After years in comedy, Deon Cole still likes who he sees in the mirror
Deon Cole will tell anyone plainly: Not every comic wants to talk about their audience members.
The longtime stand-up comedian will do some crowd work if he must. But he would much rather tell you the jokes he wrote. Itโs the nature of a changing audience that is now more likely to stumble upon comedians they havenโt seen before through short social media clips, rather than an impromptu night at a comedy club.
โ[The audience] feel like, โHey, we came to improv, we came to have funโ and itโs like, no, you know how long it took me to write these jokes?โ Cole said with a laugh. โI donโt need you coming here screaming at me, and then I spend five minutes talking about you and your mom and your kids, and then I forgot what I was doing, and now the tone of the show is messed up.โ
The Chicago-born comedian, actor and writer has long juggled multiple projects. This includes writing for โThe Tonight Show With Conan OโBrienโ and acting in films such as โThe Color Purpleโ and โThe Harder They Fallโ as well as television shows like โblack-ish.โ Cole has also taped multiple comedy specials with Netflix over the years including โCole Heartedโ in 2019, โCharleenโs Boyโ in 2022, and โOk, Misterโ in 2024. He has also been excited about the launch of his YouTube show โFunny Knowing Youโ where he gets to interview fellow comics and celebrities as they talk about their life stories.
But as he considers his legacy and comedic craft, Cole said he is proud he is still himself after all of this time in the industry.
โThereโs a lot of people who look in the mirror every morning and go out in the world and become something else, when the thing thatโs going to make them rich and successful is in the mirror,โ Cole said. โ I think that whoever that person is in the mirror you need to take that person with you and apply that person to everything that you do, and thatโs gonna make the difference in your life.โ
Now, as part of the Netflix Is a Joke comedy festival, Cole is looking forward to doing a set for Altadena residents to raise money for ongoing relief in the aftermath of the 2025 wildfires that decimated much of the area. The Times spoke with Cole about how heโs thinking about his craft, crowd work and the importance of comedians revealing themselves.
Whatโs felt different this time in preparation for this particular show compared with your other ones?
This isnโt just a regular comedy show, like at some city, you know, these people really went through something, and they are still devastated by it. And so itโs not just a regular โweโre going to do a show.โ Weโre trying to raise as much money as possible for this community to help people in need so thatโs a big difference. I donโt do that every weekend. Itโs a big difference. And then having the people we want to show up and come get down and perform, seeing all of them on the same show, itโs going to be surreal as well.
Cole prioritizes written material and personal storytelling over crowd work, believing audiences should get to know comedians as individuals rather than hearing disconnected jokes.
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How has your preparation changed over the years of you doing stand up compared with when you started?
Iโm more confident. You know, back in the day, it might be a 30-60 chance that the joke will work: 30 meaning it will work, 60 that it wonโt. And now Iโm at a point where I can think of something, and thereโs an 85% chance that it will work, thereโs a 15% chance that it wonโt. So my preparation, as far as thinking of something and then going to execute it, being able to execute it, is another difference. Back in the day I would have to ask for stage time. Now I can think of something and just go to a club and go right up.
What does improving your craft look like at this point in your career?
Just being more confident in my choice of what is funny and whatโs not. I can hear something now and go, thatโs funny, and then go, do it, and it becomes funny. So itโs just having confidence to do that and not question myself as much. Thatโs basically the difference, to be honest with you. Other than that, my drive, my thought pattern, everything is still the same. Itโs heightened to the point where Iโm paying attention more because I have a lot more free time to to pay attention. It gets to a point where you can pay a lot of people to do a lot of stuff for you, and the more time you got free, the more time you got to think about other things. So I try to pay everybody to do everything so I can go create. And so itโs been good to be in that space, to not worry about a lot of stuff and stay creative. When a lot of people thatโs been doing it this long canโt and to still be relevant after all this time, and still be funny and still pack out showsโฆ that means a lot to me.
How do you incorporate crowd work into your shows then?
If something happens while Iโm doing my stuff, then fine but Iโm not going to create a crowd work environment. If it happens, it happens, but Iโm not going to purposely create it. And I mean to each his own that do it. And thereโs some people who are very funny at it, and thereโs some people thatโs like, what are you doing? And for a lot of audience members, I feel like theyโre being tricked a lot of times, because a lot of comedians, and I ainโt going to say a lot of comedians, but a few. Not every comic that does crowd work does this. Thereโs some great crowd work comedians that I really love and admire and respect. But there are some comedians that get up there and theyโre doing a meet and greet. Itโs downstage, โHey, whatโs your name?,โ โWhat do you do for a living?,โ โHey, so how many kids do you got?,โ โSo, hey, where do you where you work at?,โ โOh, who are you?โ Do that at the meet and greet. What are you standing up here for 45 minutes, getting to know everybody for? Whereโs your jokes at? If people like it, you know, what can you do about it? But Iโm old school with the craft. I like written comedy. I like storytelling. I like hearing something I never heard before. I like that. Thatโs just my preference. I donโt like sitting in the audience laughing at somebodyโs name or what they do for a living, or who they with. My brain ainโt learning that way.
Do you think that sense of audience participation is coming from people watching social media clips?
I mean people love it, and itโs a younger audience that I think they really love it. Even though older people love it, donโt get me wrong. But the majority, I think, itโs a younger audience. And granted, thereโs an audience for that. It really is and have at it. I think everybody should go out there, get their money, do what they do. My personal preference, which I am entitled to have, I think that itโs all about balance, like it is with everything in life. I donโt think you should eat candy all day. I think you should eat some vegetables. I donโt think you should eat vegetables all day. I think you should eat some protein. Itโs all about balance. You can give me crowd work, but letโs hear about you. Who are you? What happened to you today? Thatโs whatโs funny. How do you feel about this and that? Can I get that? And then you can go back to your crowd work. But if people keep going up to these shows and they like all the crowd work, and thatโs it, me personally, I think youโre not getting your moneyโs worth when you leave there and you donโt even know if the comic was married, [have] kids, if theyโre happy, sad. You just leave there going, โdid you hear what he said about the girl in the fourth row?โ โOh, that was hilarious.โ โDid you see the guy in the back with the toupe on?โ โThat was funny.โ And itโs like, OK, well, who said that? Whoโs the guy that said it? What about him? Do we know anything about him? Is he a racist? Is he a revolutionary? Who said this? Let me know who said this. Iโm not just going to laugh at that.
Why do you think itโs important for a comic to reveal parts of themselves on stage?
Thatโs what the greats have done. Greats are that way. They have been that way. You get caught up into who these people are. Itโs good to hear that. A lot of great comics got sitcoms. Why? Because you can listen to their jokes and see the show, and then they go create the show off of what they were talking about. You can see this. So when you have a comic, itโs a lot of comics that go on stage and they tell jokes, and then they leave, and then you go, who was that person? You canโt even remember the comicโs name. You know what I mean? I just think that you should let people know who you are, because thatโs what makes you unique. Canโt just go up and tell joke after joke after joke. Anybody could tell jokes, [but itโs] whoโs telling the joke that makes it great.