Viral Video of Man Dressing of Woman Cleaning House Frantically
Chris Fleming | |
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Personal information | |
Born | (1987-01-29) January 29, 1987 Stow, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Education | Skidmore College[1] |
Occupation |
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YouTube information | |
Channel |
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Years active | 2009–present |
Subscribers | 436 thousand[2] |
Total views | 77.6 million[2] |
Updated: 27 July 2022 |
Chris Fleming (born January 29, 1987) is an American comedian and actor best known for his YouTube series Gayle, in which he stars as the eponymous character Gayle Waters-Waters. In June 2019, Variety named Fleming one of its "10 Comics to Watch for 2019".[3]
Fleming is known for his unique, specific character comedy[4] [5] and "powerful, ridiculous songs."[6] Much of Fleming's comedy is aimed at deconstructing social norms, including masculinity.[7] He has been described as accruing an online cult following.[7]
A staff writer for FSUNews covering an appearance at Florida State University praised his stand-up's underlying message, stating, "Fleming does not seem to give too much respect to anything, including himself, which allows him to rid different social norms and constructs of their power."[7]
Fleming has been described as a "progressive gender-bending role model."[7] Fleming has stated that he accepts any pronouns, stating, "Anything works for me."[8]
Early life and education [edit]
Fleming grew up in Stow, Massachusetts and attended Nashoba Regional High School, when he first began to do stand-up comedy.
He received a degree in theatre from Skidmore College in 2009,[9] [10] and graduated one credit short of receiving a minor in dance.[11]
Gayle [edit]
Gayle is a 40-episode, absurdist comedy series on YouTube.[11] It was launched in 2012 and its final episode was published in 2015.[11] The series follows high-strung, eccentric suburban mother Gayle Waters-Waters and her ruthless journey to uphold social status in the small community of Northbread, Massachusetts.[12] Fleming developed the idea for Gayle through stand-up.[10] In 2019, he described the origin of her character:
I did Gayle in my stand-up and she was inspired by a lot of folks that I saw growing up...It kind of cemented as ideas do in a very singular moment when I was in a Crate & Barrel and I saw a woman diving into a barrel of placemats. Like her legs were up in the air, and she was just digging through these placemats...it just kind of came from there...I just plucked her from a tree...I have elements of her in my psyche too; it's not gender-specific thing. It's fear of how you're seen in your community, that's what it is, that's the essence of it...Why I related to her so much is just that terror of how others perceive you.[13]
The series is written by Fleming and directed by comedian Melissa Strype, who also plays Gayle's daughter, Terry Gross Waters-Waters.[10] Fleming's mother co-stars as Bonnie, Gayle's best friend and biggest rival, and his father's legs play the role of Dave (with Fleming's voice), Gayle's sensitive bird-watching husband.[10]
The soundtrack was composed by Brian Heveron-Smith,[11] Tom Lowery, and Chris Hartford.[14] The series is filmed in Fleming's hometown in Massachusetts.[15]
Forbes reported that, in the off-seasons of filming Gayle, Fleming worked as an SAT tutor.[10]
Circa 2013, comedian Margaret Cho grew an interest in the show. In 2013, she guest starred in the episode "Chibby Point" as Yo-Yo Ma, whom Gayle kidnapped from a Barnes and Noble.[16] [17]
In 2014, the Gayle team went on a US tour with the show titled Gayle Live.[18]
Although much of his hometown supports the series - with some neighbors even participating as actors[10] - Fleming claims:
There's one woman, who a lot of [Gayle] was inspired by, who is NOT happy about it, at all...[she's] absolutely pissed [because her full name is used for a background character]. I forget to change people's names sometimes, so a lot of my life has been trying to explain to people's faces that something that is very obviously about them is not about them.[13]
Fleming has expressed regret that COMPANY IS COMING, a viral 2015 short featuring Gayle,[19] [20] [21] [22] is the series' best known project and "what I get stopped at airports for."[23] He dislikes when Gayle is known purely as a "crazy mom character," claiming her character transcends the stereotype:[8]
I've played that character for so long I have such love for her...there's so many different facets to her. That's just one part of her being. I hate that that's what people think of her in general. There's so many other beautiful shades to her psyche.[8]
YouTube channel [edit]
Fleming runs a YouTube channel under his full name; the channel has gained over 436,000 subscribers as of May 2022. In addition to Gayle, Fleming has a variety of other content that ranges from music videos to car rants.[24]
His 2015 video "COMPANY IS COMING,"[20] starring his Gayle character, went viral, accruing over 13.9 million views as of May 2022. In 2018, Fleming has lampooned this viral video as a Faustian bargain with a demon named Davis, who says, "We made a deal; one viral video in 2015 for a lifetime of servitude! You promised me your soul for your video COMPANY IS COMING going viral, and now sorority girls from the South like you for all the wrong reasons! That's your legacy, one measly viral video!"[25]
Fleming is known for his specific, unique character comedy.[4] [5]
In 2020, he created "Sick Jan," a song and music video detailing his former H&R Block tax preparer who exhibited unusual behavior that intrigued Fleming.[4] In 2022, New York magazine interviewed him based on Sick Jan's similarities to Dierdre, a character in 2022 film Everything Everywhere All At Once. Fleming stated,
Jan's not an archetype, Jan's such a specific woman. ... [The] story of Sick Jan, the character herself, is so dense — maybe it's just that all tax preparers have a vibe of anarchy and Southwestern style. With Jan, obviously, it was one song, so I could focus only on the fact that she was chronically sick for three years and never addressed it. And also her desire to go to jail — her overwhelming desire. People talk about sexual tension in the video a lot, but it's just between Jan and the prison system. ... I remember putting her on speakerphone so my friends could hear her, because she would use this catchphrase while also coughing.[4]
In 2020, Fleming stated that "Sick Jan" and "DePiglio" are his personal favorite of his YouTube videos.[23]
In 2022, Fleming created a mockumentary-style interview with an eccentric male character who explains his invention of the word "umpteenth."[26]
Stand-up comedy [edit]
Fleming began doing stand-up comedy in 2005, and in 2016 and 2017 he toured the United States with his stand-up comedy show titled Showpig.[27]
In 2010, the 24-year-old Fleming moved to Los Angeles after signing with the talent agency who managed Dane Cook.[28] Fleming has stated, "I was signed to a manager who seduced me to moving out to L.A., and as soon as I got there, she promptly became a chef."[29]
In January 2012, Fleming's friend, comedian Gary Gulman, invited to Fleming to a party to meet successful L.A. comedians from Boston.[30] Upon arriving, Fleming realized he was at comedian Dane Cook's house, and it was a watch party of the NFL playoff between the Patriots and the Ravens.[29] [31] While receiving a tour of the house, Fleming complimented its appearance, comparing it to a Crate & Barrel; Fleming claims Cook was not amused by the joke.[29] Dressed in androgynous clothing and having no knowledge about football, Fleming felt "freak[ed] out" and claims to have lost his sense of spatial awareness. He sat on Bill Burr's armrest "like a toy breed," eventually humiliating himself by sneezing "directly into the pleat of Bill Burr's khakis." During his Boba Everyday tour, Fleming describes the experience in detail.[29] On January 22, 2012, Dane Cook tweeted a photographic lineup of comedians at the party, which includes Fleming.[32]
Fleming's stand-up tour entitled Boba Everyday began in late 2019 and was postponed until 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[33] In October 2020, Fleming announced Forest Musings, a virtual show.[34] In August 2021, Fleming announced his stand-up tour, Tricky Tricky.[35] In May 2022, he announced a summer stand-up tour with venues in British Columbia, Texas, New York, Ontario, and Vermont.[36] [37]
When asked for the best comedy advice he had received, Fleming responded, "Rick Jenkins, owner of the Comedy Studio [in Harvard Square],[38] taught me that, through clarity with your audience, even the most absurd idea can be accessible - also, that no idea is too absurd."[23]
In 2011, describing Fleming's brand of comedy, Jenkins stated, "Chris isn't a funny comedian; he's an interesting person who sees the world in a funny way. Chris's world is this rubbery, cartoonish, absurd place filled with over-the-top, self-important characters. It's a really cool world he shows us."[28]
Describing his comedic process to WBUR in 2019, Fleming said,
I burn the formula every time I make something. I really revel in making things that no one is asking for. I think it might be the nature of being anti-establishment is like, when people like something they're like "Oh we want more of this," I'm going to give them something completely out of left-field. I think that's a way to make inspired work. To follow yourself and not to follow what David Bowie called "The Gallery."[13]
Fleming is likely referring to Bowie's advice for young artists,[39] in which Bowie says, "Never play for the gallery...Never work for other people at what you do. Always remember that the reason you initially started working was that there was something inside yourself that you felt that if you could manifest it in some way you would understand more about yourself and how you coexist with the rest of society."[40] [41]
Gender identity [edit]
Fleming lampooned his audience's questions about his gender in a 2016 video titled "Am I A Man?" His response was, "Can I consider myself a man if, in a pinch, I can dry myself off with a hand towel?"[42]
When asked for his preferred pronouns in a 2019 The Peak interview, Fleming stated, "Anything works for me."[8]
In 2016, Fleming defined manhood as:
My concept of a man is someone who whacks their elbow a little bit at a Bertucci's and has no hang-ups about freaking out - zero qualms about going full Streetcar Named Desire at 2 PM in a Bertucci's, putting on a one-man show in which the only words are your wife's name, "Jesus, Mary, and Joseph," "son of a," and "bitch."[42]
Fleming satirizes his relationship with masculinity in his comedy, such as with his 2016 song "I'm Afraid to Talk To Men"[43] and 2022 monologue "Men and Me."[44] When asked if he felt secure in his masculinity, he responded,
Oh, I'm not secure with my masculinity, I just don't have any masculinity. There's just such a lack of it, I have no respect for it. I have zero respect for masculinity so it makes it easier to talk about.[8]
Fleming routinely describes the way he is perceived by others in his stand-up. In regards to his appearance, he has compared himself to "a cocker-spaniel who is bi at best,"[42] "a woman...from the woods [who is] deeply ill,"[29] and "an American Girl doll that got left out in the rain."[44] In 2022, he stated, "If I'm at a restaurant with a group, the waiter will ask the women, me, children, then men. That's the order of operations...I've got a Gaia thing going on, Mother Goose energy."[44]
Filmography [edit]
Film [edit]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2012 | Genderfreak | Zach | |
2019 | The Last Laugh | Palace Comic |
Television [edit]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2012–15 | Gayle | Gayle Waters-Waters | Main role; Writer[45] |
2019 | Corporate | Todd | |
Splitting Up Together | Rando | ||
Twelve Forever | Mr. Fleming | Voice role | |
The Diaper | Sert | ||
2020–22 | Bigtop Burger | Cesare | Voice role |
2021 | Adventure Time: Distant Lands | New Death | Voice role, Episode: "Together Again" |
Summer Camp Island | Proffessor Q. | Voice role, Episode: "Oscar and the Monsters Chapter 1: Unaccompanied Oscar" |
References [edit]
- ^ "Chris Fleming '09".
- ^ a b "About chuntzit". YouTube.
- ^ "Variety Announces 10 Comics to Watch for 2019". 13 June 2019.
- ^ a b c d Alter, Rebecca (2022-03-31). "Chris Fleming Breaks His Silence on Deirdre Beaubeirdra". Vulture . Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ a b "Mic'd Up: Ronny Chieng, Chris Fleming bring their freshest to The Wilbur". Vanyaland. 2021-11-08. Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ "Chris Fleming draws inspiration from the strangest of places". Vanyaland. 2019-08-01. Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ a b c d Northerner, Kenneth. "Chris Fleming's stand-up teaches valuable lessons to FSU students". FSView . Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ a b c d e ""Masculinity means nothing to me" and other life mantras with Chris Fleming". The Peak. 2019-02-11. Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ Boston Comedy: Funny Grown Here. "Chris Fleming Interview March 2010". YouTube . Retrieved 7 April 2017.
- ^ a b c d e f Humphrey, Michael. "Meet The Man Inside The Madwoman, Gayle Waters-Waters". Forbes . Retrieved 7 April 2017.
- ^ a b c d Wenzel, John (9 July 2017). "The Ideal Jester for the digital age". The Denver Post . Retrieved 20 February 2019.
- ^ The Paley Center for Media. "The Next Big Thing in Digital Comedy: Gayle Waters-Waters". YouTube . Retrieved 7 April 2017.
- ^ a b c "Comedian Chris Fleming On Shape-Shifting Comedy, Terry Gross And New England Moms". www.wbur.org . Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ "Dadgeplott, by Brian Heveron-Smith & Friends". Brian Heveron-Smith . Retrieved 2019-02-20 .
- ^ "Local Comedian Chris Fleming Brings Fictional Local Web Character 'Gayle' to Boston Stage". BDCWire. 2015-03-19. Retrieved 2019-02-20 .
- ^ Gayle - Episode 26: Chibby Point , retrieved 2022-05-29
- ^ "Margaret Cho – Chris Fleming (Gayle Waters Waters) – 1:22:19". radiopublic.com . Retrieved 2019-02-20 .
- ^ Zaino III, Nick A. "Comic takes 'Gayle' offline in Davis Square". The Boston Globe. The Boston Globe. Retrieved 7 April 2017.
- ^ "This Is the Most Rewarding Way to Motivate Yourself to Clean Your Home". Lifehacker. 2021-12-02. Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ a b "COMPANY IS COMING". Youtube.
- ^ "With 21 million YouTube views and counting, Chris Fleming is a jester for the digital age". The Denver Post. 2017-07-11. Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ Edwards, Theresa (2015-11-12). "This viral video is the perfect guide to frantically prepping your home for the holidays". SheKnows . Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ a b c "For Chris Fleming, No Good Idea Is Too Absurd". Vulture. 2020-10-20. Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ "Chris Fleming - YouTube". www.youtube.com . Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ Davis , retrieved 2022-05-29
- ^ "The guy who came up with the word 'umpteenth' : Video 2022 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide". www.chortle.co.uk . Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ Bedford, Keith. "Chris Fleming is going beyond 'Gayle'". The Boston Globe. The Boston Globe. Retrieved 7 April 2017.
- ^ a b Clark, Andrew (2011-07-31). "Some funny things happened on the way to LA". Boston.com . Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ a b c d e My Superbowl Sunday with Dane Cook , retrieved 2022-05-29
- ^ Levy, Marc (2017-08-03). "Comedy Studio seeks new space for 2018, ending a 21-year run atop Harvard eatery". Cambridge Day . Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ "Patriots to face Ravens in '22 home opener". www.patriots.com . Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ Twitter https://twitter.com/danecook/status/161256076791136257. Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ "Tweet from @chrisfluming". Twitter. 23 September 2019. Archived from the original on 2019-09-23. Retrieved 2020-10-12 .
- ^ "Chris Fleming: Forest Musings – new media touring". Retrieved 2020-10-13 .
- ^ "Tweet from @chrisfluming". Twitter. 25 August 2021. Archived from the original on 2021-11-20. Retrieved 2021-11-20 .
- ^ Twitter https://twitter.com/chrisfluming/status/1527683142936576006. Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ "Chris Fleming". Chris Fleming . Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ Zaino III Globe, Nick A. (November 24, 2021). "By George, the Comedy Studio is coming back to Harvard Square". BostonGlobe.com . Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ David Bowie on why you should never play to the gallery , retrieved 2022-05-29
- ^ "David Bowie's tribute to Bob Dylan on one of his final songs". faroutmagazine.co.uk. 2022-02-03. Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ "Looking back at David Bowie's advice for young artists". faroutmagazine.co.uk. 2020-07-28. Retrieved 2022-05-29 .
- ^ a b c Am I a Man? , retrieved 2022-05-29
- ^ I'm Afraid To Talk To Men , retrieved 2022-05-29
- ^ a b c men and me , retrieved 2022-05-29
- ^ Gayle (TV Series 2012– ) - IMDb , retrieved 2020-10-12
External links [edit]
- Chris Fleming's channel on YouTube
- Chris Fleming at IMDb
- Rising comic Chris Fleming chases stand-up dream in LA – The Boston Globe
- Local Comedian Chris Fleming Brings Fictional Local Web Character 'Gayle' to Boston Stage – BDCwire
- Meet Chris Fleming, a Man Who's Man Enough to Admit He's Afraid to Talk to Men - LA Weekly
- [1]
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Fleming_%28comedian%29