Audio By Carbonatix
With 2 days left in our spring campaign, we have a new $10,000 goal!
New Times members have already contributed more than $7,500 - can you help us hit our new goal and keep New Times free and in print every week? If New Times matters to you, please take action and contribute today.
“So you’re comparing fart applications to a man who pioneered civil rights,” Wyatt Cenac responds after a software developer likens the listing of his Pull My Finger app on iTunes to the integration of baseball by Jackie Robinson. “As a black man, I see exactly what your struggle is. You shall overcome.” A correspondent and writer on The Daily Show since 2008, Cenac has helped rappers recession-proof their budgets and uncovered discrimination faced by gun owners who openly carry. To prove the latter, he strapped on a crap-load of firearms and entered a Virginia coffee shop. The New York-born, Dallas-raised funnyman got his break writing for King of the Hill after stints with Upright Citizens Brigade in Los Angeles. He also starred in Medicine for Melancholy, a critically acclaimed indie film from Miami-born filmmaker Barry Jenkins.
But this Thursday through Saturday, Cenac returns to his comedic roots in stand-up at the Miami Improv. “Sometimes when I’m walking down the street, I’ll see a priest or a rabbi, and whenever I do, I like to give them a high-five and say ‘Pray on, prayer!’”
Jan. 6-8, 8:30 p.m., 2011