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Cross Purposes with David Cross
David Cross came up through Boston and New York alt-comedy, sharpening a voice that blends political bite with absurd left turns. Many know him from Mr. Show and Arrested Development, but the stand-up is where he pushes hardest and riffs most freely. After years balancing TV, film, and fatherhood, his current hour leans more personal while keeping the same serrated edge.
Long stories, sharp turns
Expect a tight arc built from long stories and quick jabs, with bits likely to land such as "Small Town Tyrants", "The Wifi Is Down", and "Kids, Screens, and Screams". The room skews mixed-age, from longtime sketch diehards to younger fans who found the specials online, and they tend to listen hard and laugh in short, spiky bursts. You might spot couples in band tees and writers with notebooks, but phones usually stay down because he punishes lazy interruptions in clever ways.Two quick deep-cuts
Trivia heads: he won an Emmy for writing on The Ben Stiller Show, and his album "Shut Up, You Fucking Baby!" earned a Grammy nod. These notes about topics and staging are educated guesses based on recent shows and could shift by night.The David Cross crowd, up close
The room skews indie and bookish, with denim jackets over band tees, boots, and tote bags from small presses.
Alt-scene wardrobe, bookish energy
Pre-show chatter touches Mr. Show deep cuts, favorite Arrested Development misunderstandings, and which special nails the closer. Merch is straightforward: crisp poster art, a simple tee, and maybe a sly line that rewards those who caught a specific tag.The post-show debrief ritual
During the set, laughs are tight and frequent, and quick claps follow gnarlier turns as a nod to craft, not volume. Heckling is rare because this crowd prefers the slow build and likes seeing logic untied in real time. Afterward, small circles compare favorite phrasings and trade podcast picks, sometimes pointing a newcomer to a deep early album.How David Cross builds the hour
Onstage, David Cross rides long sentences that snap into tight punchlines, then opens a lane for quick tag runs. His voice has a dry rasp, and he uses it like an instrument, shifting from mock-earnest to booming outrage to pop a silly claim.
Timing as melody, silence as drum
He likes to plant a phrase early and call it back late, bent into a new shape so the hour feels connected without neat bows. Tempo swings do the work: he lowers to a hush to pull you in, then cracks the rhythm so the laugh drops clean. The stage is spare, usually a mic, stool, and soft wash, keeping focus on words and hand shapes that sell a character.Callbacks as architecture
A lesser-known habit is reordering chunks mid-run, testing a cold open or tucking the closer early to see if a later rant plays stronger. He will also step off-mic for a second voice, thinning the tone to make an absurdity land without props.Kindred comics for David Cross fans
Fans who track sharp, literate stand-up often cross over with Patton Oswalt, whose nerdy storytelling and pop-culture detail scratch a similar itch.