Mitch Hedberg I Like It but You Should Write It Again

For Casey Plett, the legendary comedian'due south humour has been perfect company for the absurd tedium of pandemic life.

Mitch Hedberg performs in Kansas City in 2005. (Jason Squires/WireImage)

Warm Blanket is a series of personal essays from Canadian writers and artists reflecting on the pop civilization that has brought them comfort and coziness during i year of the pandemic.

I will be at my kitchen in the forenoon, drinking my coffee, making breakfast. And I will be miserable, for many of the mutual reasons anyone is miserable so far in the 2020s, and for some of the less mutual reasons equally well.

What am I making? Oatmeal. Without even anything to put into information technology, because I am out of peanut butter and cream or any milk-like substance and so I am making the saddest breakfast in the world, which is evidently oatmeal, and then as I'thousand stirring this oatmeal, I start laughing. And the stupidest giddy smiling comes on my confront and suddenly, I begin talking to myself in what might sound to a stranger like a totally weird stoner accent (except again, at that place is no one to hear me. Did I mention I am now laughing to myself alone?)

What I say when I talk to myself is this:

"I wake up in the morning and brand myself a bowl of instant oatmeal and and then I don't exercise shit for an hour. Which makes me wonder why I need the instant oatmeal. I could've fabricated the regular oatmeal and felt productive!"

If you take not heard this joke before, it might seem like a plain, just-okay joke. But if y'all know Mitch Hedberg, and yous know this joke, you were already hearing his voice in your head and maybe you were smiling along with me. He passed over a decade agone, but there is something virtually his lines and their cadences that have only attained farther tonic equally they age. Like Caroljean Gavin (who edited a volume of stories inspired past his jokes) said, he only has that effect on people.

There'due south a delirious beauty to Mitch Hedberg jokes. They're deranged and yet never mean, crass yet never rough; surreal but unambiguous, lapping at darkness but never, always bleak. The kickoff time I heard him, it was summer later on I graduated high schoolhouse. My friends and I were listening to a burnt CD in my parents' house. I began in the eye of the album for some reason. Right away he got united states of america with the joke nearly how a club owner, who hooks him up with drugs, ane 24-hour interval gave him ADD medication — "So then I had an extra long attending span ... Someone'd be telling a story, and so the story'd stop and I'd get all mad and shit. Come on man, at that place's gotta exist more to that story! I'1000 on pills here!" I listened right until my parents chosen me for dinner, which led to them besides experiencing Mitch Hedberg, which meant they were soon laughing too.

Mitch Hedberg was a drug user and that's how he died. He joked nigh that, too. And it's incommunicable not to express mirth with a particular heaviness most those jokes, but dammit, y'all still laugh. ("I love the FedEx guy, cause he'south a drug dealer and he don't even know it. And he'southward ever on time.") He was anxious; he had permanent stage fearfulness, something you can still run into when you sentry videos of him now and notice his mic is shaking. Sometimes he even closed his eyes performing. He had a joke well-nigh that, too. ("I have painted an audition enjoying the prove more on the back of my eyelids.") I heard one time during a performance he was so nervous that he ran behind the drape — and he joked nearly that, too. ("You fuckers tin can't go me back here!")

Accept you never listened to Mitch Hedberg? Are you lot finding this a deplorable story? Considering if you feel sad reading this, then the solution is you need to listen to some Mitch Hedberg jokes, or talk to any Mitch Hedberg fan. I find information technology and then charming, nay moving, that for someone whose cadence is so identifiable and irreplaceable, every fan's got their ain subtle style of doing his lines. With virtually comedians, I find fanboy mimicking to be annoying, but I've never institute that with him.

Years ago, I was having an intense phone telephone call with a friend. I was unhappy about something in my life and I was talking to whoever would listen, as I did quite often when I was younger. I was at a loss for words, trying to cease telling my friend what had happened, shut to tears. Somewhen my friend said into the silence: "Come up on man, there's gotta be more to that story."

I laughed similar you do when a sob'southward been stuck in your throat. Nosotros both said in unison, "I'm on pills hither." I felt improve.

Read all 12 essays from the Warm Blanket series here.

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Source: https://www.cbc.ca/arts/there-s-gotta-be-more-to-that-story-finding-solace-in-the-delirious-beauty-of-mitch-hedberg-s-jokes-1.5952288

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