Kill Tony Sal Vulcano, Dom Irrera
Guests: Sal Vulcano · Dom Irrera
Lineup
Set: Joe discusses how men complain about handjobs and how they're now obsolete, using an analogy about eggs at Denny's. He shares personal anecdotes about his first sexual experiences in high school and at a laser tag facility.
Interview: Tony and the panel interview Joe about his first sexual experiences, including details about a laser tag elevator encounter and massage parlor visits. Discussion touches on his work in social media and articles for Screen Rant.
- Men ruining handjobs like they ruin everything, comparing to eggs at Denny's
- First handjob during freshman year in high school, perfect timing
- Joe admits to getting a handjob in a laser tag facility elevator
Set: Maddie jokes about dating more gay men than straight men and claims she's turning them gay. She discusses the societal benefits of gayness and mentions a friendship with a lesbian.
Interview: Tony asks about Maddie's background in comedy (one year), her work in property management, and her delivery style. The panel discusses her comedic strengths and challenges her on her American history degree.
- Dating seven or eight gay guys and converting them, improving streets
- Befriended lesbian, suspected she had feelings for her due to proximity
- Dom coaches Maddie on simplifying her premises and delivery
- Sal jokes about Maddie's outfit combining 49ers and Raiders fashion
CJ Kelly
Set: CJ discusses being white trash, his father beating him up over stolen weed, and breaking into his dad's gun safe using tape on a fingerprint scanner. He gets punched for his actions.
Interview: Tony and panel critique CJ's set structure and joke construction, suggesting he work on punchlines and efficiency. They discuss his work at restaurants and his tendency to call out, getting fired.
- Dad catches weed theft with gun safe, uses fingerprint tape trick
- Sal tells CJ he looks like an old baby right on stage
- Multiple panelists provide detailed coaching on joke structure and pacing
Jer D
Set: Jer discusses moving from Montana to LA, his daughter's career day where she said being unemployed would be easier, and buying her an electric guitar after missing Christmas shopping.
Interview: Tony discusses Jer's background in Montana, his rich girlfriend who is an environmental engineer, his love of hunting predators, and his recent move to LA. Panel explores his political views and substance delivery preferences.
- Daughter asked if being unemployed would be easier than comic
- Bought electric guitar late for Christmas gift, got her for birthday
- Dom critiques Jer for not believably delivering daughter's quote
- Jer discusses faking overdose at Bonnaroo music festival
Set: Max discusses fathoms as a unit of measurement, noting they are six feet long and don't convey proper depth. She jokes about word efficiency and how 'fathom' packs more punch than 'two yards'.
Interview: Tony reveals Max is part of the Hoover vacuum family, discussing her grandfather Larry Hoover's involvement with the company and their charity foundation. They discuss her work as a landscape architect and her breakfast preferences.
- A fathom is six feet, packs more punch than two yards
- Reveal that Max is part of Hoover vacuum company family
- Dom praises Max's efficiency and focused writing in set
Set: Ali discusses loving New York because of Law & Order SVU, making jokes about the show's episodes and victim categories. She delivers a minute about the show's formula and her childhood.
Interview: Tony discusses Ali's trip to New York, her performance of Law & Order material, and whether she fell in love or met anyone. They discuss East Coast vs West Coast comedy differences.
- Thought Special Victims Unit meant victims who were special
- Mom called her special growing up, asked to use different word
- Ali makes astute observation about East Coast vs West Coast comics
Set: Temma performs a ukulele-accompanied song about getting into dating, mixing comedy with music. She discusses being half-Black, half-Jewish and wanting meaningful connection, not just casual sex.
Interview: Tony discusses Temma's background in comedy (started March 2009, actively working four of eight years), her use of ukulele (one year), and her day job as a stand-in. Panel debates whether ukulele helps or hurts her comedy.
- I'm black from waist down, Jewish from nose up mix
- Ukulele song about dating on apps, seeking real connection
- Dom critiques opening joke as hacky Catskills-style comedy
- Panel debates whether ukulele is a strength or creative crutch
Set: Arthur performs Black comedy about his whitesounding name, jokes about slavery with dark humor, and shares stories about getting high on dabs and sitting on toilet for 15 minutes thinking he had diarrhea.
Interview: Tony corrects that Arthur is a service writer at RV dealership, not a salesman. Extensive interview covers his job frustrations, customer service, and detailed story about receiving oral sex in a Honda Civic near Ventura.
- Name Arthur Hamilton sounds like slave owner, friend points out
- Got so high from dab, sat on toilet 15 min no poop
- Arthur literally runs past Justin Walker who was pulled after him
- Extended story about receiving oral sex in car near Ventura
- Jeremiah notes Arthur and he should switch names due to appearance