recommended
Good start, but then it gets ruined
Don't Believe the Hype
Great movie. Not sure what people expected but I found it highly entertaining.
View More...for anyone lacking the ability to change to something better. So bad that even the laugh track can't save it. Yes, the show is so bad they felt the need to include a laugh track. How he managed to get his own special is beyond me. His manager must have dirt on someone at Netflix. That's the only explanation for something this bad seeing the light of day.
View MoreIt's a train wreck. he is not funny, intelligent, clever or thought provoking. he goes out of his way to be as raunchy as possible but there is no point to it. No talent what so ever. he talks about subjects that people really don't want to hear about and gets bitchy when the jokes don't land and then blames the alt right because his reviews are in the toilet because he failure couldn't possibly be that he isn't funny.
View MoreI hate to say this, but this is not as good as the previous one or even as some of his podcasts or appearances. Some bits I've already heard on Conan and elsewhere he appeared, others felt overly long and acted out too much. I'm afraid being married and expecting / having a kid might have reduced his "psychosis" as he admits to trying to being less angry and stuff. It's really difficult to come up with 10 lines of review, so I recommend listening to his podcast for those who haven't until now.
View MoreA chicken and flip flops"Women will laugh and pee at the same time!" Jo Koy tells us in his latest special. Koy did not fail to leave the pants of some, a bit moister than when he started in, Jo Koy: Live from Seattle. Returning with his latest special since 2012. Jo Koy: live from Seattle is a perfect encore to his 2012 special "Jo Koy: Lights Out". Sticking to his self-Deprecating moderately wholesome style Koy steers us down a path of his childhood paralleled by comparisons of his own sons. Listening to Koy tell us how his father "only married his mother because he likes Chinese food" is funny, but hearing Koy respond that "mom's Pilipino" was far funnier. I found his creative sense of storytelling coupled with his unique enthusiasm enthralling, to say the least. Koy will not fail to keep you laughing the entire time. "A chicken and flip flops" professes Koy, is what a comedian in the Philippines makes per show. Watching a 1400-person audience cheer Jo on makes me think that he'll be bringing home more than a chicken and flip flops. Koy's family friendly-ish humor is fun for all and I would give it a solid 9 out of 10.
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