Marc Maron on KCRW: LA Weekly's Ultimate Guide to the Top 10 Comedy Podcasts

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Doug Sadler
Host Howard Kremer, guest Zach Galifianakis and co-host Kulap Vilaysack fart up, err chart up the room on the podcast Who Charted?

As the Buggles once forecasted in their 1980s pop single: "Video Killed the Radio Star." Today, it's more accurate to say that the podcast resurrected the radio star, or more specifically, the comedian.

Over the last three years, podcasts have become a platform for comedic artists to extend their brand and service fans in the boonies. But now they're looking like a calling card for bigger projects.

On Sunday at 11 a.m., KCRW began airing 10 weekly episodes of WTF With Marc Maron, a podcast numbering 200 episodes that has been a therapy chair for funny people. We take a look at the top 10 comedy podcasts, many of which are fresh, some of which are old shoes.

10. Who Charted?
"Are you a fan of charts?" host Howard Kremer asks his guest, actor Joe Lo Truglio.
"I like graphs and charts," responds Lo Truglio, "When I pick up USA Today, I go straight to the lower left corner."
"You like to countdown?," asks Kremer, getting more excited.
"Who doesn't like lists, that's why this show is such a great idea," says Lo Truglio. Like audience suggestions at an improv show, Who Charted's review of random top Billboard and box office charts are a fountainhead of conversation starters and tangents for its comedian guests, i.e. Zach Galifianakis and Thomas Lennon. A discussion of hip-hop tracks flashes Lo Truglio back to a New Orleans Mardi Gras when Richard Simmons madly chased his Reno 911 float. The weekly podcast, one of many produced by Scott Aukerman and Jeff Ullrich's Earwolf productions, is also co-hosted by Childrens Hospital nurse Kulap Vilaysack, who serves as Kremer's voice of reason. The biggest treat: Listening to Kremer continually wax his priceless "Summa" bit.

9. How Did This Get Made?
Since December, hosts Paul Scheer, Jason Mantzoukas and June Diane Raphael have been a headache for studio publicists as they fry popcorn films into corn nuts. They're the nightmarish opposite to KPCC's button-down FilmWeek. Deconstructing Suckerpunch: "Every man is raping someone in the movie," complains Scheer. "And how do (the girls) fight back? Sexy dancing," adds Mantzoukas. "Watching (this film) would be the same way my parents would feel if they molested me thorugh my teen years," pipes guest Chelsea Peretti.

8. Charles Grodin
While Los Angeles waits for Albert Brooks to morph his Twitter into a podcast, we can rely on his Real Life leading man for an audible dose of 'what are they crazy?' sarcasm. More political interstitial than comedy podcast, Grodin's clips are an absolute hoot whenever he loosens his ties, from shitting on surveys ("One asked me 'How do I make a living?' If we answered all these surveys, we wouldn't make a living!") to sitting next to underwear-clad airline passengers ("Majority of people in a recent Daily News poll don't have a problem with passengers flying in their underwear...Why not start an underwear airline where all these people can fly together?") His forked-tongue wit, like his brief 60 Minutes II stint, reminds us that he's the heir apparent to Andy Rooney.

7. Mike Detective
Those nostalgic for Zucker Brothers comedy will delight in this bastard grandchild; a satirical '40s radio serial hatched from the dirty minds of Scott Aukerman and Neil Campbell. Rob Huebel voices the sexual-harassing title character who is hired by the curvy Stephanie Client (Grey DeLisle) to locate her sister. She's been abducted by Kelsey Grammer -- or has she? Like the weather in every episode, the show's guest-star lineup of Andy Daly, Weird Al Yankovic and Galifianakis is like the celebrity-strewn film It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World: Perfectly overcast.

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Bruce Smith
Jimmy Pardo instructs his staffer to check whether E.G. Daily was topless in the film Valley Girl

6. Never Not Funny:The Jimmy Pardo Podcast
To Jimmy Pardo's credit, there's a certain type of guest that is suitable for his show and that's a person -- typically a comedian -- who likes to truly converse and briefly segue to other topics as they pop up, whether it's the Falkland Islands War, Jim Croce's canon, actress E.G. Daily's nude scenes in Valley Girl or Pardo pains like the discomfort of Hanes underwear. A conversation with Jon Hamm turns into a discussion on his hometown St. Louis and how they're famous for fried raviolis. It's been said that Pardo doesn't write any jokes, and from listening to his rapid Don Rickles-like responses, that's no hoax.

5. The Pod F. Tompkast
Like Paul F. Tompkins' well-tailored vintage suits, his hour-plus long podcasts are reminiscent of old comedy vinyls, ones that spun their share of offbeat skits and narratives. Most episodes feature Tompkins' soothing-toned absurdisms, elegantly backed by classical piano. This then changes up to a number of segments: A John Lithgow impersonation, a real-life story from comedienne Jen Kirkman or vaudevillian hijinks from his Largo stage show.

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24 comments
RedHeatDeadHeat
RedHeatDeadHeat

WE HATE MOVIES should be included, best comedy podcast on the net.

Nick Harvey
Nick Harvey

I love these podcasts, but no Comedy Bang Bang?

and Sklarbro Country? Doug Loves Movies.

Oh well its just one persons take 

Casey
Casey

What? No Doug Loves Movies? 

Chicomon10
Chicomon10

I believe the angle for the majority of the list was new podcasts vs. all the pop stuff that Rolling Stone and EW has ranked.

Travisfromlongville
Travisfromlongville

No Jim jefferies & Eddie ifft? Even Marc maron would sat WTF? Talkin' shit should be on this list without a doubt. Now I can't take this website seriously. Amateurs.

Alistrand2
Alistrand2

The Apple sisters but no Comedy Bang Bang? Doesn't make sense to me!

Cuddlah
Cuddlah

Walking the Room!!!!!

Scott M. A. Wannan
Scott M. A. Wannan

good list. Glad to see earwolf all over this mother

Anthony
Anthony

Thanks -- this list was never meant to lean specifically toward that site, it just turns out that most of the innovative podcasts happen to be there.  They're merely a portal, like a comedy iTunes.

Gnice3d
Gnice3d

@Joerogan needs to be on this list...Where's your head?

Jethro Jetson
Jethro Jetson

You're clearly an earwolf fan (overrating several of them), so it's mind-boggling that you'd leave Comedy Bang Bang off this list.

Alon
Alon

Yeah, this reads like a humble Scott Aukerman.

Justin
Justin

My Brother, My Brother, and Me is fantastic also. 

UrWrstNghtMre1
UrWrstNghtMre1

A fine list.  While It's more like a way of life than a podcast, The Best Show on WFMU should be on the short list of anyone who enjoys any of the podcasts mentioned in this article.

Saskrotch
Saskrotch

or at the very least, best show gems, to get past the "too local" aspect. 

David
David

Honestly.  Tom Scharpling and Jon Wurster are not only the alpha and the omega, but the sine qua non, the hoi polloi and the le coq sportif of comedy.  There's a reason Podmass keeps rating their show "The Best"!

Nobody has better guests, nobody does it better, and nobody puts as much work in to week-in, week-out satisfy their fans.  Good guys win.

www.wfmu.org/playlists/BS

www.friendsoftom.com

Christine E Taylor
Christine E Taylor

Yay! This was written by an actual fan of podcasting (unlike some of the half-assed coverage of comedy pods in other mainstream publications)! This is, of course, one person's choice for Top 10, but as someone who is ensconced in the comedy podcast world, I think that this is a smart list.

Anthonydalessandro
Anthonydalessandro

Why thank you -- I think the field has progressed greatly and wanted to reflect that.

Nick
Nick

COMEDY BONG BANG

Casey
Casey

Comedy Bang Bang!!

Jordan Hartley
Jordan Hartley

What about The Bugle with John Oliver and Andy Zaltzman?

Qw
Qw

Fuck you, Chris.

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