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Cum Town

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Cum Town
Cum Town logo.png
Presentation
Hosted by
  • Nick Mullen
  • Stavros Halkias
  • Adam Friedland
Genre[1]
LanguageEnglish
UpdatesTwice weekly
Length60–90 minutes
Production
ProductionNick Mullen
No. of episodesRegular: 267
Premium: 206
(as of July 2021)
Publication
Original releaseMay 11, 2016; 5 years ago (May 11, 2016) – present
Websitewww.cum.town (Store)
cumtown.events (Events)

Cum Town is a comedy podcast founded in 2016 and hosted by New York City-based comedians Nick Mullen, Stavros Halkias and Adam Friedland.[2] As of May 2021, Cum Town is the eighth most popular podcast on Patreon.[3] It has featured guests including David Cross,[4] Bam Margera, Bonnie McFarlane, Jim Norton, Kurt Metzger, Brandon Wardell, and Dasha Nekrasova.[5]

Format

Cum Town episodes usually range between 60 and 90 minutes in length. Mullen is the primary host and producer of the show, with Halkias as co-host.[6] Friedland, who appears least frequently of the three, first appeared in the show's second episode and often serves as the butt of Mullen and Halkias' jokes and insults.

The content is almost entirely unplanned, with the hosts' aimless conversation giving way to improvised comedic characters and sketches. Many riffs come from crude puns and rhymes— for example, "Louis SeemsGay"[7] instead of Louis C.K. — and usually involve sexually explicit scenarios as well as ethnic and racial stereotypes. Conversations generally center on the hosts personal lives, the news, the worlds of stand-up comedy and social media, and pop culture history.[8]

Mullen does many celebrity impressions, including Donald Trump, Barack Obama, Michael Douglas, Dennis Hopper, E. Jean Carroll, Dwayne Johnson, Joe Biden, Andrew Cuomo, Patrick Warburton, Rip Torn, Gene Hackman, Jon Hamm, Norm MacDonald, Joe List, Mark Normand, Ice-T and Homer Simpson, with many episodes of the show featuring him trying to perfect a new impression on-air.

The first 24 episodes began with the theme song from 1990s sitcom Home Improvement.

Availability and listenership

Weekly free episodes of the show are available via Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Audible, among other services.[9][10][11] Subscribers who contribute at least $5 per month via Patreon gain access to additional weekly premium bonus episodes.[12] During the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, the show was conducted via Zoom; episodes were broadcast live via YouTube.

As of July 2021, Cum Town was the ninth most popular podcast on Patreon and is the tenth most popular creator on the platform overall; with more than 20,000 paying members, the podcast has nearly $90,000 in monthly earnings.[13] On Spotify, it is ranked the 35th most popular comedy podcast and 138th most popular in the United States regardless of genre.[14][15] On Apple Podcasts, its the 55th most popular comedy podcast (it is unranked overall).[16]

Hosts

Nick Mullen

Nick Mullen in 2014

Nick Mullen (born December 13, 1988)[17] is a stand-up comedian, comedy writer, podcaster, and actor based in Brooklyn.[6] Active since 2005, much of his comedy is ironic, observational and self-deprecating, and often focuses on internet culture.[18][19]

Originally from the Baltimore–Washington metropolitan area, he began performing as a teenager, often at Wiseacres Comedy Club in Virginia.[20][21][22] Many of his comedic anecdotes draw from a string of service industry jobs he held at this time. During his early twenties, he was based out of Austin, Texas, (and briefly Los Angeles) and was a two-time finalist at the annual Funniest Person in Austin contest (2010 and 2011).[23][24][25][26]

A nationally touring stand-up, he was an opener for acts including Dana Gould, Jim Norton, Patrice O'Neal, and Hannibal Burress.[23] In 2010, he was named "Best of Fest" at the Laugh Detroit festival.[23] In 2012, he performed at SXSW as part of the Made in Austin and Weekend Spotlight comedy showcases.[25][27] That same year, he was named one of the New Faces Unrepped by Montreal's Just for Laughs festival.[24][28] Other festivals include the 2014 Bentzen Ball in Washington, D.C.[29]

From 2013 to 2015, he wrote a popular ironic parody blog under the name Nicole Mullen on Thought Catalog.[30] He also had a prank call podcast called Help Me, I'm Old.[31]

In the mid-2010s, Mullen moved to New York City.[31] Before moving to Brooklyn, he lived in rented rooms in Chinatown, including an eight by six foot illegal single room occupancy in a commercial property. In a 2015 interview with Ari Shaffir, he spoke about living under the poverty line for a number of years, stating that he reported less than $7000 in income in 2014.[32] Prior to Cum Town, he was a finalist for New York’s Funniest Stand-Up at the 2015 New York Comedy Festival and has had multiple TV and radio appearances.[33][34]

On January 26, 2017, Mullen appeared as a panelist on Fox News's talk show Red Eye along with John Bolton.[35]

During the late 2010s, he was a recurring guest on the Real Ass Podcast, Race Wars (hosed by Kurt Metzger and Sherrod Smalls), and Legion of Skanks.[36] His writing credits include Comedy Knockout on TruTV (premiered 2016), Make Me Understand with Jim Norton (2016 IFC television pilot), and 2017's Problematic with Moshe Kasher (Comedy Central).[33] As an actor, he has appeared in the feature films Giving Up (2017) and Jungleland (2019).

Stavros Halkias

Stavros Halkias (born February 11, 1989)[37] is a stand-up comedian and podcaster.[38] Active since the early 2010s, he is based in New York City and tours nationally. As a stand-up, he has performed at venues like the New York Comedy Festival and has opened for acts including Wham City, Tom Papa, and Robert Kelly.[39][40]

Halkias was born and raised in Baltimore, Maryland, to Greek immigrant parents (a Macedonian mother and Athenian father) and attended the Baltimore Polytechnic Institute, a public high school where he played football.[41] He began performing comedy while attending the University of Maryland, Baltimore County at which he hosted a monthly comedy showcase.[42][39][43] During this period, he was active in the greater Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Virginia area and, in 2012, was named Baltimore’s New Comedian of the Year.[43]

He later moved to New York City where he has since made numerous radio and podcast guest appearances, and has written and performed on Adult Swim, IFC, MSG Network's People Talking Sports and Other Stuff.[39] He has appeared in the Comedy Central series Comedy Central Stand Up Featuring, Life Fails, and Sex Fails, and has acted in other internet shorts. Since 2019, he has co-hosted the basketball podcast Pod Don't Lie with Sam Morril;[44] prior to this, he co-hosted White Chocolate NBA Pipecast with Friedland.[45] He also hosts a Twitch series Stavvy Solves Your Problems.[46]

Adam Friedland

Adam Friedland (born April 10, 1987)[47] is a stand-up comedian, sketch comedian, and podcaster.[48][49][50] Born to South African Jewish immigrant parents, he grew up in Santa Monica and Las Vegas and lived in Israel for a year following high school;[51][49] he has since become a critic of Zionism, even critiquing the state on Israeli television station i24 News (Friedland has noted that a producer at the station is a fan of the podcast).[52] He attended George Washington University.[53][54]

Friedland got his start in the Washington, D.C. comedy scene by running the punk house Subterranean A, a noted DIY venue begun with a friend following his graduation in 2009 and deferment from law school. Over its two-and-a-half year run, it hosted the likes of musical artists Radical Face, Tennis, Alex Bleeker and the Freaks, and the ensemble Secret Society, and comedy acts James Adomian and Wham City. It had it final show in June 2012.[54] He hosted a number of comedy shows, first at Subterranean A and then other venues in the city, gaining notability in the scene for his 'alternative' performance piece-oriented comedy.[55][56][57][58][59][60] He also aided in the live seriesYou, Me, Them, Everybody.[61] He performed at the Bentzen Ball (in 2013 & 2014) and was named to the annual "Best of D.C." list by the Washington City Paper.[62][63][64][65] He moved to New York City in 2014.[66][48]

Outside of Cum Town, he is best known as the host of the live alternative comedy show Funny Moms; the show began in Washington D.C. in 2012 with original co-host Sara Starmour and transferred to Brooklyn in 2015.[67][68][66] He also co-hosted the sports podcast White Chocolate NBA Pipecast with Halkias from 2017 to 2018.[45] He is a recurring guest on Chapo Trap House. Of note, he is the former fiancé of podcaster and actress Dasha Nekrasova.[5][69][70]

Reception

Dirtbag left association

Cum Town is often associated with the dirtbag left, though it is not focused on politics.[71][72] In a February 2020 article, New York Times described Cum Town (by allusion, citing its "unprintable name") as "bards of the new American left" alongside podcasts Chapo Trap House and Red Scare.[73] Several Chapo hosts, including Amber A'Lee Frost, Will Menaker, and Felix Biederman, have appeared on Cum Town; Mullen, Halkias, and Friedland have individually made multiple appearances on Chapo.

Though the hosts occasionally discuss their responses to current events and politics—with all three expressing support for 2020 presidential candidate Bernie Sanders—they deny any specific political agenda. In May 2017, Friedland tweeted that "Cum town is not a socialist podcast it's not a fascist podcast it's a podcast about being gay with your dad."[74]

In July 2021, the hosts again repudiated[75] associations in the media of the podcast with the 'dirtbag left', criticizing Andrew Marantz's characterization[76] of the podcast as a "flagship product" of the 'dirtbag left' in an article in The New Yorker. Halkias instead suggested that the motivating force of producing the podcast was not political but instead financial. The hosts initially believed the podcast would be unsuccessful, "and people are stupid enough to give us money, and we are trapped at doing [the podcast]".[75]

Criticism

In association with their dirtbag left peers, they have received criticism for their use of ironic offensiveness. Bloggers have argued that the use of slurs and edgy jokes by the hosts, particularly Mullen, perpetuate harassment and continually cross the line into actual hatred and contempt.[77][78] Others have stated beliefs that criticism of "un-woke" media including Cum Town is non-objective as offensiveness is a subjective concept.[79] However, some on the internet have noted the podcast as a 'refuge from toxic wokeness' online.[80][81]

Some online commentators have made a distinction between the podcast and their listeners, critiquing the fanbase of the show as opposed to the hosts themselves or critiquing both in tandem.[72][82][83] In 2020, the podcasts' subreddit (which was not moderated nor endorsed by the hosts) was removed from Reddit due to the platform's new policies on hate speech.[84][85][86] Since that time, a new subreddit dedicated to the podcast was created.

Cum Town received coverage after Saturday Night Live pulled Shane Gillis from its cast for making controversial jokes and remarks on his own podcast.[87][88] Gillis had been a guest on Cum Town and is a friend of the hosts.

References

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External links

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