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It's
Funny Cause It's True:
TV Show Looks for Humor in Getting Sued
New York Lawyer
April 7, 2008
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Courtroom drama is usually nothing to chuckle about — unless it's in
the Laugh Factory and Tom Arnold or Sinbad are the lawyers.
Entrepreneur Jamie Masada
was sitting in his venerable Sunset Boulevard comedy club one night
when a patron screamed so loudly at a comedian's joke that the guy
sitting next to him claimed his hearing was damaged. Next thing the
club owner knew, Masada said, he was being named in a lawsuit.
"It was so ridiculous. I
thought, 'This is a TV show.'"
Not long after, the
"Supreme Court of Comedy" was born.
The show, which launched
last month on DirecTV, is taped at the Laugh Factory.
The premise is the same as
shows like "The People's Court" or "Judge Joe Brown," with a twist:
The plaintiffs and defendants are represented by comedians acting as
their lawyers.
"They are real people with
legitimate small claims disputes," says Ronit Larone of DirecTV,
adding that the show's producers comb through hundreds of cases to
find ones involving things like a a guy who sued a house-sitting
friend for allegedly absconding with his sex tape. Arnold and Sinbad
squared off against each other in that episode.
In another, Paul Rodriguez
defended a man against charges of taking his former girlfriend's
clothes and wearing them at a club, where one of her friends saw
him.
Comic Dom Irrera presides
over each episode as the judge.
"We spend so much money on
these cases, and they really belong in a comedy club, not a
courtroom," Masada said of his idea to take them to TV
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