• 7 months ago
Comedian Shayne Topp joined TheStreet to discuss the surprising power of failure.

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Sports
Transcript
00:00 Did you grow up watching any comedians that sort of like inspired you?
00:04 Yeah, absolutely. My family was obsessed with Saturday Night Live, but in particular,
00:09 older eras of Saturday Night Live, we would watch a ton of reruns of. In particular,
00:16 my favorites were always Chris Farley and Phil Hartman. A lot of my comedy,
00:21 a lot of my characters are very clearly inspired from them. And other than them, though, I often
00:29 when I was younger, and even still, I would stay up and I would watch Conan O'Brien every night.
00:34 I loved Late Night with Conan O'Brien. When he was on The Tonight Show, I went and saw a couple
00:39 of his shows live for the short run he had. And I've really been a fan of everything he's done.
00:46 I love his humor, how he's willing to play the bad guy, but you can tell that he has so much
00:52 love for the people around him. So those are absolutely my inspirations, but there's many.
01:00 And how do you practice and perfect your craft as a comedian? And how has it evolved over time?
01:07 It's something you never really perfect. You're kind of always, I don't even know if it's you're
01:12 improving, but you're also just always evolving and changing as a comedian and a performer.
01:18 When I started, I'd say like 10 years ago, I feel like I was the one who was always the
01:24 insane one on screen or on stage. I was bringing the volume, I was bringing the chaos. And over
01:33 time with such a big cast at Smosh and people who play such different roles, what I feel like
01:38 I've developed into is also being able to play the voice of reason sometimes, and being the one who's
01:44 kind of helping support the crazy people around me and acknowledging how crazy their performance is
01:52 and communicating that to the audience. You've played many characters in Smosh's comedy sketches,
01:58 especially in the Try Not To Laugh challenges. Some characters off the top of my head,
02:04 Courtney "Freakin'" Miller, Tom Cruise. How did you come up with these different characters?
02:10 A lot of them kind of begin with the costume and you just go out there. With Try Not To Laugh,
02:19 there's no time to think or plan, so you kind of have to just go. And from that comes some of the
02:25 best stuff. Courtney "Freakin'" Miller in particular, I created that character because
02:32 Courtney Miller, my castmate and my wife, was sick that day. And so we needed someone to hop
02:39 in for her. They were like, "Shane, do you want to hop in?" I go, "Yeah, let's find a wig. I'll
02:43 just be Courtney. And let's just not acknowledge it." So I put on this wig and the cameras roll,
02:49 and I decide to just play the character like a WWE wrestler, the most aggressive human on the
02:55 planet. And it just kind of evolved from there with every yes and. Other people are saying
03:02 something about my character. I go, "Yep, that's true now." And we just kind of keep piling it on.
03:06 Every character I play is basically a snowball effect. And it's some of the most fun that we
03:11 get to have at Smosh because we're making so much content. We're making videos week after week
03:15 that there's so much opportunity to let these characters grow. And a lot of them are years
03:21 old now, and they didn't become what people remember them as until I'd been playing them
03:27 for like a year or two. It's a blast. And I've told our fans like they play a part in creating
03:34 these characters because I read the comments. I see their reaction. I see what they like about
03:38 the character. I see what they're assuming about a character. And then I let that play into it
03:44 as well. It seems like you have your hands in multiple projects. You're on a podcast,
03:50 you do live events, and you're acting in multiple sketches. How do you prevent or manage burnout
03:56 as a content creator? You know, I am still figuring out the solution to that. It's tough.
04:04 YouTube is really, really hard in the sense that you really don't get a break. You kind of have to
04:10 keep making content or else if you go dark, it's scary. No YouTubers really do that. I mean,
04:17 it's a scary thing. I think it's finding ways to rely on my other castmates is a great way. We
04:25 have a great ensemble. And there are days where I come in and I tell my co-hosts on our podcast,
04:31 right? Tell my castmates, you know, for filming like a Try Not to Laugh or something big energy.
04:35 I've let my castmates know like, "Hey, I'm tired today. I'm not bringing my A-game. I'm not feeling
04:42 like I'm bringing my A-game. I need to rely on you guys today." And they'll be like, "I got your
04:46 back." And it's really great to have a team around us. What are some challenges that you guys have
04:54 encountered doing improv live? Because I know it's not easy. The easy thing is when things go
05:02 wrong and improv is usually the best. As long as you're confident and you roll with it and you
05:08 don't let it stop you and you don't go, "Oh, is this show? Is this funny? Is this entertaining?"
05:14 As long as you commit 100%, committing 100% to a failure is arguably the funniest thing in the
05:21 world. How do you feel about the growing popularity of people becoming content creators?
05:26 And what advice would you give them? I guess the main piece of advice I would give to people,
05:31 and I say this having just revealed to our audience and a lot of people that I was in a
05:36 relationship and I'm married and I didn't tell anyone for years, is keeping that line between
05:45 what is entertainment and what is your personal life. Because people as content creators,
05:53 a lot of people don't have like a thing that they're doing. Their entertainment source is
05:59 themselves as themselves, which is great. A lot of people are really entertaining.
06:04 But it's a pull to be like, "Oh, anything can be content. I should talk about my whole life and I
06:10 should just share my whole life and that's entertainment and I'll get more engagement
06:14 from that and that brings in more brand deals. That brings in all sorts of stuff." And that's
06:18 very enticing. But I think it also is something that if you don't stop and check it,
06:23 you'll lose track after a while. And then that's how you see content creators. They kind of operate
06:30 almost like these bursting stars where it's like, bam, they're flashing and they're gone suddenly.
06:34 And that might be because people just lost interest or they got burnt out so fast.
06:40 I think drawing that line very early on and deciding, "This is my life. This is not for
06:46 entertainment. And this is what I plan on doing to entertain people." And allowing your online
06:54 persona to be a little bit of a persona instead of being 100% genuine because I just think over time,
07:01 that for your own sake can get a little dangerous.
07:05 [silence]

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