Win Tickets to See Kinane, Funches and Braunohler in Athens, GA, on 3/28
This Saturday, March 28, Kyle Kinane, Ron Funches, Kurt Braunohler and more are doing a show in Athens, Georgia. We’ve got a couple of pairs of tickets to give away, and you can jump down to the bottom of this page if you want to see how to enter. If you’re wondering why these three comedians are doing a show together, when they could probably all headline in Athens on their own, keep reading, and then learn how to enter to win a couple of tickets.
So for the last few years the Slingshot Festival has brought some of the best indie rock, electronic and experimental music to Athens, Georgia. Slingshot isn’t just about music, though. Sure, big timers like James Murphy, Washed Out and Arcade Fire’s Win Butler are doing DJ sets, and Jamie XX, Prince Rama, Reptar and more are playing shows. It’s a multidisciplinary jam, though, with an exhibit of electronic and interactive art, a short film festival, and, since last year, a comedy night.
Kinane headlines the comedy show this year, returning to the town where he shot his latest Comedy Central special. Supporting him are Paste favorites Funches (from NBC’s Undateable) and Braunohler (well known for his skywriting pranks and regular appearances on @Midnight). Chunklet impresario and well-known heckler Henry Owings hosts the show, which also features the up-and-coming stand-up comedian Chad Cosby. The whole thing happens at the Morton Theater in Athens on Saturday, March 28.
We talked to Peter Wiley, a Slingshot organizer who curated the comedy night along with Ryan McManemin of the comedy record label ASpecialThing Records, about comedy, Slingshot and why Athens is a great town for both.
Paste: So Athens has a strong musical history, but not much of a rep as a big comedy town. Why is it important for Slingshot to have a comedy night?
Peter Wiley: Everything in Athens seems to be music related, it effortlessly winds it way into everything in this town, so much so that, to Athenians, music can seem like water or oxygen. I think, unlike music, comedy has this discordant, almost disruptive vibe to it. So in a way, comedy to a music town like Athens, or to a festival like Slingshot, is a necessary counterpoint to the music programming. I work in the music business and so music comes fairly easy to me, but the comedy world does not and over the last few years I, as I believe many people in this country have, have come to love what the comedy community is doing. Podcasts, playing outside of traditional comedy clubs (like Athens’ 40 Watt), stand-up shows at music festivals, all of this has culminated in a new comedy infrastructure. An infrastructure created by the efforts of comedians, with little outside help from established companies or industry. And so now, fans coming to festivals have come to expect the comedy show, which is cool.