
He's enjoying a Hotz streak
By JIM SLOTEK, SUN MEDIA[/align]
An untold story of the Writers Guild strike is that all over L.A. there are comedians with time on their hands -- "pilot season" having been flushed down the toilet along with dreams of sitcom stardom.
"I'm still a member, but I haven't been on the picket line yet," says Jeremy Hotz, the popular hangdog comic who kicks off a nationwide tour of sold-out theatres this week with shows in Toronto (tonight at the Winter Garden), Mississauga (the Living Arts Centre Thursday) his hometown Ottawa (the NAC next Friday and Saturday), plus Hamilton and Halifax. "They had 'Bring An Actor Friend' day, and my buddy (ex Toronto comic) Brian Hartt called me up, but I had a standup job. He was show-running Carlos Mencia's show when the strike started, and he's out there on the line and doing it and I fully support them."
But Hotz -- who has had U.S. network development deals and recently filmed a CBC pilot that was ultimately rejected -- says he wouldn't have been knocking himself out trying to land a sitcom this year anyway.
"Actually, with the state of the sitcom -- well, you've seen it -- I think I'm better off playing theatres right now. These are really weak times. They've got sitcoms with good-looking movie stars and they wonder why they're not funny. Why are there no funny good-looking people. Gee, I don't know, lack of suffering maybe? And you've got shows like Last Comic Standing that take an artform and a craft and turn it into a game show. And the worse TV gets, the better it is for me. You want to see something really funny? Get your ass out of the house and watch me."
Good times for Jeremy Hotz? The guy whose dual mantra is "Everything is sh--" and "What a miserable (fill in subject here) that is!"? As his career progresses, we suggest it must be hard staying miserable. "Oh, don't say that man, you're cutting into my gig!" he says with a laugh from his L.A. home. "There's a lot of miserable people out there, let me be their leader."
Indeed, Hotz's career is proof that your mom was wrong. Some people can attract more flies with vinegar than with honey. Even he professes to be mystified with his popularity in some corners. "I did an Ottawa Senators appreciation thing for 10,000 people late last year. It was really cool, I loved it, but it was like 'We're gonna win the Cup this year! You're the best fans in the world! Now here's a miserable c---------!'"
We suggest that his demeanour might make a better fit at a Leafs rally. "They are really worse than ever, aren't they?" he says. "It's just humiliation. I've had them on the satellite here for years, and for the first time in my life, I can't bring myself to watch Leafs games."
The self-professed "laziest man in showbiz," Hotz has, like many comics lately, discovered that the 'Net will do your promotion for you. "My web designer linked me to YouTube and I get these things all the time saying 'So and so has subscribed to your videos.' And I find I sell out shows real quick with all this Facebook, MySpace bullsh--. I played an Indian casino in Pachanga, Calif., and people showed up. I don't know them, they don't know me, they just saw me on the Internet. However it happens, people seem to be happy about the fact that I'm perpetually miserable. People leave me messages that are versions of my bits, like 'I went to your Facebook page. What a miserable page that is!' And that's a good thing. It's really flattering."
