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Demetri Martin is trying out something new on his latest tour: live drawing
Demetri Martin is trying out something new on his latest tour: live drawing

Boston Globe

time25-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Boston Globe

Demetri Martin is trying out something new on his latest tour: live drawing

'It's a game to me, and what's cool is that when I add my words to my drawing, it becomes activated differently,' Martin says. Advertisement On this tour, Martin also continues his quest for concision, with what may be his shortest joke yet: 'Fish fish,' a comment on the idea that aquatic creatures hunt and eat their seafaring brethren. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up (He confesses that his drive for efficient jokes — 'remove, remove' is his credo — is a challenge for filling an hour. 'It's not a great game, because I'm just making it harder on myself,' he says.) It's all in keeping with the man who once joked, 'Sometimes I think I overthink things. But other times I ask myself, 'Do I?'' Growing up on the Jersey Shore, Martin, 52, felt out of place in the macho, sports-driven world. 'I was the weird one,' says Martin, whose cerebral but silly one-liners often call to mind the sensibility of his early influences Steven Wright and 'Far Side' cartoonist Gary Larson. Advertisement 'I liked drawing and I was on the math team. I liked poetry and guitar,' he says. 'No one was doing that in my family or showing me those things.' The teenage Martin also found validation in puzzle books, which both suited and shaped his brain. 'I think somehow that became joke writing for me once I got into comedy,' he said in a recent video interview. 'When I watched comedy, I liked predicting punch lines — they were like puzzles for me.' Martin's solving skills also propelled him to Yale University, where he wrote Planning to become a lawyer, he earned a seat at Harvard Law but then switched to New York University for a full scholarship, only to drop out after two years to pursue stand-up. His breakthrough came in 2003 when his one-man show, 'If I,' won an award at Edinburgh Fringe. It showed off his quirky intellectual humor, but it also included more personal musings. Doing a nightly show about himself was too much. 'I couldn't handle that,' he reflects. 'With my one-liners, even if there's a personal connection, the jokes mean I'm at least one step removed from them.' (This reserve is why he is 'one of six comedians in America without a podcast' as he explains on this tour.) While he built his stand-up career, he wrote for ' Advertisement The show also taught him discipline and the need to find different twists and structures. 'It was like joke-writing boot camp,' he says. 'I learned to try to stay a step ahead of the audience.' That often means staring at a joke or drawing, saying, 'What am I missing?' 'My wife always teases me, because I say that so much it's like a weird mantra — it's the existential thing, but also just asking: Why can't I figure this out? It must be right in front of me.' Martin works constantly on new material, in part because he has learned that when he doesn't, rust accumulates and can be hard to shake, but also because his brain is always revving on high. 'I was at a dinner party once and said, 'I wouldn't say I'm tortured' and my wife started laughing. I meant I'm not depressed,' Martin recalls. 'But she said, 'Your brain is a non-stop barrage and you can't stop.'' But he argues that comedy has helped him embrace that. 'I direct the stream into something positive and productive by writing jokes — I get to have a job but also prevent my thoughts from turning back on me and analyzing this and that.' When those deadpan jokes take a second or longer to land, it can be tough to tell if they worked. At a recent show in Brooklyn, he did a bit about realizing all phone numbers having a negative number in it. The crowd didn't respond much and Martin backed away. When I mentioned that it would be helped by an actual example, he said he usually does it that way: 'When I try to give people my number, I say it's 240, negative 3567 or whatever. But last night I got discouraged so I didn't do the tag. But I should.' Advertisement After that show, I overheard a group of friends walking together and recounting his jokes, still processing some of them. 'It's comforting to hear that,' Martin says, explaining that he forgets that his jokes can take time to process and so he's sometimes thrown off when people don't laugh in the moment. Martin still likes challenging himself. 'I'm still searching for different games I can play,' he says, like drawing live on stage for this tour. He sometimes accompanies his jokes with his guitar, finding witticisms that are enhanced by the combo, either because they fit the rhythm or are propelled more by the music and sometimes will try finding jokes that work while accompanied by minor chords. His new tour begins with him offstage, doing a longer, more conceptual joke than most Martin material: He encourages the audience to prepare for comedy by closing their eyes and relaxing; he adopts the soothing tones of a meditation coach but undercuts every bit of instruction by working in an analogy to something connected to the chaos of modern life in America. 'That was a fun experiment,' he says. 'I really think comedy is an art. And the stage is such a great canvas. It's such an opportunity to have a direct conversation with the people who've come to see you.' Advertisement DEMETRI MARTIN At the Wilbur, June 28, 7 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. 246 Tremont St., Boston.

Hamilton's outdoor shelter costs balloon $5.1 million over budget
Hamilton's outdoor shelter costs balloon $5.1 million over budget

CBC

time02-05-2025

  • Politics
  • CBC

Hamilton's outdoor shelter costs balloon $5.1 million over budget

Hamilton's first outdoor shelter is $5.1 million over budget. Capital costs have almost tripled from what city staff first pitched and council approved last September — from $2.8 million to $7.9 million, says a report to council's general issues committee Wednesday. Staff revealed in the report there's been a number of issues with site contamination and the 40 tiny homes, which were delivered not up to code. These issues drove up costs for a project already plagued with controversial decisions and delays. "I have to say, I was shocked by everything that occurred, sincerely," Coun. Brad Clark told staff. "I could not believe this has happened in the manner it did and we had a full slate of people involved in this process." North-end resident Kelly Oucharek, who's been opposed to the outdoor shelter's location from the start, delegated to councillors wearing a shirt that said, "If I had $5.1 million" — a play off the Barenaked Ladies song, If I Had $1000000. "I along with many Hamiltonians are dismayed this project is 300 per cent over budget," said Oucharek. Gessie Stearns, a researcher on homelessness and advocate, told the committee that the city's decision to build the outdoor shelter on contaminated land for millions of dollars wasn't done in consultation with people experiencing homelessness or the cash-strapped community groups who support them. "If you gave 10 organizations in the community $500,000, it would've been unprecedented," Stearns said. "Here, $5 million has evaporated like it's nothing." Last summer, Mayor Andrea Horwath used strong mayor powers, which allow mayors to take quicker initiative on some issues, to direct staff to create some kind of "sanctioned" encampment site. She wasn't present at the meeting Wednesday due to an accident. By September, staff had proposed an 80-person temporary outdoor shelter — intended to house couples and people with pets — that would open by December in time for winter. It is a temporary site, and will only be operational for up to two years, but the "exit strategy" has yet to be announced, Grace Mater, general manager of healthy and safe communities, told councillors. 'A small subdivision in under 4 months' The city knew the land was contaminated when the project began, but soon discovered it would cost millions dollars more to deal with than budgeted, said Mater. The site needed grading, erosion control and other work to address the pollution, and the city had to hire architects, engineers and environmental experts to guide and sign off on the process, the report said. Mater defended city staff's management of the project on a tight timeline. "We've basically built a small subdivision in under four months," she said. "As with all projects of this magnitude, there were challenges along the way." There were also issues with the tiny homes ordered from MicroShelters Inc., staff said. The decision to buy them from the fledgling Brantford, Ont., company was already controversial, but then staff learned the units weren't up to code. The electrical wiring didn't meet Canadian standards and had to be completely replaced, said the report. The city also had to pay for architectural validation of MicroShelter's documents to make sure they met occupancy standards. The fire department had concerns about the layout of the overall shelter and individual tiny homes, and the city had to make design changes for safety reasons, the report said. In total, the city spent an unexpected $400,000 to make sure the tiny homes were safe for people to live in, Mater said. Coun. Craig Cassar said it was "very surprising" the "vendor did not deliver what was promised" and described the tiny homes as "defective." The city's legal team said it is assisting staff in trying to recoup some money from MicroShelters. MicroShelters did not respond to a request for comment, but director Jeff Cooper previously said in an email, "all aspects of its business are proprietary and confidential. Under advice of our lawyer we decline comment." Hamilton's auditor general is reviewing the contract between MicroShelters and the city, said Mater. Lawsuit filed against MicroShelters MicroShelters was incorporated weeks before council approved the project and used images on its website identical to those used by another tiny home company, Foldum Corporation. MicroShelters then imported the tiny homes from China through U.S. company Global Axxis. Foldum is now suing both MicroShelters and Global Axxis in California court, alleging they "conspired" to make a profit by using Foldum's proprietary information. Foldum's complaint says MicroShelters "falsely" advertised Foldum's housing and past projects as its own, "misleading Hamilton and other potential buyers" and then charging the city "a significant price." The allegations have not been proven in court. Global Axxis told CBC Hamilton, through a lawyer also named in the complaint, that it denies Foldum's allegations. Neither Foldum nor MicroShelters provided comments for this story. Before the lawsuit and budget overrun, city staff admitted they'd not done a thorough check on MicroShelters before awarding them a contract worth millions of dollars. Because of the short timeline, staff selected the company through a non-competitive process. Mater previously told CBC Hamilton she didn't know if MicroShelters had ever fulfilled any other similar contract before choosing it and wasn't aware they'd be importing the units from China. She said it was the only company the city could find to deliver foldable tiny homes big enough for two people in short order. The units ended up arriving weeks later than anticipated, in January. Manager says she could've told council sooner Several councillors, including Cameron Kroetsch, Matt Francis and Mike Spadafora, asked staff why they were not told of the ballooning costs or site challenges until now. "Staff had instructions to move forward extremely fast," Spadafora said. "But I think the disconnect is staff should've come back and said, 'It's not going to work, the site's a dump, it's going to cost millions of dollars and we're not going to be able to get people in before the snow flies.'" Kroetsch said if he had known the site would cost $5.1 million more and not be ready in time for winter, he wouldn't have supported it. Mater took responsibility for not "reporting back in a timely manner" but said the challenges and costs were "coming at us at a very rapid pace." The committee told staff to report back with a detailed breakdown of all the project costs, as approved in a motion from Francis. Mike Zegarac, general manager of finance, said staff would pull the additional $5.1 million from federal and provincial funding already secured for the project. Coun. Tammy Hwang defended the project, saying staff were given "an impossible task" to build the outdoor shelter in a matter of months. "This is the admirable and amazing way they have showed up and given their all," she said. "I'm thankful for the work done and respectful of the mistakes made. We need to figure out how do we talk about this and share lessons learned."

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