Yes, Penn Jillette, Michael Moschen, Anthony Gatto, Mr Mills (of Mills' Mess fame), Avner the Eccentric, Sean Gandini, Francis and Lottie Brunn, and more if I had a functioning memory...
Ive met 3 from you list. Nice list mate! Gotta mention, Wes Peden, Tony Pezzo, Patrik Elmnert. water on mars. Get the shoe, Joshen and ....i forget, one of the best acts ever. Thom was brilliant at Ejc 2019!! Lots of younger people, will be big soon, lots of Scandinavians! and the South American traffic light buskers are awesome. All the best!!!
I have copies of newspapers from the 1870s and 80s that are fascinating, at least to me, to read. They occasionally have bits of humour, mostly jokes but sometimes illustrations. However, the humour is obscure. Not in the sense that the language is incomprehensible, it's fairly standard English, or that the references and context are impenetrable (they are on occasion, bust mostly not). The problem chiefly lies in the evolution of what people find funny. For example: a man sits on a bench in a park by a hedge, whispering endearing words of love to the girl he is courting who is demurely hiding behind the hedge... except that it isn't her. It's a cow. Could it be that juggling household objects just doesn't fascinate modern crowds the way it used to?
Can you name a famous juggler? Me: thom walls
Great talk Thom!
Thom I want an autograph!!!
What a great talk! Cool to see these old tricks and history being discussed.
Great talk
Yes, Penn Jillette, Michael Moschen, Anthony Gatto, Mr Mills (of Mills' Mess fame), Avner the Eccentric, Sean Gandini, Francis and Lottie Brunn, and more if I had a functioning memory...
Ive met 3 from you list.
Nice list mate!
Gotta mention,
Wes Peden,
Tony Pezzo,
Patrik Elmnert. water on mars.
Get the shoe, Joshen and ....i forget, one of the best acts ever.
Thom was brilliant at Ejc 2019!!
Lots of younger people, will be big soon, lots of Scandinavians! and the South American traffic light buskers are awesome.
All the best!!!
How does he do it?.... Carefully...
😍
I have copies of newspapers from the 1870s and 80s that are fascinating, at least to me, to read. They occasionally have bits of humour, mostly jokes but sometimes illustrations. However, the humour is obscure. Not in the sense that the language is incomprehensible, it's fairly standard English, or that the references and context are impenetrable (they are on occasion, bust mostly not). The problem chiefly lies in the evolution of what people find funny. For example: a man sits on a bench in a park by a hedge, whispering endearing words of love to the girl he is courting who is demurely hiding behind the hedge... except that it isn't her. It's a cow. Could it be that juggling household objects just doesn't fascinate modern crowds the way it used to?
Absolute horrible to perform for such audience...are they blind ,heavyly sedadet,death???
Once i perform with such audience,its veeery irritating