Jump to content

Tom Rhodes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Levisah (talk | contribs) at 16:41, 5 July 2012 (→‎Material). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Tom Rhodes
File:TomRhodesMic.jpg
Rhodes in Joshua Tree National Park, Calif.
Born (1967-01-14) January 14, 1967 (age 57)
Washington D.C., U.S.
Mediumstand-up, television
NationalityAmerican
Years active1984 - present[1]
SpouseAshna Rodjan (2011-present)
Notable works and rolesMr. Rhodes
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno
Comedy Central Presents
Viva Vietnam: A White Trash Adventure Tour
Never Mind the Buzzcocks (US Version)
Kevin Masters Show starring Tom Rhodes
American Drug War: The Last White Hope
Tom Rhodes Radio
Websitetomrhodes.net

Tom Rhodes (born January 14, 1967) is an American comedian, actor, host, and travel writer. He is now known for his international appeal and for performing across five continents.

When Comedy Central began in the early 90s, Rhodes became the first comedian spokesperson they signed with. Much of his commercial success came during this time. He was later the star of NBC's Mr. Rhodes, Dutch Yorin Television's Kevin Masters Show starring Tom Rhodes and Yorin Travel, and made numerous appearances at international comedy shows, such as Montreal, France, Vancouver, Aspen, Sydney, and Melbourne.

His podcast Tom Rhodes Radio often features other comedians or people he meets while traveling. He writes for The Huffington Post Destinations section and often documents his travels on his YouTube page.[2]

Career

Stand Up Comedy

Rhodes was introduced to stand-up at age 12 when his father took him to a local DC comedy club to see his Uncle Bob perform. Because Tom was wearing a Washington Redskins jacket, another comedian pulled him up onstage and interviewed Tom as if he were the Redskins football coach. He claims this was the moment he fell in love with stand-up comedy. He also idolized his favorite Uncle Bob, who influenced his sense of humor and the way he talked. At the age of 17, Tom took a fake ID and auditioned at the only comedy club in Orlando, The Funny Farm. Throughout his junior and senior year he did shows every weekend in Orlando and branched out to one-nighters all over the state of Florida. After graduating from high school in 1985, Tom went on the road. At 19, Tom won "The Funniest Person in Central Florida" contest. The grand prize was the opportunity to perform at the Comedy Store in Los Angeles, California.

Rhodes had a chance meeting with Jay Leno at a jazz club called Cheek to Cheek in Winter Park, Florida. Tom was not old enough to get in the club at the time, so he waited by the backstage door for the opening act to walk out. When they did, he stuck his foot in the door and watched Leno's show through a crack in the curtain behind him. When the show was over, Leno discovered Tom and impressed with his curiousity, took him backstage and let him ask questions about comedy and what it takes to be a comedian. Part of the advice Leno gave was that great comedians should be living in New York or Los Angeles to better seize performing opportunities on stage and TV. On his first apearance on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Rhodes reminded Leno about this meeting which Leno recalled.[3]

Rhodes took Leno's advice and moved to New York City. He spent, what he describes in interviews, as the worst year of his life living in the Washington Heights neighborhood of NYC "like a dog" with no money and very few comedy sets in the city. Instead, he was performing mostly one-nighters in New Jersey and Long Island. Eventually he got a break when he was booked as a headliner at his first quality club, the Punchline Comedy Club near Atlanta, Georgia.

At 22, Tom moved to San Francisco, which he called "the Jerusalem of stand-up comedy," with the sole purpose of growing and strengthening his craft. At the time, San Francisco was a beacon for creative comics in the early 90s. He became friends with other up and comers there such as Margaret Cho, Marc Maron, Dana Gould, Patton Oswalt and Greg Proops. During this time, Tom got noticed and began appearing on shows like An Evening at The Improv, Comic Strip Live, Caroline's Comedy Hour, and MTV's Comedy Half Hour. While in San Francisco, he performed as the opening act at concerts for James Brown and The Everly Brothers. [4]

Tom Rhodes is featured in the 2010 book ¡SATIRISTAS!: Comedians, Contrarians, Raconteurs & Vulgarians[5] written by Paul Provenza, Host of Showtime's The Green Room with Paul Provenza and featuring photos from San Francisco photographer Dan Dion. The book also includes interviews with George Carlin, Eddie Izzard, Trey Parker and Matt Stone.

File:Tom Rhodes on Comedy Central Commercial.jpg
Tom Rhodes with long hair in his popular Comedy Central commercial from the 90s.

Comedy Central

After an appearance on Comedy Central's Two Drink Minimum,[6] Rhodes was signed to a one-year development deal, the first stand-up to sign with the young station. He filmed several comedic rant commercials. These were shot in a jail cell and edited like a music video, a format popularized in the early 90s with Denis Leary's MTV rants. Comic Marc Maron, a personal friend of Rhodes, hosted Short Attention Span Theater during this time. On an episode of his WTF with Marc Maron podcast he confessed that during their Comedy Central days, he was jealous of Tom's commercials. He said that after he complained "like a little bitch" to the network, he was able to get an image piece on the station just like Tom.

Rhodes said that his time on Comedy Central was a positive one. "They were just starting out [as a station]," he said. "They didn't have these signature shows like South Park, Politically Incorrect, and The Daily Show. It was really like being a junior filmmaker; I could do whatever I wanted! They loved me!"[7] Rhodes explored this creative license when he hosted and wrote Viva Vietnam: A White Trash Adventure Tour. Viva Vietnam was a docu-comedy and Tom's first television travel show. He chose Vietnam because the country had just opened up for tourism in the early 90s and he had always been interested in Vietnam due to his father David, a decorated Vietnam war helicopter pilot veteran. He wanted to bring humor to something that was otherwise bleak in American history. Viva Vietnam aired in 1995 on the 20th Anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War. Rhodes explored the country, pulling stunts such as setting up a Slip N Slide on China Beach.[8]

In addition to commercials and Viva Vietnam, Tom was often interviewed or featured in other Comedy Central shows, such as Comics Come Home, Politically Incorrect and The Daily Show. As a spokesman, he was utilized by the station for special segments or events. A few of these included going up in the Budweiser Blimp and interviewing players at Superbowl XXVIII in Atlanta, Georgia; interviewing Shaquille O'Neal in the Dream Team II as they prepared for the 1994 FIBA World Championship and the 1996 Olympics; and a week on the H.O.R.D.E. tour, in a bus sponsored by Levi's Jeans and Comedy Central, along with Blues Traveler, Sheryl Crow, Joan Osborne, The Black Crowes, and Ziggy Marley. These segments usually aired during commercial breaks.

Rhodes shot two Comedy Central Presents, which aired in 2001 and 2009, respectively. Both specials were filmed at The Hudson Theatre in New York City. Featured comics are allowed to choose their own unique backgrounds for their episodes. For the first one, Rhodes chose Leonardo da Vinci's study overlooking Florence, Italy. For his second, Rhodes requested a background featuring the great monuments of the world, including Colossus of Rhodes (the inspiration for the title of his third CD), to be bunched together.[9][10]

Television

Rhodes starred in NBC's Mr. Rhodes during the 1996-1997 fall lineup. It was his first primetime television show and lasted for 19 episodes, although 2 episodes were left unaired. It followed The Jeff Foxworthy Show at 8:30 p.m. on Monday nights. People Magazine gave the show an 'A-' in their "Picks & Pans" section, calling Rhodes a "gifted standup comic" and the show "a Welcome Back, Kotter for the gentry."[11] Rhodes has gone on record saying his time on the show was only about six months of his life, but the affect it had on him was immense. The Orlando Sentinel reviewed his sitcom unfavorably, mostly critiquing his acting. [12] During filming, Rhodes said that the constant jokes about his long hair[13] and his inability to focus on stand-up, started to get to him. When the show ended, he used the money he earned to live comfortably in New York City again and concentrate on comedy. He called this his "NBC Artists Grant."

Rhodes had a relationship with Dutch actress Anniek Pheifer, and moved to the Netherlands with her. The relationship ended, but it jumpstarted his involvement in Dutch television. He hosted the talkshow Kevin Masters Show starring Tom Rhodes. The show ran on Dutch Yorin television for two years beginning in 2002.[14] The producers of the show wanted an American to host the show and give his take on Dutch culture. The name Kevin Masters was a generic one to use until they found an actual host. Tom's audition for the show featured his normal stand-up routine and was selected as the best by producers. The show was quite popular in Holland and Rhodes was akin to David Letterman in the Dutch late-night talk show world. In addition to Dutch celebrities, Tom interviewed American celebrities, as well. Since there is no censorship on Dutch television, Rhodes was able to smoke weed with Tenacious D at an Amsterdam coffee shop and Steve-O stapled his scrotum to his leg in full uncensored nudity. Rhodes lived in the Netherlands for five years.

In a fourth season episode of Insomniac with Dave Attell, Attell visted Amsterdam with the intention of experiencing the Seven Deadly Sins while there. As the host of Kevin Masters Show starring Tom Rhodes, Rhodes represented "Envy," since Attell was envious of his cushy job in such a liberal town. Rhodes took Attell to some of the hottest night clubs in Amsterdam where Rhodes was often surrounded by adoring women. This added to Attell's envy of Rhodes.[15]

When his talk show ended, Rhodes began hosting a travel show Yorin Travel on the Dutch television station Yorin. The format was fitting for Rhodes, who was starting to gain international appeal. It was also reminiscent of the travel show he did for Comedy Central in Vietnam. For a full season Rhodes filmed travel segments all over South America and Europe, including Peru, the Champagne Region of France, Saint Petersburg, Russia, Wales, the Dutch Caribbean, Aruba, Curacao, and a special Beatles tour in Liverpool, England.

Rhodes appeared on the premiere episode of Red Light Comedy - Live from Amsterdam hosted by Russell Peters. On the episode, Tom does regional material specific to Holland, such as calling Antwerp "Hand Throw City" and about marrying a Dutch woman.[16]

Radio

As of 2009, Tom Rhodes has been producing his own podcast, Tom Rhodes Radio, which features conversations with comedians, Tom's family and friends, and unique people he meets on his travels. The episodes are casual conversations between Tom and his guests with a comfortable feel. The podcast is an extension of the interviews Tom has done for his television shows and travel DVDs. Episodes are released on itunes at least once or twice a month.

Travel Blogs & DVDs

Rhodes travels with a toy Elvis doll and takes pictures of the doll in various places around the world. The pictures can be seen on his website. Some of the 80 pictures include Elvis at historical monuments and cities, such as the Lincoln Memorial in Washington DC; Mount Rushmore South Dakota; Valley of the Temples in Siciliy, Italy; Big Ben in London, England; Pyramid El Castillo in Tulum, Mexico; Tokyo, Japan; the Grassy Knoll in Dallas, Texas; Times Square in New York City; The Great Wall of China in Bejing; Sydney Harbour in Sydney, Australia; the Berlin Wall in Germany; the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco; the Alamo in San Antonio, Texas; Machu Picchu in Peru; Thailand; Dubai, United Arab Emirates; Antwerp, Belgium; France; Aruba; Greece; and Argentina where he visited with family on his mothers side.[17]

He became a travel writer for The Huffington Post in 2011, documenting his various travels.

Personal life

Rhodes was born in Washington DC to Sara Rhodes (née McCollough), from Buenos Aries, Argentina, and David Rhodes, an insurance salesman from Washington DC. He has two older brothers and a younger sister. On his podcast with his Uncle Bob, Tom explained that since his family is from DC, that they have "a certain amount of blackness to the way they speak" and that he takes a lot of pride in that. He attended Oviedo High School in Oviedo, Florida.[18] He married Ashna Rodjan in April 2011.[19]

Material

Rhodes paces around the stage a lot and holds his microphone in a loose wobbly way. It's a relaxed style he once called "a temple dance to honor the spirits of the universe." His pacing grew from a combination of things. First, he moves like a boxer naturally (he boxed at age 13 and often does jokes about it). Second, he is a fan of tennis player John McEnroe who advises to "Play the net," which Tom applies to the stage, and third, he received some advice from a comic when he was just starting out. "[He] gave me some advice when I first started out. He said, “Sh*t in all four corners of the stage”. Simple, but what it means is that you should cover all areas of your stage, and ever since that advice I’ve always made sure in every show I...sh*t in all four corners of the stage," said Rhodes. Rhodes recognizes that some people have called his style annoying but that it is not something he can help anymore. [20]

Rhodes' comedy is observational and political. He is involved with Sacred Cow Productions and Stand Up! Records. He is a fan of Richard Pryor and Bill Hicks.

Television & Film

Discography

References

  1. ^ "Bio Page - TomRhodes.net".
  2. ^ "Tom Rhodes YouTube Page".
  3. ^ "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno imdb".
  4. ^ "IMDb Biography".
  5. ^ "¡SATIRISTAS! Book Trailer on YouTube".
  6. ^ "Tom Rhodes on CCs Two Drink Minimum with Jake Johannsen".
  7. ^ "Episode 158 - Tom Rhodes on WTF with Marc Maron". {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  8. ^ "Viva Vietnam on Rhodes' YouTube".
  9. ^ "Tom Rhodes' CCPresents #1".
  10. ^ "Tom Rhodes' CCPresents #2".
  11. ^ "People Magazine - Picks & Pans - September 23, 1996 - Vol. 46 No. 13".
  12. ^ "Rhodes and Foxworthy: Dumb & Dumber Duo".
  13. ^ "Entertainment Weekly - Something So Right sitcom review (mentions Mr. Rhodes and the long hair)". {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help); Text "url+http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,294592,00.html" ignored (help)
  14. ^ Savage, Todd. "Dutch Interview about Kevin Masters Show". Expatica.
  15. ^ "Amsterdam Insomniac Episode imdb".
  16. ^ "Showtime's Red Light Comedy - Live from Amsterdam: Episode 101".
  17. ^ "Elvis Around the World - tomrhodes.net".
  18. ^ "IMDb Biography".
  19. ^ "IMDb Biography".
  20. ^ ""Rhodes to somewhere: An interview with Tom Rhodes" UK Interview 2010".

External links

Template:Persondata