Christina Pazsitzky and Ralphie May Available in Comedy Works Studio Next Week

By: May. 26, 2017
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Christina is available in Comedy Works Downtown in Larimer Square studio Thursday June 1 & Friday June 2. Ralphie May is available in Comedy Works South at the Landmark studio Thursday June 1.

Christina is a stand-up comedian that can be heard narrating the documentary Can We Take a Joke?. You can also hear her on her hugely successful podcast Your Mom's House with her husband Tom Segura. Your Mom's House is a top rated comedy podcast on iTunes and was nominated for the Stitcher Radio Comedy Award in 2013. If you like 7th grade humor, you'll love Your Mom's House. Check out Christina's other podcast, That's Deep, Bro where she gets super deep on stuff.

Christina's TV credits include TruTV's How to Be a Grown Up, she was a round table regular and writer on the popular E! show Chelsea Lately and TBS Funniest Wins with Marlon Wayans. Pazsitzky is best known for providing her unique and funny pop culture commentary on several VH1 countdown shows, TV Guide Channel, SyFy Channel's Insane or Inspired, Tru TV's World's Dumbest and E! Television's Wildest TV Moments.

With a background in animation, Christina has written on and lent her voice to several animated projects, like the feature film TV: The Movie with the guys from MTV's Jackass and the television series, Trolls. She was given Animation Magazine's "Up and Coming Writer" Award. You can see Christina's stand-up on the Showtime special Red Light Comedy filmed in Amsterdam, TV Guide Channel's Stand Up in Stilettos and Nuvo TV's Stand Up and Deliver.

For 25 years now, Ralphie May has appeared at the biggest venues, slayed every late-night audience multiple times, recorded a special for every comedy-loving network on television, traveled the world for the USO and reached the level of popularity few stand-up comedians have attained.

May earned a spot on the first season of Last Comic Standing, and though he finished second, he might as well have won with the way fans fell in love with his over-the-top persona. Yet little compares to the amount of exposure May received when Netflix exclusively launched his new comedy special Unruly. The raw, uncensored hallmarks of his mentor Sam Kinison are evident in May's set, laid out brilliantly over two hours in Unruly. May doesn't deal in simple outrage, building a routine that's rich, deep and fearless. He's able to balance boyish charm, withering introspection and compassion for his fellow human being with some of the dirtiest, most honest observations you've ever heard.

Viewership expectations are high. May debuted five specials over a decade on Comedy Central with each drawing record ratings. He also tours extensively and has made 19 trips into war zones to perform for troops with the USO and Wounded Warriors charity. And his popularity continues to grow.



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