Moms find themselves in the humor of #IMOMSOHARD. (Fox Tucson Theatre/Submitted)

One day nine years ago, best friends Kristen Hensley and Jen Smedley were hanging out, having a glass of wine, commiserating about the sweet, hilarious and often outrageous doings of their four collective kids.

Both had come to Los Angeles to pursue careers in comedy โ€” sketch, improv, standup. Along the way, family became a greater priority. Still โ€ฆ

Having just had a baby, Smedley was feeling particularly low. โ€œPostpartum on its own is such an isolating time,โ€ she said.

โ€œYou really have no idea how much time youโ€™re going to spend with this baby, that, you know, cries, which is really a criticism. Letโ€™s be honest. Theyโ€™re not crying cause theyโ€™re happy with what youโ€™re doing.โ€

Luckily, Smedley said, โ€œI can find comedy in dark situations. I worry if lifeโ€™s too good, is it going to be funny anymore? Then you have kids and things get so overwhelming and dark. Thereโ€™s constant material coming out of them.โ€

And luckily, Hensley was there for her. The two became best friends in LA, partly because, although they never met, theyโ€™d grown up going to the same Nebraska schools. Both had left the Midwest for LA hoping for careers in standup and comedy writing. Both had husbands with careers in acting, directing and producing. What cemented their friendship, though, was their mutual passion for making people laugh.

They made each other laugh, and cry, with their bottomless collection of anecdotes about their family lives, but they also frequently shared their frustrations about their stalled comedy careers.

โ€œGetting onstage at 11 p.m. does not work if youโ€™re a mom,โ€ Hensley said, โ€œand if youโ€™re not doing that, youโ€™re never going to get any consistency to your comedy. It just felt like unfair play.

โ€œSo, one night Jen came over and we were having wine and we were both talking about how terrible we are as moms, but through the tears we started to laugh and then she was like, โ€˜I wonder if this is like a video, if there is something to this.โ€™โ€

Smedley recalled that, at the time, social media featured mostly content that made moms feel like they werenโ€™t doing a good job. As if to undermine the flailing self-respect of the average mom, videos were all about how they could be doing a better job and looking like models at the same time.

Their latent ambition ignited, and their drive did the rest. They made each other laugh about motherhood. They could make others laugh, too.

According to Hensley, โ€œWithin a couple days we were filming at her house in the playroom. We did it wrong in so many ways. As we watched the footage we were, like, we donโ€™t know what this is, but we think this is it.โ€

Months later, after theyโ€™d learned the tech and acquired the basic gear, they dropped their first video on Facebook, the platform their research had told them attracted the most moms.

Hensley said, โ€œIt took us six months from the first one to start posting regularly because we had to learn, and we wanted to make sure the storytelling was right. But the first one hit so fast that we had a week to post the second one.

โ€œThat really motivated us.โ€

The duo agrees there was a single moment in that first video that defined their project. It was the now-immortal moment when Smedley couldnโ€™t remember the name of her new baby. Moms understood perfectly: Not only did they laugh, but they also wanted to hug these women for their vulnerability.

Smedley said the vignette resonated as โ€œemblematic of a friendship and also of how women actually are together. Theyโ€™re not precious, and they give each other a hard time and they laugh about stuff that feels bad because thatโ€™s how we cope.โ€

It was because they were eager to meet the women who became their fans and friends that they set out to create a show they could take on tour. โ€œWe are very much in service to how grateful we are to the women who propel this thing,โ€ Hensley said.

โ€œThe women are so wonderful. They come out and theyโ€™re like, โ€˜Yes, me too. Oh my God. Yes. I feel the same way.โ€™ And thatโ€™s why weโ€™ve driven to do this.โ€

#IMOMSOHARD, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 11, Fox Tucson Theatre, 17 W. Congress Street, Tucson, tickets start at $20, foxtucson.com

Proscenium hosts The Men of Clean Comedy

Four touring comics rarely seen in Tucson share a bill at The Proscenium Theatre this weekend. Featured are Brotha Man from TVโ€™s โ€œMartinโ€ and โ€œThe Bernie Mac Showโ€; Barry Brewer from the Tyler Perry series; โ€œThe Bruhโ€ on BET+ and Kevin Hartโ€™s โ€œGuide to Black Historyโ€ on Netflix; โ€œJamminโ€ Jay Lamont from BETโ€™s โ€œComic Viewโ€ and Byron Allenโ€™s โ€œComics Unleashedโ€; and Mo Jones, also from โ€œComic View.โ€ Top L.A. DJ JiJi Sweet will mix the tunes.

โ€œMen of Clean Comedy,โ€ 6 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 5, Proscenium Theater, Pima Community College, 2202 W. Anklam Road, tickets start at $55, ticketleap.com

Eric Schwartz was viral before it was cool

Eric Schwartz is a comic for our time, with the skills and imagination to jump on the zeitgeist like a surfboard and hang 10 into the new millennium.

First, heโ€™s a geek, so incorporating accelerating tech developments has been a snap. YouTube once anointed him one of their โ€œNextUp Creatorโ€ and heโ€™s won more than 42,000 followers there. In live shows, he mines his multicultural background (Jewish and Latino) for comedy gold.

Eric Schwartz, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 5, The Screening Room, 127 E. Congress Street, Tucson, tickets start at $17,

screeningroomdowntown.com

OTHER SHOWS

Laffโ€™s Comedy Caffe, 2900 E. Broadway Boulevard. 8 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 4, and 7 and 9:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 5, laffstucson.com, $15, $20 preferred seating. J.R. Brow has performed with Bill Hicks, Wanda Sykes and the Monkees.

Tucson Improv Movement/TIM Comedy Theatre, 414 E. Ninth Street.

tucsonimprov.com, $7 each show, $10 for both shows, same night, free jam and open mic.7:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 3, โ€œHarold Etaโ€ and โ€œFinding the Wordsโ€; 8:30 p.m. Open Mic.; 6:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 4, Improv Jam; 7:30 p.m. โ€œThe Soapboxโ€; 9 p.m. Stand Up Showcase; Saturday, Aug. 5, 1 p.m. โ€œPretendy Timeโ€; 7:30 p.m. โ€œReturn of the Mermaidsโ€ events and โ€œThe Meetingโ€; 9 p.m. โ€œThe Dating Scene.โ€

Unscrewed Theater, 4500 E. Speedway Boulevard, unscrewedtheatre.org, $8, $5 kids. 7:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 4, โ€œFrom the Topโ€ improvised musical; 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 5, Family Friendly Improv; 9 p.m. โ€œThe Backyard,โ€ pay what you will.

2 replies on “Women find the jokes in real lives of moms”

  1. [ JOIN US ] I am making a good salary from home 16580-47065/ Dollar week , which is amazing under a year ago h I was jobless in a horrible economy. (a21) I thank God every day I was blessed with these instructions and now itโ€™s my duty to pay it forward and share it with Everyone,
    Here is I started.โ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆโ€ฆ> ๐—ช๐˜„๐˜„.๐—ฆ๐—บ๐—ฎ๐—ฟ๐˜๐—–๐—ฎ๐˜€๐—ต๐Ÿญ.๐—ฐ๐—ผ๐—บ

  2. GET RICH WITH BLANK ATM CARD

    I want to testify about Dark Web blank atm cards which can withdraw money from any atm machines around the world. I was very poor before and have no job. I saw so many testimony about how Dark Web Online Hackers send them the atm blank card and use it to collect money in any atm machine and become rich {DARKWEBONLINEHACKERS@GMAIL.COM} I email them also and they sent me the blank atm card. I have use it to get 500,000 dollars. withdraw the maximum of 5,000 USD daily. Dark Web is giving out the card just to help the poor. Hack and take money directly from any atm machine vault with the use of atm programmed card which runs in automatic mode.

    You can also contact them for the service below

    * Western Union/MoneyGram Transfer

    * Bank Transfer

    * PayPal / Skrill Transfer

    * Crypto Mining

    * CashApp Transfer

    * Recover Stolen/Missing Crypto/Funds/Assets

    Email: darkwebonlinehackers@gmail.com

    Website: https://darkwebonlinehackers.com

Comments are closed.