Comedian Paul Scheer Reveals Past Trauma in Touching and Hilarious Memoir
Photo by Jess Isaac
Paul Scheer’s first memoir, Joyful Recollections of Trauma, was pertinently named, and that’s evident right off the bat. Fans of the actor, comedian, and podcaster might expect to pick up a more lighthearted collection of stories, yet Scheer delivers something more meaningful. The book delves deep into the comedian’s life, offering an unflinching look at the trials and tribulations that shaped him. His ability to juxtapose his darkest moments with humor results in a memoir that is as emotionally jarring as it is entertaining.
I first took note of Scheer in the 2010s on FX’s The League. He plays Dr. Andre Nowzick, the awkwardly hysterical member of the fantasy football league who just wants to be accepted as cool by his friends but instead often hands them fodder for jokes. Soon after, Scheer popped up as a guest on Kumail Nanjiani and Emily V. Gordon’s old videogame podcast The Indoor Kids (RIP), which led me right to How Did This Get Made?, a bad movie podcast he co-hosts with the outrageous Jason Mantzoukas (“GEOSTORM!”) and incomparable June Diane Raphael, to whom which Scheer is married.
I quickly devoured a modest back catalog of HDTGM episodes as I scrubbed who-knows-what off toilets at my day job as a janitor for a concert venue. This was back in the early days of podcasting, the Wild West, as it were. It was so early, in fact, that I had to download episodes onto my hard drive and load them directly onto my iPod. It became a comforting show with guaranteed belly laughs. As soon as I caught up with what was available, I listened to them all again. I appreciated Scheer’s enthusiasm for movies, whether good or bad. He wasn’t just a comedic actor but a genuine fan of the medium he was lucky enough to work in. It’s one of the handful of shows that have been on this long that I never get behind on.
Over a decade of episodes, Scheer has shared anecdotes about growing up that have often surprised, delighted, and confounded his co-hosts. Fans of How Did This Get Made? are sure to enjoy reading some expanded pieces of Scheer lore in Joyful Recollections of Trauma, like when he worked at Blockbuster as a teen and set up a fake autograph session with a coworker’s friend just because she sort of looked like Jami Gertz from The Lost Boys.