>> When you're connecting, and
it's going well, and the, like,
audience is with you, especially
when it's a new joke.
Like, I mean, you know, you do enough
shows; you know what works and what doesn't.
But whenever you have a new idea, and you try
it for like the first time or the second time,
or you've been working on it for like two weeks,
and that joke's been struggling
for like two weeks.
You adjust it every time.
It's getting a little better,
but it's still not there.
And then, that first show,
where it just hits as hard
as all the other stuff, that's always exciting.
But performing and writing with friends.
And everything else about it is horrible,
but those two things keep you going.
The standard heckler that everyone imagines
as the heckler that always is like, "You suck.
I can do better," stuff like that.
And that very rarely happens
that confrontationally.
Usually it's someone, bachelorette party
that's a little drunk and talkative.
But they're usually like -- most where
I've noticed it, they're with you,
but they're just over-agreeing and talking
out loud, like they think it's a television.
So, most people, after you respond
like once and twice and like kind
of play with them, they'll stop talking.