The Straight Man

February 1, 2024
3 mins read

Words by Shelton Hull 

‘My Show, Also My Life’ returns Jan. 29

 

It was mere days ago that I interviewed comedian Ted Brown, the writer, director, producer, editor and also the star of “My Show, Also My Life,” which has the unique distinction of being a show that is actually fresh, and actually new. True originality in our densely oversaturated media landscape is way harder than you think, but Brown has somehow managed to do so, almost entirely by chance.

 

The show, also his life, is unscripted. It basically involves Brown walking around as his own sort of one-man “The Truman Show”, wearing a body-cam on his chest and carrying a second camera on a selfie-stick type gimmick, augmented by at least one smartphone, sometimes two. He narrates events in a drowsy, slightly nasal monotone, the kind of voice you’d hear in court or on a PBS pledge drive.

I spoke with Brown on a Monday night about two weeks ago, and we were doing the same thing we always do on Monday nights: sitting at a high-top on the front patio of Rain Dogs awaiting the start of Hot Potato Comedy, one of that bar’s trademark open-mic features, hosted in the back room by another homie Chris Buck. That same venue would host the world premiere of season four, episode five of “My Show, Also My Life” the following week. Even though I am writing this before that event, I can look into the future and attest that I was there, and a good time was had by all.

“My Show, Also My Life” is an experiment in its form with historical antecedents dating back past the rise of reality shows and creation of vlogs, all the way to the very first selfies. He comments on the decaying facade of 20th century capitalism, a dead model that remains the standard by which we define. One feature of the show is a sort of pop-up window called the “Brand Scanner,” which is often deployed to mock certain brands but just as often to promote independent businesses, including a wide variety of the creators he’s encountered, here and elsewhere.

A possible misnomer, earlier in this article, was possibly my referring to Brown as “the star” of his show. Of course, he is … but also not. Whereas most performers doing such a project would truly make it all about them and their wacky antics, Brown is much more comfortable in the role of observer, narrating events as they unfold around him, finding humor in the more innocuous aspects of his life. This comes through more clearly when he’s on the road, having filmed on location in Europe and Mexico over the past year. In fact, our interview took place the night before a trip to Peru, the details of which will be seen in season four, episode six of “My Show, Also My Life.”

 

It may surprise you to learn that a professional comedian who spends so much of his show, also his life, walking around, often interacting with total strangers, documenting the minutiae of his own existence in maniacal detail with at least two cameras going at all times is, in fact, quite shy. But so am I, and that’s fine. This was a bonding moment in our conversation, as we discovered that we are both shy people who deliberately chose career paths that forced us both to develop certain methods to better facilitate the socialization process, and those methods eventually became second nature. These very similar but also very different life paths converged at that table on that patio. We both found this funny, but not enough to actually laugh at. 

 

Past episodes of the show can be viewed on his YouTube channel, which is oddly named “lorem ipsumeriam.” What could that possibly mean? Actually, it literally means nothing, or about as close as you can get to pure verbal nothingness. “Lorem ipsum” are the first two words of a passage of randomly assembled Latin words used to help with old-school typesetting and new-school graphic design. Interesting choice, for a guy whose own format of choice is itself a sort of blank slate, a slate on which dreams and nightmares can be projected side by side. That is his show, and also his life.

 

https://www.youtube.com/@loremipsumerian 

https://www.instagram.com/lorem_ipsumerian/ 

 

Shelton Hull has been writing for Folio Weekly since 1997, but his resume goes back even further. He has written for almost every newspaper, magazine and zine in Northeast Florida, as well as publications like Orlando Weekly, Narrow GNV, Creative Loafing Tampa, Charleston City Paper, Ink19 and The Atlantic.

He currently writes the "Folio Weed" column, which he created in 2018; he remains one of the widest-read and most influential cannabis writers in the world today. He also compiles material for "Weird Wild Stuff" column, and he previously wrote the legendary "Money Jungle" column for Folio Weekly from 1999 to 2009.

He is a regular contributor to "First Coast Connect" on WJCT, as well as the Jacksonville Music Experience. He is a co-host of "The Contrast Project" and the "Bold City Civics" podcast. He is also a co-founder of the record label Bold City Music Productions. He can be reached at sheltonhull@gmail.com.

Current Issue

Recent Posts

SUBMIT EVENTS

Submit Events

Advertisements

Sing Out Loud Festival

Date

Title

Current Month

Follow FOLIO!

Previous Story

February Concerts

Next Story

Comedy- February

Latest from Feature

October Soapbox

Do you ever have something you’re itching to say but you’re too afraid to do so? Scared you’ll get canceled over the candid conversations you have in the privacy of your own home or mind? Is there a secret that you need to let go to finally feel released? Well,

What We’re Reading October

Djibouti  Read by Harry Moore Author: Elmore Leonard     Genre: Crime Fiction           Published: 2010 An American documentarian and her multi-skilled assistant arrive in the African nation Djibouti in order to document the rising wave of piracy that has afflicted the region, only to find

Bricks and Bouqs

BOUQ To media outlets in Jacksonville for fact checking and reporting the real news. Contrary to what Dean Black of the Duval GOP says (in this issue!), we appreciate your dedication and determination to get the story and get to the truth. (More on Black in a minute.) To Bishop

Dear Dumbs,

Dear Dumbs, Boy, do I have something juicy for you two. My husband and I live in a really cool neighborhood. We’ve lived here for 15 years. About a year ago our next door neighbor sold his home. He sold it to a single woman. She’s very attractive and professional.

Combined Minds

Why do we love being scared & lore behind haunted houses Words by Ambar Ramirez & Carmen Macri Carmen: We won’t bore you with the details you should already know if you truly are a “Folio” fan (wink wink), but with Halloween right around the corner, let’s chat a
July 5th Cleanup
GoUp

Don't Miss

Your New Podcast of the Summer

Words by Emily Cheyne Podcasting has been around for awhile,

Podcast Picks

Words by Su Ertekin-Taner “Pops on Hops” For Barry