Students in 鈥檚 freshman seminar on stand-up comedy have to do just that. The final exam is a five-minute routine in front of an audience.
While the students want to be hilarious at the final, the class is really about clear and concise writing. Without that, the funny will flop.
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Writing funny is a challenge
鈥淭hey have to come up with unique material that they鈥檙e presenting before an audience while also being funny,鈥 says Waltonen, better known as Dr. Karma, a continuing lecturer in the .
鈥淭hey come in for the fun and wanting to try their hand at comedy, not thinking this is going to be a challenging writing class.
鈥淢ost of them have never presented anything in front of people. I tell them at the end that they鈥檝e done the hardest public speaking they鈥檒l ever have to do.鈥
Pushing boundaries
鈥淣othing is off limits, but we talk about how to frame the comments properly,鈥 says Waltonen, who has done stand-up and is also an expert on and edited a just-released .
鈥淪ometimes a bad word just distracts the audience," Waltonen says. "They need to use it for a reason. Some are making jokes that are intentionally trying to push the boundaries, and that鈥檚 what good comedy often does.鈥
Usually they find out what works 鈥 and what doesn鈥檛 鈥 when they try out the material for their classmates.
鈥淭here鈥檚 immediate feedback from an audience, and that鈥檚 usually the best feedback,鈥 she says.
Big audience for the stand-up exam
The final exam 鈥 or show, take your pick 鈥 is held in a large classroom packed not just with the 15 or so students who are performing, but also with friends, a few parents and siblings. The room is buzzing loudly even before the fledgling comics send the jokes flying.
鈥淭hey told me they鈥檙e having a final in the next room,鈥 Waltonen says. 鈥淚 told them, 鈥楽o are we 鈥 and it鈥檚 going to be loud.鈥欌