Hi all -
I'm a 38 year old Canadian guy who wants to crack the British comedy industry. I'm hoping it's not a delusional goal. I make my living as an ESL teacher in South Korea and I'm hoping that from afar anyway I might have a shot at getitng some stuff published.
My mom's British and I grew up with a lot of British comedy. I was hugely influenced by Monty Python, the Adrian Mole books, VIZ comics and my favourite writer for years was Martin Amis. Weaned on the lyrics of Paul Heaton, Billy Bragg, Elvis Costello and Morrrissey. I would love to make a living writing comedy in Canada but I'm not sure my sensibilities jibe with the Canadian market. The country's been quite dumbed-down in recent years and the comedy that is popular there seems to reflect that in its blandness. Years back, it was great with SCTV, Kids in the Hall, but now the comedy is very soft. When I see shows like Peep Show (my absolute favourite) and Extras I realize just how far behind and conservative Canada currently is. I like my humour tar black and bilious. In Canada there seems there's an unspoken mandate that comedy shoudl first and foremost be nice.
I'm also a big fan of some American comedy productions. I love The Onion news site, Curb Your Enthusiasm, South Park (most of the time) 30 Rock, The Office and It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia. Oh ya Flight of the Conchords too. That was brilliant. I read a lot of fiction too and my favourite authors are George Saunders and David Foster Wallace.
I'm not really sure what my plan is at this point. I'm currently writing some comedic essays that I'm trying to publish and I'd like to get an agent a.s.a.p. I've got a journalism background but have struggled at thispoint to get my fiction published. I love sketch comedy too and I suppose what I'll do is publish some of my work on this site and ask you guys for your feedback. The one tricky thing is my work may lack some of the cultural references and use of slang that a British writer might be more at ease with. If you guys can point out any deficiencies my work might have in that particular regard it would be extremely helpful.
Looking forward to chatting to you all and I'm curious - any other non-Brits out there trying to crack the market from afar? I know it's a longshot but can it be done?
Thanks for reading....