
Tracy Metro and Adam Chester
I was the first person to smoke pot with J. Keith van Straaten while in college. Even then, his hysterical and offbeat comic talents were evident. “Dear Dad,” Keith began a letter telling his father just how his college tuition was being spent: “College is really groovy. I like my friends, especially my roommate, Akmed. The other night, he had a plastic baggie that had some funny-looking herbs and spices in it. I asked him what it was for, and he said ‘mental stimulation.’ He put the herbs and spices into a little pipe and lit it, then started acting really weird and laughing at everything! Then I tried it, and started doing the same thing. Dad, I hate to say it, but I’m beginning to suspect it was…marijuana! Well, anyway, I sure hope it wasn’t, because I sure used a lot of it.”
Keith didn’t smoke pot again until recently. In the opening monologue for his self-titled show, van Straaten joked, “I haven’t smoked pot in so long, at first I wondered if it had changed. Do I need to connect to the Internet now? But I’m glad I did it because it made me realize how cool I look when I do drugs.” A lot has changed over the past ten years, but van Straaten is as funny and clever as ever.
At first glance, The J. Keith van Straaten Show (JkvSShow) seems like a Tonight type of affair. This impression is not entirely correct. The show’s format is admittedly familiar–host’s opening monologue, witty banter with a sexier than normal sidekick, brief sketches and comic bits, a house band, and various celebrity guests–everyone from Steve Allen to Margaret Cho to Luke Perry to Weird Al Yankovic. But this show is not on TV, cable, or even the radio. Instead, it is performed every Saturday night, live, in a theater for a lucky audience of 99. It has been described as “a great piece of conceptual satire,” with “every trapping needed to take on Leno and Letterman.” While both of these interpretations are valid, they miss what makes the show unique: Unlike TV, there are no commercials, no editing, no seven-second delay. The JKvSShow is truly live and, therefore thrillingly dangerous.
“Anything can happen” van Straaten exclaims. “I do a quick 10 minute pre-interview with my guests, just to find out what they are and aren’t willing to talk about. I also research their careers so I can talk to them intelligently. The rest is spontaneous. I can’t tell you how many times guests have started out stories saying, ‘Well, I wouldn’t say this on TV but, since no one’s gonna see this…’ The fact that the show is in a theater and not televised to millions of people allows for things to happen.”
Has that ever been scary? “Well, yes,” he admits. “But, sometimes, it’s great. We had a musical guest, Donna DeLory, who I knew had sung backup for Madonna. For the hell of it, I asked if she was in Truth or Dare. Turns out, not only was she in it, but she was the one who dares Madonna to go down on the water bottle! On behalf of all men, I thanked her. Then there was the time a guest just didn’t bother to show up at all. Luckily, that has only happened once.”
The night I attended the show, former Taxi star Jeff Conaway was one of van Straaten’s guests, and he was very funny and quite candid about his faded career. Towards the end of the interview he pulled out a guitar. “I’ve been saved by the Lord,” he declared and proceeded to sing a rather lengthy song called “Go Out and Save Someone.” He did it in earnest, hoping to spread his born again message. Now, where on TV would you see something like that?