The Weekday Rush Comedy Spotlight (February 2): Jim Gaffigan

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Jim Gaffigan

Instagram: @JimGaffigan

Twitter: @JimGaffigan

Find Tickets: https://www.ticketsmarter.com/4958916/jim-gaffigan

Nearest Tour Date: Tuesday March 29th at the Alabama Theater in Birmingham, Alabama

James Christopher Gaffigan was born in Elgin, Illinois on July 7, 1966, the youngest of six children born to charity worker and fundraiser Marcia Miriam and banker Michael Ambrose Gaffigan. He is of Irish descent, with his family’s surname originally being Gavahan. As a teenager, Gaffigan watched Saturday Night Live. He attended La Lumiere School in La Porte, Indiana, where he played on the school’s football team. He attended Purdue University for one year, where he was a member of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, before transferring to Georgetown University’s McDonough School of Business, where he graduated in 1988 with a degree in finance. He played football at Georgetown and Purdue. Although he hated studying finance, he worked as a litigation consultant for a short time after graduating and “was horrible at it”. Gaffigan moved to New York in 1990 to pursue comedy, a move that was  inspired by his admiration for fellow Hoosier David Letterman.He found a job in advertising, and he would work during the day and take acting classes at night. During this time, he was cast in Blockbuster Video’s “Entertainment Squad” series of commercials. His career began in earnest when a friend from the class dared him to take a stand-up seminar that required a live set at the end. He fell in love with stand-up, and began to play comedy clubs nightly—after his evening acting classes—until the wee hours of the morning. He was often found sleeping on the job; his boss had to wake him up to fire him. For the first seven years of his career, he tried various styles, ranging from angry comedy to impressions and voices. Also, live comedy was in decline following its peak of the 1980s, further affected by the increased popularity of cable television. After periodically auditioning for The Late Show with David Letterman for six years, he then had a successful stand-up routine on the show in 1999, and his career took off. Gaffigan’s style is largely observational, and his principal topics relate to laziness, eating, and parenthood. He is famous for his Hot Pocket routine, which was inspired by a commercial he saw that he mistook for a Saturday Night Live sketch. Also, during his routines, he will sometimes perform soliloquies by using a high-pitched voice and—in the third-person—deliver negative feedback on his own performance, such as after making a diarrhea joke in his 2012 special “Mr. Universe” using the voice and saying “Really, he’s using diarrhea jokes?” He says “that inside voice is my connection with the audience”. In an interview with the Duluth News-Tribune, he explained that the voice was developed over time, beginning as a teenager when he would disarm people by talking for them in their presence. He also used it as a way to fend off hecklers earlier in his career, when he says that comedy clubs were more combative. He cursed early in his career, and he added cursing to his comedy album Doing My Time, at the request of his label, in the hopes of drawing more teenagers. However, he has largely removed profanity from his routine, as he feels that his subject matter doesn’t lend itself to cursing and that it reduced the effort he put into crafting his jokes. In 2004, Gaffigan’s stand-up material was featured in Comedy Central’s animated series Shorties Watchin’ Shortie. In October 2005, he filmed a live Comedy Central special that aired for the following January, and became the comedy album/DVD Beyond the Pale. The routine consisted primarily of material regarding food and American eating habits, and the comedian unknowingly predicted a future menu item at Dunkin Donuts—the ‘glazed donut breakfast sandwich’—while commenting on the future of America’s eating habits. His 2009 album King Baby was also a television special filmed in Austin, Texas, at the end of his “The Sexy Tour.” Comedy Central released King Baby on DVD. In a March 2009 interview on Anytime with Bob Kushell, Gaffigan defended his naming of the tour, stating that he thought it would be funny that parents would be unsure about whether to bring their teenage children to the show. Four years later, on March 14, 2013, Gaffigan was named the “King of Clean” by the Wall Street Journal. On February 25, 2012, Gaffigan taped a one-hour stand-up special—Mr. Universe—at the Warner Theater in Washington, D.C.; it was nominated for a Grammy. He announced that, based on the business model used by Louis C.K.’s Live at the Beacon Theater, the stand-up would be available online through his website for $5, with 20% of the total proceeds going to the Bob Woodruff Foundation, an organization that provides support to military veterans. In 2012, he was among the top-ten grossing comics in the US, according to Pollstar. Gaffigan filmed his 2014 comedy special titled Jim Gaffigan: Obsessed at Boston’s Wilbur Theater on January 18, 2014. Obsessed premiered on Comedy Central on April 27 becoming the most watched stand-up comedy special of the year for the network. The accompanying album, also titled Obsessed, debuted at number 11 on the Billboard 200 and number 1 on the Billboard Comedy Album charts. 2015 saw him embark on a headlining tour, culminating in a winter show at Madison Square Garden. Gaffigan has performed stand-up to support charitable causes as well. In 2002, he was part of a United Service Organization event at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base. Gaffigan performed at the 2013 Stand Up for Heroes charity event benefitting the Bob Woodruff Foundation alongside fellow stand-up comedians Jerry Seinfeld, Bill Cosby and Jon Stewart. Gaffigan also performed at the 2013 CNN Heroes event, which celebrates everyday heroes doing extraordinary work around the world. In May 2014, Gaffigan performed at the Make It Right Gala, an organization founded by Brad Pitt, which builds sustainable homes and buildings for communities in need. On September 26, 2015, he performed at the Festival of Families, a Catholic event held in Philadelphia. Gaffigan was the only comedian on the bill at the festival, and the event was visited by Pope Francis. The event had more than one million attendees. As of June 2016, Gaffigan was the most popular comic on all of Pandora.com with over 647 million spins.In 2016, Gaffigan embarked on his Fully Dressed Tour, performing in the United States, Canada, and the UK. Gaffigan has appeared at the “Just for Laughs” comedy festival in Montreal, Quebec, numerous times. The 6-time Grammy nominee (Best Comedy Album) returns to Netflix with COMEDY MONSTER.  America’s most prolific comedy everyman hilariously jokes about everything from Billionaires to bikers.

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