• hannibal buress Mindy Tucker

Zanies

1548 N Wells St
Chicago IL 60610
312-337-4027
  • Tue Mar 30 8:30 pm
    Hannibal Buress at Zanies

    Chicago-raised stand-up (and Saturday Night Live writer) Hannibal Buress had to overcome a few things early in his career: His delivery is the epitome of patience-trying—it often takes a few minutes of his wry monotone to figure out what the hell he’s talking about—and the material is mostly left-field observational stuff that’s equal parts inviting and off-putting. (“I’d love to kick a pigeon,” begins one head-scratcher.) But Buress has gotten sharper by the day, to the point where his jokes about fire SUVs and “the next big blind guy” are no longer odd, but seen as a window into his wonderfully skewed sensibilities.

    Zanies 1548 N Wells St, Chicago, IL
  • Wed Mar 31 8:30 pm
    Hannibal Buress at Zanies

    Chicago-raised stand-up (and Saturday Night Live writer) Hannibal Buress had to overcome a few things early in his career: His delivery is the epitome of patience-trying—it often takes a few minutes of his wry monotone to figure out what the hell he’s talking about—and the material is mostly left-field observational stuff that’s equal parts inviting and off-putting. (“I’d love to kick a pigeon,” begins one head-scratcher.) But Buress has gotten sharper by the day, to the point where his jokes about fire SUVs and “the next big blind guy” are no longer odd, but seen as a window into his wonderfully skewed sensibilities.

    Zanies 1548 N Wells St, Chicago, IL
  • Thu Apr 1 8:30 pm
    Hannibal Buress at Zanies

    Chicago-raised stand-up (and Saturday Night Live writer) Hannibal Buress had to overcome a few things early in his career: His delivery is the epitome of patience-trying—it often takes a few minutes of his wry monotone to figure out what the hell he’s talking about—and the material is mostly left-field observational stuff that’s equal parts inviting and off-putting. (“I’d love to kick a pigeon,” begins one head-scratcher.) But Buress has gotten sharper by the day, to the point where his jokes about fire SUVs and “the next big blind guy” are no longer odd, but seen as a window into his wonderfully skewed sensibilities.

    Zanies 1548 N Wells St, Chicago, IL
  • Fri Apr 2 8:30 pm, 10:30 pm
    Hannibal Buress at Zanies

    Chicago-raised stand-up (and Saturday Night Live writer) Hannibal Buress had to overcome a few things early in his career: His delivery is the epitome of patience-trying—it often takes a few minutes of his wry monotone to figure out what the hell he’s talking about—and the material is mostly left-field observational stuff that’s equal parts inviting and off-putting. (“I’d love to kick a pigeon,” begins one head-scratcher.) But Buress has gotten sharper by the day, to the point where his jokes about fire SUVs and “the next big blind guy” are no longer odd, but seen as a window into his wonderfully skewed sensibilities.

    Zanies 1548 N Wells St, Chicago, IL
  • Sat Apr 3 7 pm, 9 pm, 11:15 pm
    Hannibal Buress at Zanies

    Chicago-raised stand-up (and Saturday Night Live writer) Hannibal Buress had to overcome a few things early in his career: His delivery is the epitome of patience-trying—it often takes a few minutes of his wry monotone to figure out what the hell he’s talking about—and the material is mostly left-field observational stuff that’s equal parts inviting and off-putting. (“I’d love to kick a pigeon,” begins one head-scratcher.) But Buress has gotten sharper by the day, to the point where his jokes about fire SUVs and “the next big blind guy” are no longer odd, but seen as a window into his wonderfully skewed sensibilities.

    Zanies 1548 N Wells St, Chicago, IL
21+ $23

Chicago-raised stand-up (and Saturday Night Live writer) Hannibal Buress had to overcome a few things early in his career: His delivery is the epitome of patience-trying—it often takes a few minutes of his wry monotone to figure out what the hell he’s talking about—and the material is mostly left-field observational stuff that’s equal parts inviting and off-putting. (“I’d love to kick a pigeon,” begins one head-scratcher.) But Buress has gotten sharper by the day, to the point where his jokes about fire SUVs and “the next big blind guy” are no longer odd, but seen as a window into his wonderfully skewed sensibilities.

Updated 04/02/2012

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