Local stand-up comedian Wayne Walsh hosts the Weekly Comedy Competition at 3rd Street Bar, 125 W. Third St., every Wednesday night at 9 p.m. Heโ€™ll also be performing at a new comedy event, Tahoe Comedy North at Pioneer Underground, 100 S. Virginia St., on Saturday, Feb. 26, at 10 p.m. And, to top it all off, he got engaged on Valentineโ€™s Day.

How long have you been doing stand-up comedy?

About eight years now. I had a couple of breaks here and there, but eight years.

Howโ€™d you get into it?

Actually, a friend of mineโ€”who I got to meet through working at the convention center, on-call banquet serving, a crap jobโ€”she did stand-up comedy, this older black lady named Josie Spadoni. I got to know her and she said, โ€œWow! Youโ€™re really funny. Youโ€™ve got two weeks to write six minutes.โ€ I didnโ€™t have a choice. She was like, โ€œYouโ€™re going to do this.โ€ And I went to my first open mic and kind of got hooked.

What was your first set like?

I think I said the word โ€œfuckโ€ like 287 times in six minutes, because I was so nervous. โ€œOh, and the fucking fucking and the fucking fucking fucking.โ€ Yeah. And it was at theโ€”at that time it was called the Speakeasyโ€”and they had an open mic there. It was just myself, Josie, two other comics, the bartender, my best friend growing up, and his wife. That was it. That was the entire room. That makes it even more nerve-wracking. Five hundred is way easier than five.

Whyโ€™s that?

Because then they become just a sea of people, you know what I mean? You donโ€™t notice the fact that theyโ€™re just sitting there staring at you. When thereโ€™s a whole bunch of them, it just makes it easier. They laugh easier.

How long have you been doing 3rd Street?

I took it over in July.

How does the event work?

Itโ€™s basically just an open mic, but we award the person who did the bestโ€”or brought the most friends, one or the otherโ€”with more stage time the following week. So, what we do is we have a bunch of people doing five-minute sets, and maybe a guest spot or two, but typically just the five minute sets, and then whoever won the previous week will do like 15 or 25 minutes.

How do you prepare for a set?

I usually know what Iโ€™m going to do before I go up. Iโ€™ll figure out what jokes I want to do and line it out. Iโ€™ll take into account what kind of audience Iโ€™m expecting and what jokes Iโ€™m going to do. If something pops up, and I have a chance to adlib off on a little tangent, thatโ€™s always fun. But I canโ€™t rely on that. A lot of times youโ€™ll have audiences that just sit there, and even when you try to get them to talk, they donโ€™t want to. The typical comedian banter doesnโ€™t work for me. I donโ€™t know why. People say itโ€™s because Iโ€™m scary. Iโ€™ll try to do that, โ€œSo, where you from? What do you do?โ€ And they act like Iโ€™m trying to interrogate them, like Iโ€™m trying to get them to rat out on their family.

How would you describe your stand-up?

Basically, just the really twisted little thoughts that come to me if I canโ€™t sleep or Iโ€™m bored at work. โ€ฆ [T]he worst possible thing that you could say at that exact moment is the kind of stuff that I find hilarious. โ€ฆ Weโ€™re actually in a hotel in Virginia City right now. We just got engaged last night.

No shit? Congratulations!

Thank you. โ€ฆ But thereโ€™s a joke I wrote recently. Weโ€™ve been seeing each other for about a year-and-a-half now. So people ask, โ€œWhen are you going to get married?โ€ โ€œShit, I donโ€™t know. Maybe never. Not for the typical reasons, but because I refuse to call the woman I love โ€˜my fiancรฉeโ€™ because I hate the French.โ€

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