Langston Kerman: Bad Poetry (Netflix) Story, Review, Trailer, Release Date, Songs, Cast 2024

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Langston Kerman: Bad Poetry (Netflix) Story :-

Comedian Langston Kerman delivers a side-splitting special where he shares his experiences with raising a high-achieving baby, navigating the challenges of teaching tough teens, and handling his mother-in-law’s dating apps.

Langston Kerman: Bad Poetry (Netflix) Story, Review, Trailer, Release Date, Songs, Cast

Langston Kerman: Bad Poetry (Netflix) Release Date, Trailor, Songs, Cast :-

Release Date20 August 2024
LanguageEnglish
GenreComedy
CastLangston Kerman
DirectorJohn Mulaney
CinematographyCameron Barnett
Certificate16+

 

Langston Kerman: Bad Poetry (Netflix) Review :-

Might find performing in a close-knit room daunting, where the audience’s reactions are magnified, Kerman not only handles it with ease but also revels in the atmosphere.

You might recognize Langston Kerman from his roles in Insecure, High Maintenance, and Bless This Mess. It took me a moment to remember he also appeared in The Boys Season 2 as Eagle the Archer, a Supe and aspiring rapper—though, according to The Deep in Season 3, his music career hasn’t exactly taken off.

Langston Kerman: Bad Poetry (Netflix) Story, Review, Trailer, Release Date, Songs, Cast

Langston Kerman is still in the early stages of his career, but Bad Poetry shows he has a solid grasp of comedy and a knack for engaging with his audience. Despite the question of why he chose to debut on such a massive platform, Kerman’s performance in Bad Poetry proves he can captivate an audience. While his topics may tread familiar ground, his take on being mixed-race and the color of his baby adds a unique twist. It’s a relatable angle, though some might find certain jokes, like those involving Meghan Markle, a bit cringeworthy.

Langston Kerman effortlessly connects with his audience when he humorously rants about his wife’s lack of trust in his microwave skills, fearing he’d accidentally put metal in it. It’s these relatable irritations that form the heart of modern relationships, and Kerman’s take had me in stitches.

His punchline cuts to the core: if you’re planning on a lifetime together but can’t trust him with a microwave, why bother committing in the first place?

Kerman’s next challenge is likely another Netflix special. He clearly deserves a bigger stage than just a comedy club to showcase his talent. This isn’t a slight against emerging comedians—they all have to start somewhere—but when you encounter such natural comedic ability, you want more of it. I’ve felt the same about Taylor Tomlinson, but conversely, I’ve noted that Matt Rife needs to address his brand identity issues.

Langston Kerman: Bad Poetry (Netflix) Trailor :-

One of the joys of watching Langston Kerman perform lies in his unique timing and delivery. He doesn’t always pause where you’d expect; instead, he leans into unexpected premises or circles back to earlier jokes at surprising moments.

Earlier, I noted how some of Kerman’s jokes in his 50-minute set place him somewhere between John Mulaney and Sam Jay. For instance, his bit about getting roasted by his high school English students, which crushed his poetry dreams, echoes Mulaney’s own experiences with teens. Additionally, Kerman’s description of his parenting anxieties as feeling “like a bird trapped at the airport” brings to mind Mulaney’s memorable metaphor comparing Trump to “a horse loose in a hospital” from a previous special.

For a bit of comedy trivia, it’s worth noting that Langston Kerman’s bit about getting high on mushrooms and having park adventures with friends not only features Sam Jay as one of those friends but also intersects with one of Jay’s own jokes from her stand-up special about similar park antics.

If it ever turns out that these jokes are based on a real-life encounter involving Forest Whitaker at an IHOP, Kerman might just have a compelling argument for having experienced one of the most extraordinary events of his life—excluding, of course, the birth of his child.

Our Call

Kerman humorously acknowledges that he might test the limits of his audience’s patience just to deliver a good pun, admitting, “I’ve heard that critique too—that it’s too long to get to the punchline.” But his unique style of humor could be exactly the comedic spark you need, potentially saving you from a microwave mishap and turning you from an ordinary person into the next Orville Deadenbacher.

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