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Next Deep Night is Live 3/13/19

One of the most delightful aspects of producing Deep Night with Dale, is working with my talented guests and finding amazing illustrators to design the posters for the shows. Now, usually these posters get circulated digitally, but I often print up a few and keep them in the Deep Night archives. This month’s Deep Night poster features artwork by New York-based artist Katherine Lam. She sent a few rough ideas, and I loved all of them (from moody interiors of modern apartments to Dale looking out into a rainy night) but the one that lept out at me was the one featured here – with the large pigeon looming in the background and Dale looking like the next star of True Detective.

Dale might not be solving any crimes (or will he?!) on the next live show on Weds, March 13th at The Slipper Room – but you should definitely come out to see the show which features an amazing lineup of comedians and writers that I have been eager to get on the show for years. Join Dale and his guests Todd Barry, Monroe Martin, Mallory O’Meara, and Alex Song. Plus Cornelius Loy will be playing the theremin and 96B will be filling the tiny stage with movement. Tickets are available here: http://www.slipperroom.com/event/1828043-guest-event-deep-night-dale-new-york/

For more on Katherine Lam, visit her website: http://www.katherinelam.com/

Deep Night with Dale Launches 2019 with Coast to Coast Shows!

Deep Night with Dale turns 10 this year, and to celebrate we’re kicking things off with back to back shows on both coasts! First up, we return for our sixth appearance at SF Sketchfest with a brand new spin on the format that started it all. While the podcast is only ten years old, Dale really started his career in comedy in the basement at Cafe Du Nord as part of the Killing My Lobster Kabaret, seventeen years ago. Variety shows are in his bones, so he decided he’d assemble an all-star roster of comedians and interesting people to put on a variety event like no other. With a focus on the future, Dale’s welcoming old friends and new for the first ever Deep Night with Dale’s Vortex Variety Hour as part of SF Sketchfest. Ticket and information lives over on sfsketchfest.com. The lineup includes a very special surprise guest, The Templeton Philharmonic, Francesca Fiorentini, Sureni Weerasekera, a new work from Peter Sinn Nachtrieb, a visit from the long-lost Comics of the Future, music from Agouti and an interview with future-expert, Rose Eveleth! Plus a short video from Cole Kush. Sunday, January 13th 8pm. At Piano Fight.

Then Dale returns to NY with the first live show of 2019 – an extraordinary episode of Deep Night featuring guests Maria Dizzia (Orange is the New Black), X Mayo (The Daily Show with Trevor Noah), Katie Hannigan (The Late Show with Stephen Colbert), and musician Vera Sola (new album Shades). Plus we have CUSHIONS playing music and movement throughout by The Deep Night Dancers, 96B Dance Theatre. Info on that one up on deepnightshow.com.

Artwork here for the show in SF, by the fantastic Maria Nguyen.
Full poster shown below:

DEEP NIGHT BACK TO BACK COAST TO COAST SHOWS

DID YOU MISS DALE?! He missed you. And he felt the bomb cyclone and the earthquakes and he said – you know what, my audience needs a little touch of the Deep Night! Convinced you were summoning him to both the East and West Coasts, Dale’s planned two big shows for you to enjoy.

First up- SF SKETCHFEST! This marks our fifth time going to the most esteemed of sketch comedy festivals (sixth if you count an appearance with Killing My Lobster in the early aughts). On Saturday, January 13th at the reasonable comedy hour of 5:30pm – Dale will bring an all new show full of wonderful guests and hot sounds and lots of talk about ancient Egyptian curses. Join him as he welcomes all-time favorite Michelle Buteau; new fave Becky Braunstein; and the witches behind the cult radio sensation, Astral Projection Radio Hour. Plus music from Bay Area superstars, Yea-Ming and The Rumours! It’s happening at the cozy winter hangout, Piano Fight, in the city’s glorious Tenderloin District. Find out how tender things can be when Deep Night with Dale returns to SF Sketchfest in this FREE show! But you should still RSVP – cause that’s a good thing to do. And you can do it here: https://sfsketchfest2018.sched.com/event/CzHL.

THEN NEW YORK CITY – I CAN’T QUIT YOU!! Time to sneak back through the portal and the back alleyways of Laguardia for another show at the world famous Slipper Room on the Lower East Side. Along with the fantastic Cornelius Loy on theremin, Dale will welcome Dulce Sloan, Yedoye Travis, and the groovy sounds of Friends Who Folk (Rachel Wenitsky & Ned Riseley). Tickets are available now and would it be a good idea to pick some up? IT WOULD! This show will also feature some surprises! Don’t miss out. Weds, January 17th at 8pm/doors at 7pm. 167 Orchard Street. The turtlenecks are being pressed as we speak for these two exceptional events. Tickets for NY show here: https://www.slipperroom.com/event/1615030-guest-event-deep-night-dale-new-york/.

Artwork from the poster for the shows by illustrator to the stars, Vicky Leta. A better view here: POSTER FOR JAN SHOWS

DEEP NIGHT SEASON 10 BEGINS 9/20!

Friends. Dale’s looking forward to seeing you at The Slipper Room on Weds, September 20th at 8pm for the live Season 10 premiere of the Deep Night podcast. Dale’s got a terrific lineup of guests – most of whom are still covered in body glitter after attending the recent Emmy Awards. We’re finding comedy in dark places with Matt Rogers (Las Culturistas), Rae Sanni (The President Show), Kristen Bartlett (SNL), and Melinda Taub (Full Frontal with Samantha Bee). For tickets and more info visit:
http://www.slipperroom.com/event/1519641-guest-event-deep-night-dale-new-york/.

All of these guests are helping to define and contextualize and offer relief from our current political moment. Meanwhile – Dale is fresh off his stint as spiritual consultant to the catering staff at some of NY’s hottest fashion events for New York Fashion Week. His turtleneck is pressed, his owlmulet gleaming, and his demons are mostly in check. Don’t miss this opportunity to celebrate the tenth season of the show and to learn more about essential oils from a licensed regional distributor.

And after this live event tune into the podcast for more great conversations. But really – come to the event. Dale promises a good time.

Photo of Dale looking especially mystical by the one and only Sandy Honig.

DALE ENTERS THE DEEP NIGHT WITH ALL-NEW SEASON!

Dale Radio presents Season 9! Dale’s gone through some big changes this summer, and now he’s on a path to master the mystic arts. Knowing Dale, that means he’s probably going to get himself trapped in a dimension of crystals. Join him beginning Weds, September 28th as he launches DEEP NIGHT WITH DALE! He’s like an occult Charlie Rose! He’s like Leonard Nimoy on In Search Of. Amazing guests, weird energies, and a lot of black turtlenecks.

Tune in on www.daleradio.com or subscribe and never miss an episode on iTunes. Also available on SoundCloud, Stitcher Radio, and Google Play.

DEEP NIGHT kicks off with a live season premiere episode featuring Dale’s guests Julee Cruise (Twin Peaks), Rachel Chavkin (Natasha, Pierre and the Great Comet of 1812), Dan Kennedy (The MOTH), and Rosebud Baker (Netflix Campfire Podcast). Featuring music all evening by theremin virtuoso, Cornelius Loy. It’s happening at The Slipper Room in New York City, Wednesday, September 28th at 8pm. Doors open at 7pm. Tickets are available by clicking through this link: http://www.slipperroom.com/event/1301549-guest-event-dale-radio-deep-new-york/.

For more info on the guests and to listen to every episode from all nine seasons, visit www.daleradio.com.

Why I’d Be Great as SNL’s Announcer

Update 9/18: We wish Darrell Hammond all the best and congratulate him on securing the dream gig. Thanks for all the votes of confidence. I’ll be out on the sidewalk with my microphone if anyone finds themselves in need of an enthusiastic voice tinged with sadness.

Original post:
Last night I couldn’t stop thinking about SNL. Specifically the job of announcer that is now vacant (or not – they probably filled it by now, so forgive how foolish this will look the day they discuss who got the job) following the passing of the legendary Don Pardo. I was thinking how, even though I am very happy where I am career wise (hi co-workers and board members!), that the only job I’ve ever really wanted is the announcer gig at SNL.

So here are eight reasons that I would be perfect for a job that is probably not even open. (And I fully acknowledge that a non-white guy voice is probably a more progressive path forward and I would applaud that choice forever, but hey, a kid’s gotta dream, right?)

1) Born to it. I am exactly one day older than Saturday Night Live. Given my erratic sleep schedule that first night, I probably watched it. I might not have been able to hold my head up, but I knew something monumental was happening, the culture had shifted. I knew exactly one day without SNL and that day was awful, and I never want to live in that world again.

2) Experience. I’ve been cast as an announcer in things since middle school. My voice changed in the sixth grade, long before the rest of me. So I was this scrawny big haired kid who resembled Egon from Ghostbusters with a voice like Barry White. It did not help me with the ladies, but I’m hoping it helps me secure a job where I get to say the names of celebrities and Maroon 5.

3) Stay the course. Let’s say you want someone who sounds exactly like Don Pardo. I can be that person. I even have a recording of that happening. Take a listen to this interview wherein I really go to town on a bunch of 1990s bands. If Fine Young Cannibals ever get back together, I’m your guy. My take is in this bit at around the 12 min mark:

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4) Oh, Canada! My family has deep roots in our great neighbor to the North. I get what’s going on, Lorne! Also – thanks to my great grandfather and his somewhat ill-advised, possibly con-artist like decision to fly a broken plane from New England to Toronto – Canada has an Air Force. You’re welcome!

5) 40 More Years. I’m almost 40. You’re almost 40. I got 40 left in me and I am willing to give em all to you. Like a John Legend song, you are my end and my beginning. You want consistency? I am loyal, I will never leave to star in a movie, I have no other aspirations beyond being your announcer, and I will never do less than 110%.

6) NYC based. I gather Don lived in the desert somewhere. Those plane tickets must have been expensive. I live in Brooklyn, overlooking the pier and a bunch of garbage trucks. So yeah, I am here to stay. I mean, if you cover a MetroCard, I’d be grateful, but also NOT A DEAL BREAKER!

7) Almost 40. Yeesh. I’m almost 40, which probably means I’m older than everyone in the cast, and probably always will be. What can I bring to this youthful group? I can fill that adorable/authority figure/cool Uncle spot without any aging make up. I’m almost bald on my own!

8) Easy to work with. Ask anyone. I’m a champ. People genuinely like me. (I think.)

Obviously, I heart SNL pretty bad. Probably no other television program has had such a direct impact on what I chose to do and the things I’ve thought possible in comedy and in life. I’ve seen almost every episode. I stuck with it during some cast transitions that didn’t always work, and I have celebrated when a sketch knocked it out of the park. I love the failures as much as the successes. I have had Toonces the Driving Cat theme stuck in my head for weeks. I bought the It’s Pat My Life Exposed book and the Stuart Smalley book. The 15th Anniversary calendar hung on my wall for many years more than it should have. And while this starts to sound like maybe I care too much – that’s probably true – but I hope this also conveys the deep level of respect I have for this comedy institution. And c’mon – how fun would it be to be their announcer? Ack! Can’t sleep.

How I Learned to Live in New York

I was thrilled to be a part of the July edition of the fantastic How I Learned Series, hosted by Blaise Allysen Kearsley (who you may see as a guest on Dale Radio very soon!). It was a terrific night full of stories about living in New York told by Bob Powers, Choire Sicha, Maris Kreizman, Blaise, and Sasheer Zamata. I thought I’d include the text of my story here, so you can see what it looks like before I perform it. It always changes slightly when I get up there – but here’s the blueprint that I work from:

HOW I LEARNED TO LIVE IN NEW YORK: PRAYERS FOR NYC
I used to get panic attacks every time I came to New York. Like crippling, stomach wrenching completely doubled over in agony, panic attacks.

I did not grow up in a city, but outside of one. And when I say I grew up outside of Philadelphia, I mean I grew up in an Andrew Wyeth painting. Stone houses, watercolor trees, white curtains blowing inside old barns. And we never went into the city, because my dad worked there all day doing construction so when he came home – after spending hours in traffic, he never wanted to go back in. Also I was not incredibly eager to go to the city, because I watched Fat Albert, and therefore I knew all about city life, which mostly involved hanging out in a junk yard and learning hard lessons about vandalism. And even though my best friend in the world was a heavy set African American kid with a funny nickname I just did not see a future for myself as a radiator player. I know it’s just a hot water bottle and a funnel and a heater, but I have no idea about the fingering on that thing. I imagine it’s like the bagpipes, which I tried to play once. Very difficult.

For awhile I did end up living in small cities – little training wheel places like Providence and San Francisco – and all throughout that time I would visit NY. Usually around Christmas time, and usually to try and go on what I always thought was a date. And what every woman I was on the date with thought was a meaningful way to deepen our friendship. Which is wonderful. I love friends. I have SO MANY FRIENDS!! I can’t say I blame them, because on every one of those ill-fated romantic journeys, I ended up desperately trying to find a public restroom or requesting that we just spend another minute sitting on a bench outside in the freezing cold because jut moving made me nauseous. How good can a date be when you spend forty minutes waiting in line for the toilet at the Union Square Barnes & Noble? Not very is the answer. Not very.

So then I met a woman in Los Angeles and she hated it, because she worked in reality TV and LA has enough going against it that if you work in a medium that requires you to outfit a cul de sac of homes for a program called Baby Borrowers, in which yes – actual human babies are loaned out to unfit teenage couples questioning their relationships – you’re going to hate it. She had lived in New York before and wanted to go back, so I said – give me a year. Cause I was going to marry her, and I did not want our first year of wedded bliss to be spent hunting for a men’s room at Jay Street Metro Tech. After the year was up, we came to New York for a job interview and to find an apartment.

Not being from here, I rented a car from Hertz at their 48th and 2nd Avenue location in Manhattan, in order to best explore rental units in Carroll Gardens. In retrospect, I think it was divine intervention that led me to midtown. Now I don’t know if I was just ready for it, or if New York was ready for me, but something happened when I slid behind the wheel of that baby blue Buick LeSabre. Again – I had been here many times – gotten lost on the subway – been felled by humidity – walked too far in new shoes, walked too far in too much humidity in new jeans– I had been chafed, blistered, and broken by this city and never wanted to live here. But when it was clear that I was going to – when the great Gods of Manhatta discovered I would soon be one of them, that I had given everything up to merge with the greater city-mind – I felt my fears melt…away.

We eased out of the subterranean garage and turned onto 2nd Ave – and I hit the gas. Normally, I am a very cautious driver. On this day, I accelerated through yellow lights, I swerved around public buses, anticipated taxi drivers turning left, bikers – I was Neo in the Matrix – I was on my way to see a woman named Edith from Staten Island who was going to show us a rental property next to the BQE! I was in a full on Billy Joel eating a bagel standing next to an open fire hydrant New York State of Fucking mind!

And I think in that moment – that moment of being accepted into the city’s own strange system, that I realized that this – this whole thing – is – underneath it all – a faith based organization. It was this overwhelming calm that I had given myself over to whatever was going to happen that made things ok.

And it made me also realize that to survive here one had to say little prayers every day. I would wager that we pray here more than anyplace on earth. If you had a drone that you flew over the city to absorb prayers it would explode cause it could not possibly contain them all. Just – boom. Like a super villain whose power it was to absorb stuff– they can always be defeated by simply giving them too much of whatever it is they seem to suck up.

So with this high prayer quotient in mind, I thought I’d share just a few of the prayers I say– just to get through a single day– in New York.

I pray that speck of dirt on my bed sheet does not have legs and feed on human blood.
I pray there’s no snake in the toilet.
I pray there’s no roach in my shower, because my friend Rebecca who, mid-rinse thought she was pulling a hair out of the hole in her sponge and instead it was an antenna.
I pray the cart has cinnamon raisin bagels, why do they always run out of cinnamon raisin bagels?
I pray the lights I see at the end of the tunnel do not belong to the trash train, cause I’m running late, because I like to watch the erotic tension between NY1’s Pat Kiernan and Jamie Shupak Stelter.
I pray that no one opens that metal subway door with the alarm. Why is that alarm there. No one cares about that alarm.
I pray I don’t have to help someone with their stroller down the stairs, not that I wouldn’t, but I don’t like being put in the position of being a bad person when I choose not to do it.
I pray that the subway car is not full, but also not empty, cause that means someone is using it as a toilet.
I pray that I don’t make eye contact with a beautiful person, because I have nothing to offer.
I pray that I don’t have to look in someone’s crotch and/or armpit.
I pray that the three guys on the F Train will realize that there’s not enough time between Delancey/Essex and 2nd Avenue to sing the entirety of This Little Light of Mine.
I pray that it’s ok that I never give money to singers, dancers, trumpet players, or people handing out old sandwiches. When I do decide to give to someone, it’s going to be big. I’m saving up. I want to make a difference. Just not every day.
I pray that any of the following won’t fall on me while walking to the office: plates of glass, crap from a pigeon, a whole pigeon, air conditioner water, an air conditioner, a person holding an air conditioner.
I pray that I will be exhaling when I pass the garbage behind Bobby Flay’s new restaurant. There should probably be a whole sub category of smell prayers – but let’s just say the same applies to the Gowanus, Abercrombie and Fitch, and the live poultry place on my corner.
I pray that I make enough money.
I pray that my rent doesn’t go up.
I pray that my wife doesn’t ask me how much that bottle of whiskey cost.
I pray that they never find out how much I write stories and comedy bits at work.
I pray that lunch will cost less than $15, and that root beer is not fattening, and this salad will taste better.
I pray that my lane number is called next at Whole Foods.
I pray that the free sample guy at Trader Joe’s doesn’t try to strike up a conversation with me.
I pray for my family’s safety and that keeping my wallet in my front pocket all these years was the right choice, cause now all my jeans have a giant wallet pattern on the front so that every mugger knows where I keep my wallet.
And finally I pray that we are in fact all connected and that we’re all working together in some cosmic way forward and that doing shows in front of 2 people is just as productive as doing shows in front of 100 and that everybody who says “ just stick to it” is right and that someday someone’s going to go back through all 12,500 tweets and realize what a genius I was and that someone will come to their senses and stop selling slim fit shirts and that my single friends find happiness and stop asking me what to do with their lives, and that they never move the fireworks back to the other side of the river and that I don’t have sleep apnea, and we all get a good night’s sleep cause we have to do this all over again tomorrow –
AND THAT’S HOW I LEARNED TO LIVE IN NEW YORK.

-JB, 2014.
Photo of me by Jesse Chan-Norris.