HomeBlogThe ContestHow to EnterThe ShowContact Us






Via Rail Canada

Archive for February, 2010

Registration is Closed

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Registration for the 2010 Yuk Yuk’s Great Canadian Laugh Off is closed, but excitment is building as the shows are mere weeks away from starting in Toronto.

Visit the newsroom frequently, as we get ready to post the names of the local laugh-off winners, and reveal the names of those who have been selected to compete by random computer draw.

The laughs start at Yuk Yuk’s in Toronto on March 19th and continue with daily shows until the $25,000 grand prize is awarded on March 28th.  To order tickets call 416-967-6425 or order online.

Catching Up With Mark Little - The 2009 YYLO $25,000 Winner

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

mark-little 

Last week, we caught up with Mark Little, winner of the $25,000 grand prize in the 2009 Yuk Yuk’s Great Canadian Laugh Off, to see what he’s been doing with all that cash. 

YYLO: How has the Yuk Yuk’s Great Canadian Laugh Off changed your life?

ML:It’s a lot easier to focus on writing and performing my own as-yet-unprofitable material with $25,000 in the bank, so that’s been the main change: financial peace of mind. Temporarily. I guess it’s similar to how musicians/artists/writers must feel when they get government grants. Yuk Yuk’s is my Canadian Government. Make what you will of that analogy.

YYLO: What have you been up to since your big win last year?

ML:So, so much. My main focus has always been sketch comedy, and in the last year my sketch group Picnicface worked with Mark McKinney on developing a sketch series for the Comedy Network. It’s currently in the second stage of development, which, if I know anything about the Canadian TV industry, means it should go to air sometime between 2011 and never. We also wrote a book of lies about Canada for Harper Collins. They have the first draft; we’ll see if they publish it. We’re marketing it as a nice Christmas present for people who like to be lied to.

The most exciting thing is a feature-length movie script that Andrew Bush, Scott Vrooman and I wrote over the last year called Roller Town. We all had to learn how to roller skate for the trailer we shot. That’s the last major thing I did after winning the Laugh Off: buy rollerskates.

YYLO: How did you get into comedy?

ML: I did improv before anything. I got into it in high school through the Canadian Improv Games, which is this amazing organization that spans the country. Nothing glib to add to that, Mark? No, I’m good.

YYLO: Have you always been funny?

ML: I always made my friends laugh, but I’d get intimidated by the real class clowns with their spot-on velociraptor impressions. I think there’s an O.C. episode about that. I remember watching it and thinking, “You’ve captured my life again, O.C.”

YYLO: Where do you find your comedic inspiration?

ML:Other comedians get me real inspired, especially the balls-out original ones. Paul F. Tompkins blows my mind. That whole Comedy Death Ray crowd. Andy Daly. And sitcoms. Eastbound and Down, Seinfeld (still), Curb Your Enthusiasm, Peep Show. Especially Peep Show. Oh, and certain novelists, like the late David Foster Wallace. As for the jokes/sketches I write, the direct inspiration usually comes from things that happen to me — not things I do so much as things that are done to me. I don’t live life in any sort of active sense.

YYLO: If you were a fruit, what type of fruit would you be and why?

ML: I’d be a tomato. People would say, “I thought you were a vegetable…” and I’d be like, “Oh, did you?”

YYLO: What advice would you give to the contestants in this year’s laugh off?

ML:Advice? I don’t know. The judges are totally different in the early rounds compared to the finals. So… don’t get too down if you’re getting low marks from radio DJs? Nothing against radio DJs, of course. (Of course.)

I remember a friend told me that certain comics had an advantage in last year’s competition because they’d peppered their sets with a variety of judge-pleasing material: political bits, relationship bits, etc. Maybe that’s a good tactic, but all my stuff was pretty one-track and I did alright. So I guess my advice is don’t worry about tailoring your set to please the judges — be they radio DJs or, you know, not radio DJs.

ML: In response to your unasked eighth question: Big Mama’s House.

Making Shinan Govani laugh gives you a chance to win $25K

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Are you at the top of your comical game? If you think you can make celebrity judge Shinan Govani laugh, then step up and deliver your best line.

Shinan Govani, columnist for the National Post and author of Boldface Names, is Canada’s most celebrated gossip columnist. He’s currently scheduled to judge one of the semi-final shows on March 26th. If you want a chance to command the stage in front of celebrity judges like Shinan, you better register fast! Registration closes on February 21st – that’s in 3 days!

Register now and show your comical worth.

Laugh Off Buzz

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

The local Laugh Off contests are in full swing, but there’s still plenty of time to enter the random draw online. Who knows? You could walk away $25K richer!

Canada has been buzzing with Laugh Off anticipation. The contest has popped up in the Toronto Sun, Chronicle Herald, Durham Region News, Barrie Examiner, London Free Press and Shecky Magazine. This year’s Canadian Blog Award winner, Michael Morrison, also gave a special shout out for the contest.

Thanks to everyone for the support. It’s shaping up to be the best Laugh Off ever!

Time’s a ticking- YYLO deadline Feb 21

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Since we know that comedians have tendency to procrastinate, here is a subtle and tactful reminder that the 2010 Laugh Off deadline is February 21.

Watch out or it’ll sneak up on you and all your anticipatory laughter will be replaced by sad, sad tears.

Enter here.

Here’s 2009 Runner Up Mark Forward for a little comedic inspiration.

Here are some fun Laugh Off statistics:

Percentage of international contestants, YYLO 2009: Over 20%

Percentage of American contestants, YYLO 2009: Over 25%

Farthest commute, YYLO 2009: Zaid Barrakati, Amman, Jordan

Shortest Commute, YYLO 2009: Mark Forward, Toronto Local Laugh Off winner

Number of contestants detained at border, YYLO 2009: 0

Number of contestants detained at border, YYLO 2008: 1

Laughing your ass off: Priceless*

* Price does not include cost of admission to Yuk Yuk’s

We’re off and rolling!

Monday, February 1st, 2010

The 2010 Laugh Off is underway and we are receiving oodles of talented submissions from the funniest people all across the world!

Perhaps you shyer comics need a little persuasion? Luckily resident Laugh Off expert Fatima has put together a little video with you folks in mind.