then he's been on tour, starting on the West Coast, with his penultimate stop here at the Warner Theatre. (Atlantic City this weekend is his very last one).

While some lines from his current act might sound familiar, the majority are brand new. Be prepared for some Internet jokes. (Oooh…tingling feeling inside. Speaking our language, Steven.) He admitted in a Newsweek article that “when you’re hearing something over and over, it just gets in your head. You hear e-mail, that word, several times a day. This is my theory: your subconscious starts working on a joke but you don’t even know it.” Something tells us Steven Wright's subconscious works a little differently than most people's -- which is exactly the reason why it's worth it to catch his act tomorrow.

Steven Wright’s “When the Leaves Blow Away” will begin at 8 p.m. on Friday at the Warner Theatre, located at 13th St. between E & F Sts. NW. Tickets can be purchased through the Box Office (202-783-4000) or Ticketmaster.


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Comments (10)

"Even before our scatterbrained, ADHD world began over-prescribing Ritalin..."

A. If our world is riddled with people with ADHD, then Ritalin is not over-prescribed.

B. Being scatterbrained does not mean that one has ADHD; it's something quite different. People like you who conflate the two add to the confusion, the public perception/stigma, and the misdiagnoses.

C. You failed to show how any of this comedian's work has anything to do with ADHD, instead just going for the snarky and lazy lede on a tired point that Newsweek stopped covering years ago.

If you're going to be a sloppy writer, do it at your own expense.

 

Ugh: Shut it. Nobody gives a fuck.

 

Ugh: I'm just curious and being a little snarky, bhat expense did you incur by reading this blog?

 

Ugh,

What outfit do you write for?

I think it was the "Wright's eight-second or so “jokes”" line that confirmed the tie-in to an ADHD society. RTFA.

 

I'd say Ugh writes for a scientific journal since gripe C) is that the article failed to prove a connection between ADHD and Wright's comedy. News flash: paragraph one is not an abstract.

 

Nope, Ugh is right on all counts. At the very least, that's one of the sloppiest opening lines I've read. On the upside, it should give every aspiring writer hope that they can get published somewhere.

 

Stay tuned tomorrow on DCist when a writer calls a short person a midget for literary effect and gets yelled at by some PC asshole representing little people and lamenting the conflation of the concepts of a person being short and a person being a midget, since one is quite different from the other.

Get the fuck over it, Ugh. Or just take your Ritalin.

 

Is it just me, or is everyone on the comment boards as of late wound a little tight?

Maybe the commenters all just need a collective hug. C'mon Sommer -- make it happen!

 

Is it just me, or is everyone on the comment boards as of late wound a little tight?

Maybe the commenters all just need a collective hug. C'mon Sommer -- make it happen!

 

Is it just me, or is everyone on the comment boards as of late wound a little tight?

Maybe the commenters all just need a collective hug. C'mon Sommer -- make it happen!

 
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