Talk:Comedy's Dirtiest Dozen

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Fair use rationale for Image:Comedy's dirtiest dozen.jpg[edit]

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BetacommandBot (talk) 21:17, 13 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Content removed from article page[edit]

I removed the following content from the article page due to its original research, bias and lack of sources and peacock terms/weasel words:

a definite cult movie from stuart s. shapiro who also produced 'the killing of america'(?) (if wrong please edit this out)

in this writer's opinion one of the funniest movies about standup you will see. set in a comedy club in 1988 the film is just an observational piece of up and coming comedians performing before a live audience, notably featuring howard stern amongst others. the premise of the film is that it wished to document the performances of comedians deemed 'too hot for television' in that they questioned the mores and standards of the powers that be due to politics, content or language. bill hicks went on to appear on the david letterman show 11 times. in his 12th appearance, hicks' material went too far and excecutives from the show deleted the segment from the final transmission. hicks died soon afterward and letterman himself expressed great personal regret that mr.hicks wasn't dealt with better. some may say this film is a blasphemous, foul mouthed exploration of vulgarity. others will see it as a look into the raw world of comedic honesty with the role of fool shown up in its ancient context..one of challenging the safe and sanctified societal idiom and the validity of certain sacred cows by shining a light on the overlooked and holding a blowtorch to such paradigms. its merit therefore is in the eye of the beholder but for purely historical value the film rates highly.

The reason for it moving here is that it may provide a basis for a plot/film premise, but as it stands it's nowhere near good enough for the encyclopaedia. Booglamay (talk) - 16:07, 16 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]