What Happens in a Stand-Up Comedy Class?

If you’ve never taken a stand-up class, it’s easy to imagine one of two things:

  • either it’s terrifying
  • or it’s just people trying to be funny with no structure

It’s actually neither (if the class is good).

Here’s what really happens.


You don’t walk in and perform.

You start with:

  • exercises
  • prompts
  • identifying what’s already funny about your perspective

Most people realize they already have funny life stories — they just need shaping


This is the core of the class.

You:

  • write short bits
  • try them out
  • get feedback
  • refine them

You learn:

  • how to tighten jokes
  • how to structure setups
  • how to make things hit harder

Now it becomes about:

  • delivery
  • timing
  • stage presence

You start putting together a real 5-minute set


At the end:

  • you perform in a real comedy club
  • in front of an actual audience

This is the part that changes everything


  • how supportive the room is
  • how quickly they improve
  • how fun it becomes

And also, “I can’t believe I actually did that”


  • complete beginners
  • people curious about stand-up
  • people who want to try something new
  • people who have dabbled in comedy a few times and want to get better, faster

  • 6 sessions
  • small group
  • Manhattan location
  • graduation show

You don’t need to be funny to start.

You just need to start.