There's been a lot of talk of me being a one-man show but that's simply not the case. We win games when I score 40 points and we've won when I score 10.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I never imagined myself doing a one-man show. If I'm going to do one, I'd rather do one that breaks all the rules.
When I do stand-up, I'm basically doing a one-man show.
My goal when I make my show is to make a show for women. I don't make a show for men.
Most of the time when you're around the opposite sex, you kinda have to put on a show and not completely be yourself.
I enjoy being a singles guy. I enjoy commanding the stage with myself and an opponent. It's a different process when you're teammates. Especially with the way we work. We're very unselfish with how we work together in so many different regards. Not just what you see as the final product of the match. Just strategizing, psychology, teamwork.
If you're a single man and you happen to be in this business, you're deemed a player. But I don't see myself as a ladies' man.
I'm a one-woman man. Pretty much.
I experimented with my own one-man show a couple of years ago in Aspen when HBO used to have their comedy festival there. I called it 'A History of Me.'
I just do my thing and try each show to be more honest about why I am and who I am. It's quite tricky and actually nerve-racking to do that. It's kind of a happy train wreck.
In my own defense, I wrote a one-man show, and that to me was more where I fit.