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Colin Quinn discusses the origins of New York and how it got its unique personality.Colin Quinn discusses the origins of New York and how it got its unique personality.Colin Quinn discusses the origins of New York and how it got its unique personality.
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Comedian Colin Quinn presents the history of New York, in particular its inhabitants and their unique character. Filmed live off-Broadway in 2016.
I've been a fan of Colin Quinn since his Tough Crowd days and really enjoy his cynical, quick-witted, knowledge-filled sense of humour and biting delivery. He employs these traits well in this homage to his beloved hometown.
You'd think a comedy routine that relies on stereotypes of the different ethnic groups that make up a city would be quite cringy and not-done, especially in this over-PC, being-offended-as-a-hobby day and age. Yet it works.
The trick is that while Quinn points out the traits of all the groups that combined to make the modern New Yorker, he doesn't put them down, celebrating them and showing how they contribute to the diversity of the city. It's funny without being mocking.
Not perfect though. Quinn's quickfire delivery is often too quick: you hardly have a chance to digest what he's said and in some cases it's difficult to even make out what he says as sometimes blurts out the punchline. That's the problem with having so many jokes and ideas running through your head: you just want to get them out all at once.
Tough Crowd also had this problem, especially as it was largely unscripted as he would deliver his joke before it was fully formed in his head. Here the jokes are fully formed but his delivery is so fast and intense that the audience can't always keep up.
It's a trade-off though. One of the best things about his stand-up routine is the intensity and if he slowed down to let the audience savour his jokes he would lose that edge.
It probably doesn't help that I'm not from New York so can't immediately relate to what he's talking about. The crowd, being from New York, would have had less of a problem.
Overall though it's still very funny and entertaining.
I've been a fan of Colin Quinn since his Tough Crowd days and really enjoy his cynical, quick-witted, knowledge-filled sense of humour and biting delivery. He employs these traits well in this homage to his beloved hometown.
You'd think a comedy routine that relies on stereotypes of the different ethnic groups that make up a city would be quite cringy and not-done, especially in this over-PC, being-offended-as-a-hobby day and age. Yet it works.
The trick is that while Quinn points out the traits of all the groups that combined to make the modern New Yorker, he doesn't put them down, celebrating them and showing how they contribute to the diversity of the city. It's funny without being mocking.
Not perfect though. Quinn's quickfire delivery is often too quick: you hardly have a chance to digest what he's said and in some cases it's difficult to even make out what he says as sometimes blurts out the punchline. That's the problem with having so many jokes and ideas running through your head: you just want to get them out all at once.
Tough Crowd also had this problem, especially as it was largely unscripted as he would deliver his joke before it was fully formed in his head. Here the jokes are fully formed but his delivery is so fast and intense that the audience can't always keep up.
It's a trade-off though. One of the best things about his stand-up routine is the intensity and if he slowed down to let the audience savour his jokes he would lose that edge.
It probably doesn't help that I'm not from New York so can't immediately relate to what he's talking about. The crowd, being from New York, would have had less of a problem.
Overall though it's still very funny and entertaining.
Great material but he is so wound up it's tough to watch.
As a native NY'r I agree with everything he said and laughed many times but this version of Colin is not enjoyable Colin is an astute observer and accurate reporter of humans-he nails this topic .... I want every visitor to NY to watch this on the plane and hope they don't get scared off This comedic set glorifies a bygone era - a city that can't exist again. ( When he gets to the Polish joke you'll understand- And that observance is gold. ) What makes us different and great is our distinct parts. But if we're not distinct anymore, who are we?
As a native NY'r I agree with everything he said and laughed many times but this version of Colin is not enjoyable Colin is an astute observer and accurate reporter of humans-he nails this topic .... I want every visitor to NY to watch this on the plane and hope they don't get scared off This comedic set glorifies a bygone era - a city that can't exist again. ( When he gets to the Polish joke you'll understand- And that observance is gold. ) What makes us different and great is our distinct parts. But if we're not distinct anymore, who are we?
Colin Quinn goes through some history and what makes a New Yorker played off of stereotypes of immigrants who moved there. Being from New York himself, it's interesting to see his comedy perspective on what made a character from the city.
This Netflix Special, however missed the mark completely. His delivery for a lot of the anecdotes felt too anger- fuelled and it felt he was trying too hard. One of the funniest traits he had in his earlier shows was his carefree attitude and laidbackness. In this Netflix show it seemed like this was lacking. I hope his next standup show is better! this is boring
I love Colin Quinn's take on NYC and his crazy frenetic delivery! An hour of brilliance. My only regret is that I didn't see this sooner! Thank you Netflix.
Did you know
- Quotes
Colin Quinn: He live in the back of a hardware store - come to school smellin' like cut keys!
Details
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- 1h 2m(62 min)
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