
FEBRUARY 25TH, 2003
BEHIND
THE WHEEL

"Mr.
Traffic" Kenny Morse, who teaches at Improv Comedy Traffic School in
Burbank, also
hosts radio and cable television call-in shows about driving. Morse has a
manic, in your face comedy style.
If a student begins to doze in class, he uses a megaphone.
For These Comics, It's Always a Tough Crowd
Views
differ on whether comedic traffic schools offer performers a path to success.
But there's little doubt students are a challenging audience.
By Hugo Martin, Times Staff Writer
Talk about a comedian's nightmare.
That is the driving question at the dozens of
comedy traffic school throughout the state. In the last 20 years, traffic
schools that attempt to incorporate humor have proliferated like oversize SUVs
on the Santa Monica Freeway. They go by such names as Comedy for Less Traffic
School, Fun N Cheap Comedy Traffic School and Great Comedians Traffic School.
In Los Angeles County, nearly one out of every
three traffic schools touts itself as comedic. It's a testament to how desperate
most prospective students are for a few laughs to alleviate the tedium of a
typical traffic lecture.
But if you expect to find a truly great comedian
at a traffic school, some talent agents and comedy club owners say, you have a
better chance of finding a courteous driver on the San Diego Freeway.
"I've never heard anyone say, 'You've got
to see this guy. He is brilliant. He is playing at a traffic school,' "
said Rich Super, an agent who works with such comedians as David Brenner, Shawn
Wayans and Judy Tenuta.
Bruce Smith, a booking agent with Omnipop Talent
Agency Inc., said traffic schools are probably the bottom-rung gig for
comedians.
"I can't picture a good comedian lowering
themselves to that level," he said.
He speaks from experience. Smith attended a
comedy traffic school a few years ago but said the teacher's act was so lousy --
including a bad Madonna impersonation -- that it felt like an eight-hour jail
sentence.
Has any successful comedian ever started out as
a traffic school teacher?
"I've never heard the term 'traffic school'
used in this place," said Dean Gelber, manager of the Comedy Store in
Hollywood, an incubator for the careers of such noted comedians as David
Letterman, Robin Williams and Arsenio Hall.
But traffic school owners disagree. They say
comedy traffic schools have become a testing ground where struggling young
comedians can try out new jokes and hone their skills in front of the toughest
audiences in show biz.
Michael Marino, a comic who has performed with
headliners such as Carrot Top and Andrew Dice Clay, is among those who have used
the traffic school classroom as a practice stage for his act.
Although his career now seems on track, Marino
said, he still teaches at the Improv Comedy Traffic School once a month to keep
his skills sharp.
"It's a great experience," he said.
"I recommend it to all comedians."
For some comics, traffic school has become what
a job waiting tables is to many struggling actors. Sadly, the pay is not much
better than waiting tables. Some traffic schools pay teachers as little as $10
an hour, without tips.
Still, some comedians have made the leap out of
traffic school and into show business.
Joey Randall, founder of Fun N Cheap Comedy
Traffic School, said he is now trying to replace two teachers, one of whom he
says left to work on a television series and another who left to work in movies.
"We are the springboard for a lot of
people," he said.
But even by traffic school standards, the humor
at comedy traffic schools can be hit and miss. Although some traffic schools
insist that all teachers have some professional stage experience, the standards
at other schools are a joke.
"There are some out there that will hire
you if you can just tell a joke," said Randall.
To receive a teaching certificate, all traffic
school instructors -- whether comedians or not -- must pass a written Department
of Motor Vehicles test. The examination tests the applicants on the state's
driving laws, not on the rules of good joke-telling.
Larry Newell, a Los Angeles area resident who
has attended traffic school several times, said he suffered through one of those
unfunny comedy traffic schools about seven years ago.
A onetime child actor, Morse is not a
professional comedian, but he has taught the class for 15 years. He also hosts
radio and cable television call-in shows about driving.
Morse has a manic, in-your-face comedy style.
Throughout his class, he likes to shout out, "STUPID!!!" to explain
why a driver might, say, honk at a police car or speed through a school zone. He
is not above using props. If a student begins to doze in class, he arms himself
with an annoyingly loud megaphone.
But comedy is a subjective art form. Not
everyone appreciates a poke at the French or a jab at country music.
Copyright 2003 Los Angeles Times