John: If you like our videos, you’ll like the show that base of our comedy is always the same. Then when I was 12 or so, I got a little digital camera and started making videos and putting them on YouTube and just got obsessed. We’d stay up watching Adam Sandler and Will Ferrell movies. I loved going to Hollywood Video and renting a comedy with my dad and brother. I decided to opt for something more challenging. I could have done that, but I decided not to. Ben, what did you want to be?īen: I wanted to be in the NBA. John: The only time I didn’t want to do comedy was when I wanted to be Eminem. Weirdly for some reason, I just didn’t want to admit that I wanted to do the same thing my dad did. Martin: I wanted to be an archeologist because I liked “Indiana Jones.” I always gravitated towards and liked it. Did you grow up wanting to get into it, or not wanting to? Martin and John, both of your dads were comedy writers. I find myself doing a lot of sketches where I play a guy whose body is crumbling, but he won’t admit it. How did that come together?īen: That was just an idea I had right as the vaccine was coming out because that was all anybody could think about. The vaccine sketch got a lot of attention. Martin: The TikTok thing was kind of a side-effect of the pandemic and not being able to perform live. We did that until the pandemic, and then we got into more internet stuff. We did sketches in the loosest description of that word. John: Before the pandemic, we did a weekly show at this bar downtown, Von. People know your video sketches, but you started out doing live shows. We love “Hot Rod,” “Wet Hot American Summer,” John Mulaney. John: Our influences were really similar. What was the spark that connected you three? We actually had John playing a cow who didn’t speak for the entire show. We were trying to shoehorn this whole narrative into it. It was an overly complicated premise for a stand-up comedy show. “Please Don’t Destroy” comes from an act you had called “Please Don’t Destroy My Farm.”īen: It was this high-concept thing where I was in character as a businessman coming to destroy a poor farmer’s - Martin’s - farm. While listening to them may just break your heart in two, these songs will also remind you that you’re not *totally* alone in how you feel, which is somewhat reassuring, no? Ahead, all the best heartbreak and breakup songs from 2022 that’ll get you right in the feels.Q. No matter your current mood (or relationship status), they are must-listens for when you’re feeling weepy.įrom Shawn Mendes’s heartbreaking hit about his real-life split from Camila Cabello to Lauren Spencer-Smith’s viral breakup anthem that’s all over TikTok, this year’s saddest songs perfectly encapsulate feelings of loss, loneliness, and unrequited love-and damn, do they hit hard. ’Cause truly, what’s better than throwing on some sad tunes and having a good sob? The answer: nothing!! And while we were gifted some truly heart-wrenching ballads in 2021, the best sad songs of 2022 may just have ’em beat. As much as the world needs fun pump-up songs and sappy love songs for those times when ya need a pick-me-up, it’s also important to have music on deck for whenever you’re due for a cathartic cry sesh.
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