This Southern California comic came up in clubs with a fast, physical style and stories that punch above their size. Recent fatherhood has added fresh angles and warmer beats to his quick, high-impact hour.
Small-stature, big swing storytelling
His early break came when
Carlos Mencia pulled him onstage, which led to opening slots and steady reps in tough rooms. Specials like
Fun Size,
Daddy Issues, and
Starfish show how he blends act-outs with tight writing.
What the night likely covers
Expect bits like
New Dad Field Notes,
Schoolyard Stories,
Airport Shenanigans, and a
Crowd Work Sprint tailored to the city. The room typically skews toward podcast listeners, long-time club fans, and date-night groups who enjoy quick pivots and playful improvising. A smaller trivia note is that he co-hosted the
About Last Night podcast with
Adam Ray, and he often trims setup lines between tours to keep pace brisk. All setlist ideas and production details here are informed guesses rather than locked plans.
The room where stories snowball
What you will see and hear
Expect a casual mix of jeans, team caps, and graphic tees that nod to past specials or podcast in-jokes. Merch trends lean toward cheeky one-liners and new-dad riffs, plus a simple logo piece for people who want something low-key. Pre-show chatter trades favorite clips and city-specific stories, and people compare which bits they hope return as callbacks.
How the crowd carries the jokes
During the set you may hear quick claps in rhythm after a dense tag, then a hush for the turn before the next pop. A few fans echo a familiar tag under their breath, but the room usually lets the comic steer and keeps the pace respectful. Post-show, friends recap top lines in the lobby and swap podcast episode picks for the ride home. The overall scene feels welcoming, comedy-first, and curious about craft rather than gotcha moments.
Timing, tone, and the snap of a punchline
Craft that leads the tech
The pace sits in the sweet spot where setups stay lean and tags stack fast, so the laughs never drift too far apart. His voice moves from a brisk conversational clip to sharp bursts that underline the turn, and he uses silence to spring the flip. The set is arranged in arcs that loop back with callbacks, often planting a seed early that blooms late for a layered closer.
How the hour breathes
An under-the-radar habit is reordering chunks mid-show if the room loves act-outs, then slotting a different closer that pays off the biggest early seed. Expect handheld mic work with the stand as a prop, quick posture changes, and tight footwork that sell characters without any drag. The opener primes the rhythm and the room tone stays simple and warm, with lighting shifts that frame stories rather than distract. Little production flourish, big craft first is the goal, and the result feels like a club-tight hour scaled for a theater.
If you like this, you might road-test these comics
Kindred stand-up DNA
Fans of
Tom Segura will connect with the dry honesty and long-form stories that still snap to a clean punch.
Gabriel Iglesias overlaps on animated act-outs and family angles, helped by an audience that enjoys sound effects and big character swings. If you like the calm, logical build and clean framing of
Nate Bargatze, this hour scratches a similar itch without losing spice.
Taylor Tomlinson brings sharp relationship insights and precise writing that match the mix of confession and craft on display. For riff-first energy that thrives on quick reads of the room,
Andrew Santino is a smart neighbor in your queue.
Why these comics mesh
Together these artists point to fans who like story-driven sets, clear tags, and a room that can turn on a dime when crowd work pops.