Andrew Huberman· PhD
Some guys that are-- women, I'm saying, just people, that are very, very funny offstage just, they can't do that to an audience. They're funny to be around in life. But they're not performers.
The evidence is convergent. Multiple independent sources reach the same conclusion, the underlying mechanism is well-characterized, and even the field's most cautious voices treat it as worth doing.
Some guys that are-- women, I'm saying, just people, that are very, very funny offstage just, they can't do that to an audience. They're funny to be around in life. But they're not performers.
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Some guys that are-- women, I'm saying, just people, that are very, very funny offstage just, they can't do that to an audience. They're funny to be around in life. But they're not performers.
The difference is that, can he be that funny when it's just him with a microphone in front of people and take who he is in real life and be that on stage? That's ultimately the goal for every comedian.
Everybody who ends up being a good standup was super funny to somebody offstage years ago. Right, they just worked at it and they were able to translate it.