The Accidental Comedy Fest Proves Cleveland Is No Joke
Ramon Rivas II Discusses Cleveland's Premier Comedy Festival
Photo courtesy of Ramon Rivas II; other art from Accidental Comedy Fest
Ramon Rivas knows what people think about his home town of Cleveland. “Every time I travel, when I tell somebody I’m from Cleveland they’re like, ‘oh, I’m so sorry,’” the comedian tells Paste. “Everyone has a preconception of Cleveland because it does exist as a pop culture reference point, in a way that Des Moines, Iowa, doesn’t.”
No matter how hackneyed Cleveland jokes are by this point, that bad rep still clings to it, as it does with many other Rust Belt cities that faded in the second half of the 20th century before undergoing a 21st century rejuvenation. A proud local son, Rivas and a handful of other local comedians are reclaiming Cleveland’s reputation through the annual Accidental Comedy Festival, which starts tonight, Aug. 30, 2017, and runs through the weekend at the comedy club Hilarities. One of countless local comedy festivals that have popped up throughout the country this century, Accidental is becoming a festival of note outside the 216 area code, as the now-LA-based Rivas’s burgeoning career and expanding industry connections have lured big names onto the schedule. This year’s headliners include Ron Funches, Dave Hill, Dan Soder, a live taping of Doug Benson’s Doug Loves Movies podcast, and more, with Rivas himself main eventing Saturday’s lineup. The rest of the schedule features some of the best up-and-comers in stand-up today, including Jak Knight, Mia Jackson, Kate Willett, Brett Druck and others. It’s about as strong of a collection of comedians as you’ll find outside the major megafests like Just For Laughs.
For Rivas, Accidental serves two goals. It highlights the city’s comedy community, which, despite growing rapidly over the last decade, still struggles for respect in its own town. It also acts as a de facto sales pitch for the city itself to the festival’s out-of-town performers. “It’s been cool to be able to bring people to town,” Rivas says, “and either through working with them at a club or bringing them in to these independent shows at rock venues and shit like that, getting to show them that there’s nothing that’s going to blow you away [in Cleveland] but there’s good food, good bars, good people. If you just stay in your hotel and don’t go experience the city, yeah, it’s going to be as shitty as you’ve had it built up in your mind. But if you take the time to go out and do anything you’re going to realize it’s a vibrant city that has stuff going for it. It’s cool to use comedy to bring people together from all parts of the city.”
Accidental’s roots stretch back to 2011, and true to the name, it wasn’t really planned to be a festival. “I did a comedy stage at an existing music and arts festival in Cleveland,” Rivas says. “It was, like, under a bridge, the Detroit-Superior Bridge, where the trolley system used to run. Cleveland hasn’t used the trolley since like the ‘50s. It was an interesting repurposed stage. The next year I was doing a comedy stage with that festival again, and I had Kyle Kinane and Neil Hamburger booked at other venues that same week, so I was like ‘oh, if I fill out these gaps I can push that out as an accidental comedy fest.’ So that’s how the name came about.”