This dude is crazy talented. Crowd work is insane. Handling a heckler is one thing but to have a whole 3.5 minute bit based around an unplanned interaction is super impressive
@Luna B. smith Depends on the terpene profile of the strain. I have Fibromyalgia and weed does help alleviate some of the pain. It's still there, but dull and manageable. I will say it doesn't really help when I have flare-ups. It tones it down a bit, but I'm still irritated by my clothes touching my skin in certain places. I don't even liked to be touched by my wife on those types of days. Staying active is honestly the best medicine for Fibromyalgia...that and a bit of weed.
Not fun for me, what so ever. I can have a dark sense of humor. But fact is, fibromyalgia already gets a bad name because it is hard to diagnose and treat. This joke was lame to me.
@@sjohnson5813 yeah, you are so much more knowledgeable than doctors. You are exactly why fibromyalgia doesn't get enough attention and care. You think people fake it. Research some.
The body language, how he holds the mic and leans on the mic stand, it’s unique… and how he goes from zero to 100… when. Showed them a clip of him handling a heckler, my family thought he was REALLY mad, but I’ve seen enough of him to think it’s part of his schtick, but ALSO a way for him to channel his rage, like Sam Kinnison… Troy is a classic
I noticed that about him as well [your 1st sentence] , it's actually why I started watching his shorts I was intrigued. Came for the mic hold, stayed for the comedy haha
@@StarchieSkizzyx my favorite channels are Tara and Nate , Sailing LaVagabond, Bailey Sarian, and Bruce Rivers if you need something new to watch… Also Emon and Bec (hope I spelt everything correctly)
@@soothingseasby exclusion of any other possible, demonstrable cause. There are some "pain trigger points" on the body surface but they're not very scientific; it helps the diagnosis if the patient is young, female, has other kindred disease such as IBS, depression, chronic fatigue etc
@soothingseas Mine started with hip pain, I could no longer sleep on my back. Then I started having pain in different places. I just thought it came with middle age. In my 30s I also started having bladder problems. My doctor sent me to a urologist, who filled my bladder with water, when I screamed in pain he said I just had a small bladder, like it shrunk at age 36 or something. I remarried and moved to a bigger city. I started going to my husband's doctor. Eventually my bladder got worse, he diagnosed me with interstitial cystitis, right away, just on symptoms. I found a urologist with knowledge of IC, after scoping me, he confirmed it. I started reading up on it and found that many tht had IC also had fibromyalgia, I recognized all of the pains I had been having were listed. I talked to him about the pain and he sent me to a rheumatologist. He ran tests and did a trigger point test. There are 11 and I was 11 for 11. They bend your fingers and other pain points, if it hurts, that is a point. The medication for fibro was part of what I was taking for IC, hydroxyzine and Amitriptyline. I eventually dropped them due to the fact I couldn't stay awake. They helped some, but not worth the trade off. The other drugs do enough to manage it. Many of these conditions considered together, chronic fatigue, IBS, IC, etc. I don't have IBS, but have some chronic fatigue. There is no cure, just symptom management.
hes good, improv comedy is REALLY hard. I used to chill around comedy club and hanged with some known names in comedy and everyone has their "branding" and ppl dont realize how much more difficult this is than just being with a group of friends.
My Mom has it. It does indeed suck. Her muscles bunch up under her skin and form a painful, spasming lump. They have to be rubbed and painfully pressed on to make them release. As a teen I knew a woman with fibro. She became so dependant on pain relief meds that she eventually ODed and her relatives found her two days later. So terrible.
This is one of the most interesting comedians I’ve come across. Still seems to be somewhat underground…? 220K seems like a lot of people, but I just found him a few weeks ago. Friggin crushing it though. Very funny; very good at handling hecklers. I don’t know, I think this guy could become one of the best there is. Doing the right thing with his life, that’s for sure.
I love his on the fly raw material guy is naturally funny , quick funny responses are awesome.. This guy will be a big time headliner., His Sienfeild skits are hilarious.
Kevin Boyle will love your show!!! You don't bullshit and in reality your a great person who wants everyone to break out of themselves for just a miniscule of time in they're lives. And to think about changing they're jobs, partner choice etc. Live comedy shows are the best for destressing. As you meet the sick people. Sick as in you know they need help but quickly realise that they will never change. Or And you're sick too! I love your sense of humour! And if we never meet again. I will remember you and replay that to everyone I meet in life ❤❤❤ The true champions of life...... Peace
@@OlaviMurto No worries, I listened to it like 5 times trying to figure it out, and gave up! Went into the comments to look for the answer, and seeing your comment steeled my resolve hahaha
I have fibromyalgia, and at its worst feels like running a marathon while you have the flu and covid at the same time. It's difficult to treat because they don't know why it happens or where it comes from in the body. The two working theories are the brain sends the wrong signals or the brain sends the right signals but then interprets them wrong thus resulting in widespread pain with seemingly no cause throughout the body. Until recently, most doctors saw it as mental illness and treated you as if you are "crazy," but now they think of it as a disease of the brain, not the mind -- hence, neurology. : )
The doctor wanted to Diagnose my mom with fibromyalgia, she refused the diagnosis and told them to actually find out what's wrong with her. Here they pretty much use fibromyalgia as a diagnosis when the doctor can't find the root of a problem. Which is sad since for some people it's a real disease. Years later it turns out she has massive thyroid problems that gave all kinds of symptoms...
@Bustermaniax Gosh that sucks. Here in the US and where I am it is rare to diagnose ppl with that because they think ppl just want the diagnosis to get pills. That's why my name- because it was all I was prescribed unfortunately. My diagnosis came after years of specialists, x-rays, ultrasound, mris, surgery, and more. I even have thyroid problems that I solved myself too. Thank you for sharing your story. I believe one day fibromyalgia will be broken down into types and/or actually be several different illnesses they discover. For example, burn out from autism, lyme disease, and pots are all similar to fibromyalgia.