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Paul Reiser Bringing Big Font Tour To Vegas In 2024

Comedian and actor Paul Reiser is going out on tour this year and he’s making a stop in Las Vegas. The Big Font Tour will be landing at the Red…

Actor and comedian Paul Reiser speaks into a microphone on stage. He's wearing a black suit and checkered tie.

Host Paul Reiser speaks onstage during Equality Now presents “Make Equality Reality” at Montage Hotel on November 4, 2013 in Los Angeles, California. He bringing his comedy tour to Las Vegas in 2024.

Mike Windle / Stringer via Getty Images

Comedian and actor Paul Reiser is going out on tour this year and he's making a stop in Las Vegas. The Big Font Tour will be landing at the Red Rock Resort on Friday, November 15, 2024.

Paul Reiser is most known for his role in the sitcom Mad About You opposite Helen Hunt. But not only did he act in that series, he created it. Showing the various facets of his talent in the show business industry. Mad About You won Emmy, Peabody and Golden Globe awards. Reiser has also been seen in the Netflix original series Stranger Things as well as Chuck Lorre’s The Kominsky Method. Which landed him an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actor.

Paul Reiser Projects For 2024

This year, Paul Reiser is keeping himself very busy with various projects. His new comedy, The Problem with People, is set to drop on October 11. A movie about two cousins trying to mend family fences, Reiser stars in the film and helped to write it. Reiser also just wrapped up co-writing a memoir with and for Michael McDonald. Called What A Fool Believes, the book just came out in May. Going back to the acting part of his talent, you can catch Paul Reiser in the upcoming third season of Amazon Prime’s The Boys, where he till be playing a superhero called "The Legend".

Reiser's comedy special that is coming to Red Rock Resort in November is called The Big Font Tour. The show will be for one night only and will start at 8 p.m. With doors opening at 7 p.m. The show is 19 and older only. Tickets start at $35 plus taxes and fees and are on sale now and can be purchased at ticketmaster.com.

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6 Comedy Super Women Who Inspired Me And Many Others

I believe laughter is universally one of the most amazing things on earth. The feeling you get from a full on belly laugh, or a laugh till you pee, laugh - it's freeing. And it's healthy.

Comedy: What's Funny, What's Not, And Why

It's definitely easier to make some people laugh, than others. I mean funny is funny, But what is funny to one person is not to another. There's an old joke among comedians: How many comedians does it take to change a lightbulb? Three. One to change it, and two to ask each other "how long is he/she going to be up there?" Might not make you laugh, because it's kind of an inside joke among young comedians, who are fighting to get stage time.

How about this one, my psychologist friend told me: How many psychologists does it take to change a light bulb. Only one. But the bulb has to want to change. Funny!!

As a comedian, it's about getting hundreds, or thousands, to laugh at the same thing. I've been doing comedy for 40 years, and that has never changed. But what is funny often changes, because of changing times, and attitudes. But to get a whole room of people laughing at what I am saying? Well, that's my drug.

Comedy Super Women

Women's History Month got me thinking about how I got my start in comedy, and the female comics who inspired me.

I knew I wanted to do comedy from the time I was about 8 years old. I would often wake up, and turn on the TV very low, and watch The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. That's where I first saw that a woman could do exactly what a man could do - as a comedian. A woman name Totie Fields.

Even though I didn't totally understand all of Totie Fields material at the time, she made me laugh hysterically! She was talking about things that women talked about at the time. And very honestly. Like no woman I had ever seen.  Then I saw Joan Rivers. And I knew.

My father was an entertainer, who actually used to work with some of these funny women. He, and my amazing mom, both encouraged me and supported me. Always telling me I  could be whatever I wanted to be

So I started writing material - or things I thought were funny - around 10 years old. I knew I was going to be a comedienne (the word for a female comedian. Which is rarely ever used anymore, because comedy is very gender neutral now - thank God).

For Comedians

I loved making people laugh! Probably some psychological reason for that, as an overweight kid - which I found out later in life. But it was good for me. And I've had such a great career because of comedy. And because I took a negative - kids picking on the chubby girl -  and turned it into a wonderful positive: making jokes about the bullies to their face - and they laughed. What a high!

It felt great the first time I got laughs on the playground, the first time I performed a set in high school in the talent show, and the first comedy club I worked. And on TV shows, and specials, and on radio. Even though radio is far less immediate in response, I have a radio partner, and producer, who are great laughers! And listener, who are a great audience.

Along with my amazing, and funny mom -  here's to the women of comedy that inspired ME. I was lucky enough to work with some of them, and I am forever grateful!

1. Totie Fields

Totie Fields was hilariously funny. Her delivery, her attitude, her style - it was spot on. And at the time, she was a bit raunchy - and it was great! Ed Sullivan, Laugh-In, The Tonight Show, Mike Douglas Merv, Carol Burnett - you name it, she did every show. She was huge. And her panty hose bit. As a young woman - freaking hilarious!! She worked at The Sahara in Las Vegas regularly, and people truly loved her. Sadly, she was a diabetic, and at that time, it wasn't quite as treatable as it is now. Totie had one of her legs amputated, but continued to perform. Breast surgery, phlebitis, heart attacks. She died at 48 years old. Many don't remember her because she wasn't with us nearly long enough. Ask any comedian - she was one of the best.

The Sahara sign in Las Vegas, at nightEthan Miller via Getty Images

2. Phyllis Diller

Not only was she funny, but Phyllis Diller made herself look funny, as well. The goofy outfits, the makeup. Her voice was that kind of scratchy, and when she laughed it was this hilarious cackle! She joked about marriage, her mother in law, and her husband "Fang." It was the first time a woman had really done it the way she did. Biting, but loving. Oh, and that long cigarette holder - classic! She paved the way for more of those character comedians - like Judy Tenuta, Larry the Cable Guy.

Black and white picture of Phyllis Diller looking silly from the side of a door.

 

3. Elayne Boosler

I saw Elayne Boosler on The Tonight Show for the first time, and thought "cool - comedy is changing for women!" She was so very real! But she wasn't on with Johnny Carson. Legend has it, he didn't like her the one time she did the show with him. Told his people never to have her on again. Elayne was the first "club comic" I really knew, and followed. She broke ground, as the time. for the REAL women of comedy. and she started with so many of the other comedy club greats: Richard Belzer, Richard Lewis, Seinfeld, Carol Leifer.

Comedian Elayne Boosler in a white  tank tomHulton Archives via Getty Images Plus

4. Paula Poundstone

Paula Poundstone was funny, and quirky - and I loved it! She gave off this free, and honest feeling onstage. And she has a cadence that pulls you in, and has you waiting for her next words. Paula was the first female to host a White House Correspondents Dinner. Her spontaneity is quietly mindblowing, and her material is so distinct, that you would often know it was Paula, even if you just saw it written out. Paula Poundstone is definitely one of my comedy (s)heroes!

Paula Poundstone in suit with yellow tie

 

5. Joan Rivers

Everyone knew Joan Rivers. To me, she was probably the definitive "female" comic, at the time, and in many ways the definitive comedian. She made it ok to do any type of humor. She would sometimes pick on a physically disabled person. One once said that she loved it, because it made her feel just like everyone else! She came back after her husband's very sad suicide, with a freshness. She never really had to change with the times - although she did - but it seems more like she changed the times, when it came to comedy. She got away with so much, because she was so strong in her material, and her delivery, and her conviction. She inspired a lot of comedians - female and male alike. She was one of a kind, and will forever be just that.

Joan Rivers standing behind Carla Rea

 

6. Kathleen Madigan

Kathleen Madigan is a friend. I've known her for 30 years. There are some comedians that even another comedian will watch, and say, "why am I even doing this?" Madigan is so naturally funny, that it's almost scary. There's the expression "some people say things funny, and some people say funny things." There is a difference - especially in comedy. But Kathleen has it covered. And she does both! I truly have never seen, or worked with another comedian who so easily makes everything funny. She inspired me from the first time I saw her, to now. And she helped me a lot along the way. Her material is non-gender specific, and she does it better than anyone!

Kathleen Madigan and Carla Rea standing next to each other with arms around each others shoulders

 

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Wendy Rush is the midday host on one of Vegas's top stations, 96.3 KKLZ. She has been with the station for ten years and comes with a diverse career background. In addition to being a radio host, Wendy has lived the Vegas life as an entertainer. She has been a celebrity impersonator, rock band singer, and improv comedian. As a content creator for 96.3 KKLZ, Wendy writes about music, celebrities, mental health and wellness, and life as a Las Vegas local.