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Jensen, Keith Lowell

WORK TITLE: Punching Nazis
WORK NOTES:
PSEUDONYM(S):
BIRTHDATE:
WEBSITE:
CITY:
STATE: CA
COUNTRY: United States
NATIONALITY: American

http://keithlowelljensen.blogspot.com/

RESEARCHER NOTES:

 

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PERSONAL

Married; children: daughter.

ADDRESS

  • Home - CA.

CAREER

Comedian. Performed stand-up comedy for live comedy venues and television specials; wrote for punk zine Flipside in high school and contributed to SN&R, 2001-07.

WRITINGS

  • Punching Nazis: And Other Good Ideas, Skyhorse Publishing (New York, NY), 2018

Released five comedy albums, including To The Moon, Cats Made of Rabbits, Elf Orgy, and Bad Comedy for Bad People, 2017. Appeared in his comedy specials, Not for Rehire, and Atheist Christmas, 2014.

SIDELIGHTS

Keith Lowell Jensen is a comedian known for his subtle, smart approach, and his meandering storytelling that is largely autobiographical from his school days and workplaces. Through Stand Up Records he has released five comedy albums, including the number one Bad Comedy for Bad People in 2017. He has performed on The History Channel’s How The States Got Their Shapes The Starz Network’s The Coexist Comedy Tour, and Spike TV’s Manswers. He also had his own comedy special, Atheist Christmas, on the Hulu streaming service and performed at festivals around the world, including the China International Comedy Festival in Shanghai in 2016. Jensen’s comedy show, Not for Rehire, features stories of mischief in his previous minimum wage jobs at a golf course and fast-food restaurant, and his first big break doing stand-up at an animated film festival. He remarked on his Keith Lowell Jensen website: “With no 401k, no savings, no retirement account, these stories are the only return on my investment.”

In 2014, Jensen performed in his Atheist Christmas television special. A paradox as an atheist who loves Christmas, Jensen irreverently makes fun of the beloved holiday while noting that Americans find atheists to be one of the least trusted groups, even less than convicted rapists. While he skewers people who can’t imagine that a person who doesn’t believe in the punishment of a higher power can be a moral person, he also marvels at a holiday in which stockings poop candy coated raisins. In an interview with Shanon Nebo online at Patheos, Jensen explained his reason for making the show: “The seeming oxymoron of Atheist Christmas just struck me as funny, and it fits me because I sincerely love celebrating Christmas. The nostalgia, lights, gifts…it didn’t stop being fun when I stopped believing Jesus. Hell, my family celebrates Bilbo Baggins’ birthday too!”

In 2018, Jensen published his debut comedy book, Punching Nazis: And Other Good Ideas, a compilation of essays, stand-up routines, interviews, and social commentary. In his younger days, Jensen was active in the punk years in Sacramento where the LGBTQ and feminists carved out a safe space. But he despaired when the racists and neo-Nazi skinheads moved in. In the book, he describes his experiences clashing with white supremacy groups like The Suicidals gang, and the progressive scene, and hecklers at his comedy shows. Jensen comments on the rise of white supremacy groups like the Alt-Right and Racial Realists through the lens of punk rock music and how to deal with racist fringe groups. Based on the book’s title and noting Jensen’s focus on punching and fighting those who disagree with you, a Kirkus Reviews writer questioned that his answer to racism is a brawl, saying: “This is a book about right and wrong, and if right stops wrong with a punch, so much the better. Neither a nuanced political analysis nor a typical comedian’s laughfest.”

While the book is mostly first-person stories about his experiences as a straight white man, Jensen acknowledged in an interview with Aaron Carnes online at Sacramento News & Reviews: “I didn’t want to write this book at all … I’m a high school dropout and a heterosexual white cisgender male trying to write about social justice,” he says. “I’m not sure that I’m qualified to do that.” As for his theme of punching neo-Nazis, “I’ve lost several friends over it,” he says. “I’m sorry, but they’re all white guys. Anyone who’s actually faced any kind of racist or bigoted violence is sort of OK with not letting these alt-right guys play the game of being civilized while they build strength. I’m not telling anybody they should personally punch a Nazi, but they should shut the fuck up criticizing Antifa and other people that are punching Nazis.”

BIOCRIT

PERIODICALS

  • Kirkus Reviews, April 15, 2018, review of Punching Nazis: And Other Good Ideas.

ONLINE

  • Keith Lowell Jensen website http://keithlowelljensen.blogspot.com/ (August 1, 2018), author profile.

  • Patheos, http://www.patheos.com/ (December 17, 2014), Shanon Nebo, author interview.

  • Sacramento News & Reviews, https://www.newsreview.com/ (April 26, 2018), Aaron Carnes, author interview.

  • Punching Nazis: And Other Good Ideas - 2018 Skyhorse Publishing, https://smile.amazon.com/Punching-Nazis-Other-Good-Ideas/dp/1510733744/ref=sr_1_1_twi_har_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1531628275&sr=8-1&keywords=Jensen%2C+Keith+Lowell
  • RockAss.net - http://keithlowelljensen.blogspot.com/

    Bio: Keith Lowell Jensen has become known for his subtle, smart approach, and his meandering story telling. He has appeared on The History Channel, Spike TV, and The Starz Network, and has five hilarious comedy albums to his credit, with his latest, Bad Comedy For Bad People, hitting the # 1 spot on Amazon's comedy charts.

    In May of 2018 Skyhorse Publishing release the comedian's first book, Punching Nazis, and other good ideas, a collection of short stories, essays, and interviews centering around late eighties, early nineties punk rock and the bewildering presence of racist skinheads within that scene.

    In 2016 Jensen spent two weeks in Shanghai headlining the China International Comedy Festival.

    More Info:
    Keith Lowell Jensen tells stories that are engaging, hilarious, and often poignant. His subject matter is largely autobiographical. In addition to covering his misadventures at school and in the workplace, the comedian has managed, over five comedy albums, to create an oral history of his daughter Max's life from announcing that his wife was pregnant on his first album, To The Moon, to reflecting on his daughter's love of trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, civil rights activist Rosa Parks, and all the dragons you can imagine (and then some) on his latest, 2018's Bad Comedy For Bad People.

    Jensen's latest live offering Not For Rehire follows his roller-coaster career path, from his time as a
    range boy at a public golf course where he got paid less than minimum wage to the employer who started him in stand up comedy by shoving him onto stage in front of a large crowd at an animated film festival. More information on Not For Rehire is available here: http://keithlowelljensen.blogspot.com/2016/11/not-for-rehire-epk.html"

    Keith Lowell Jensen wears polyester Wrangler "Wranchers" which he orders from Wrangler.com.

    For booking information contact Joe Hauner: joehauner@gmail.com

  • IMDB - https://www.imdb.com/name/nm3038620/

    Keith Lowell Jensen
    Biography
    Mini Bio (1)

    Keith Lowell Jensen is an actor and producer, known for Smosh (2005), Keith Lowell Jensen: Atheist Christmas (2014) and Palace of Stains (2007).

    Actor (6 credits)
    2017 Cinema Insomnia with Mr. Lobo (TV Series)
    Francois Fly
    - Carnival of Souls (OSI Version) (2017) ... Francois Fly
    2013 420 Friendly Comedy Special (Video)
    Comedian
    2012 Smosh (TV Series)
    British Soldier
    - Ultimate Assassin's Creed Song (2012) ... British Soldier
    2012 Scalped (Short)
    Dog Man
    2007 Palace of Stains
    Methuseleh Grieper
    2006 Spree! All the Way to Mexico (Short)
    Priest
    Hide Hide Producer (3 credits)
    2014 Keith Lowell Jensen: Atheist Christmas (executive producer)
    2013 420 Friendly Comedy Special (Video) (producer)
    2012 The Coexist Comedy Tour (Documentary) (executive producer)
    Hide Hide Writer (2 credits)
    2018 Keith Lowell Jensen: Bad Comedy for Bad People
    2014 Keith Lowell Jensen: Atheist Christmas
    Hide Hide Director (1 credit)
    2014 Keith Lowell Jensen: Atheist Christmas
    Hide Hide Self (4 credits)
    2018 Keith Lowell Jensen: Bad Comedy for Bad People
    Himself
    2014 Keith Lowell Jensen: Atheist Christmas
    Himself
    2012 The Coexist Comedy Tour (Documentary)
    Himself
    2012 How the States Got Their Shapes (TV Series documentary)
    Himself - Atheist Comedian
    - Battle of the Bible Belt (2012) ... Himself - Atheist Comedian
    Getting Started | Contributor Zone »

  • Patheos - http://www.patheos.com/blogs/danthropology/2014/12/please-keep-us-laughing-an-interview-with-keith-lowell-jensen/

    Please keep us laughing: An Interview with Keith Lowell Jensen
    December 17, 2014 by Shanon Nebo
    1 Comment

    atheist christmas

    Many people love Christmas, including atheists and humanists that celebrate it secularly. Some people loathe the season and some struggle to manage their depression or other mental illness throughout a time that society is telling them to be merry and cheerful. In the War on Christmas, it has been made clear that ownership of this holiday is the cause of much strife with the proper associated salutations largely debatable. Whatever the holidays may include for anyone, many could agree that it all pairs well with a laugh.

    Keith Lowell Jensen has artfully wrapped all of the highs and lows of the “Most Wonderful Time of the Year” into one aptly named comedy special called, “Atheist Christmas”. In it, he addresses Christmas, being a non-believer during the holidays, depression, parenthood, grief, and the sometimes profound awkwardness of sexual awakening.

    Having the pleasure of seeing him perform live and watching his video special, I was thrilled at being presented with the opportunity to conduct a brief interview.

    Shanon: “Atheist Christmas” is definitely more than just a single prominent bit on your album. Christmas is a very strong theme throughout. What made you choose what many people would consider such an adversarial pairing of ideas for this project?

    Keith: The seeming oxymoron of Atheist Christmas just struck me as funny, and it fits me because I sincerely love celebrating Christmas. The nostalgia, lights, gifts…it didn’t stop being fun when I stopped believing Jesus. Hell, my family celebrates Bilbo Baggins’ birthday too!

    Shanon: Coping with depression, another holiday obstacle for many people, also creeps up from time to time in your comedy. How much did this coincide, at the time of your writing these jokes, with the passing of Robin Williams, and how closely do you think comedy and depression are related?

    Keith: I have a new bit about how we’re all diagnosed these days…depression, manic depressive, etc., and how some don’t like it, but I think it’s better than when we all just thought we all were assholes. I think it’s universal to struggle with some degree of melancholy and we’ve all been touched by depression in our family or among our friends.

    I don’t know how related comedy and depression are, but it does make sense to use art to self-treat, and particularly to use an art form that masks depression. It’s interesting to turn that on its ear by doing comedy ABOUT depression, and weird when the crowd laughs. I mentioned having had suicidal impulses in my act. This was the first time I’ve ever talked about that in front of my dad. So strange to pour my heart out like that and be laughed at, and to be glad to be laughed at.

    This was recorded in Christmas 2013, because I didn’t want to fake that it was Christmas, so it was before we lost Robin.

    Shanon: I noticed that your album was strangely devoid of “sandwich jokes” and jabs at how funny it is when certain minorities do certain things. How do you manage to still be funny without using bits like this?

    Keith: I laugh at dumb hack shit with my comedian friends as we drive to gigs, but I have different standards for what I’ll do onstage. You’d be surprised how many comics disagree with this approach, saying I’m limiting myself and making it hard. I think that if we want to be good, it’s supposed to be hard. When I heard David Byrne say that Talking Heads just made a list of what they didn’t want to sound like, and what was left was Talking Heads, I was encouraged to continue “limiting” myself.

    Shanon: After watching “Atheist Christmas” and seeing you perform live, I think it is safe to say that your child will soon surpass you in comedy prowess. Do you have some kind of contingency plan in mind for when this happens, or do you plan to willingly sacrifice yourself to the comedic powerhouse you are raising?

    Keith: I can’t wait to retire and let her go earn the checks. She’s a blast and really loves making people laugh.

    Shanon: What has been the most rewarding aspect of pursuing a career in stand-up comedy?

    Keith: Letters from people telling me my comedy has meant something to them, has made them feel less alone or more confident in some aspect of themselves. Music and comedy did this for me during a sometimes rough childhood and I love the idea of others getting strength and comfort from my art.

    You can find out more about the talented Keith Lowell Jensen on his own personal blog at: http://keithlowelljensen.blogspot.com/2011/08/biography.html

    And you can purchase your very own Atheist Christmas at: http://keithlowelljensen.blogspot.com/2014/11/atheist-christmas-out-now.html

    Or watch it on Hulu: http://www.hulu.com/watch/727565

    Atheist Christmas makes a great gift for anyone, especially that passive aggressive family member that insists on closing all discussions with, “I’ll pray for you,” and wraps purloined hotel Bibles as stocking stuffers.

    I can’t express my gratitude enough to people like Keith that can keep us laughing through the ups and downs of each of our unique holiday experiences. I hope to see a lot more from him as well as other secular artists and authors in the coming year.

Jensen, Keith Lowell: PUNCHING NAZIS
Kirkus Reviews.
(Apr. 15, 2018): From Book Review Index Plus. COPYRIGHT 2018 Kirkus Media LLC http://www.kirkusreviews.com/
Full Text:
Jensen, Keith Lowell PUNCHING NAZIS Skyhorse Publishing (Adult Nonfiction) $24.99 6, 1 ISBN: 978-1-5107-3374-9
Give fists a chance.
As a boyhood veteran of the Sacramento punk scene, Jensen became uncomfortably familiar with white supremacy before it began veering toward mainstream acceptability. In this scattered collection of polemics, broadsides, stand-up routines, social commentary, and personal anecdotes, the street-wise author and comedian mainly leads with his heart. His heart tells him that racism is wrong, wrong enough to deserve a punch in the nose whenever one encounters it. However, he notes early on, "full disclosure; I've never punched a Nazi. This is my great shame." Regardless, Jensen supports those who do, even if he admits that sometimes those folks are just looking for a brawl. Take his ambivalence toward a group that some readers might not know: "The SHARPS, Skinheads Against Racial Prejudice." You have to be up on your cultural codes and tribes to understand that shaved "skinheads" originally embraced everything about Jamaica: the culture, the rhythms, the black musicians--until the shorn style was adopted by militant white racists who transformed that culture into their stomping grounds. Hence the SHARPS, who represent a rejection of that racist stereotype and a return to the original ethos--ostensibly. A club promoter suggested to the author that they weren't really effective anti-Nazi warriors but rather "just dudes who wanted to fight. They cloaked it in some kind of ideal but they were just dudes who wanted to fight." Jensen admits to his own ambivalence: "I didn't like a lot of the SHARPS, and I loved several of them," before concluding, "whatever other issues I may have had with them, I will always admire them for their Nazi punching. Well done, crew, well done." His sentiment toward Antifa--the aggressive anti-fascist protestors--is similar: "If you think Antifa groups are as bad as Nazis, please stop being the right's tool." This is a book about right and wrong, and if right stops wrong with a punch, so much the better.
1 of 2 7/14/18, 11:16 PM
http://go.galegroup.com/ps/marklist.do?actionCmd=GET_MA...
Neither a nuanced political analysis nor a typical comedian's laughfest.
Source Citation (MLA 8th Edition)
"Jensen, Keith Lowell: PUNCHING NAZIS." Kirkus Reviews, 15 Apr. 2018. Book Review Index
Plus, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A534375120/GPS?u=schlager&sid=GPS& xid=ca90d3cf. Accessed 15 July 2018.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A534375120
2 of 2 7/14/18, 11:16 PM

"Jensen, Keith Lowell: PUNCHING NAZIS." Kirkus Reviews, 15 Apr. 2018. Book Review Index Plus, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A534375120/GPS?u=schlager&sid=GPS&xid=ca90d3cf. Accessed 15 July 2018.
  • Sacramento News & Reviews
    https://www.newsreview.com/sacramento/fast-funny/content?oid=26170385

    Word count: 3365

    Fast funny
    With two new records and his first book—Punching Nazis—Keith Lowell Jensen keeps the comedy coming.

    By Aaron Carnes

    This article was published on 04.26.18.

    It’s September 14, 2016. Local comedian Keith Lowell Jensen is perched on the modest Luna’s Café stage. Several comedians are lingering around the venue, including Johnny Taylor Jr., Cory Barringer, Jaclyn Weiand and Becky Lynn, who opened the show. The sold-out crowd waits in anticipation for Jensen’s first-ever performance of Not For Rehire, a collection of stories about his long string of shitty, menial jobs.

    Jensen opens the set by asking audience members to raise their hands in the air and wave their fingers to “start the magic.” It feels like we’re in kindergarten, but it’s effective in loosening up the crowd.

    Although he’s a seasoned storyteller-comic, this is a new realm for Jensen: a full hour of themed stories with a narrative arc and some serious and emotional moments that don’t stray from the most important component: comedy. It’s an advanced level of performance for a comedian of any stature. And the stories are killing.

    He does some KFC material where he recounts his antics with a co-worker and unlikely ally named Tony—a metalhead—as they take turns breading and deep-frying their fingers. One day Jensen ups the ante by sticking his entire breaded hand in the deep-fryer, using it to scare kids and earning Tony’s undying respect.

    It’s rough, but it’s clearly an amazing hour of stand-up. And I’m amazed at the speed at which it came together. Not seven months earlier, I was at the taping of Jensen’s previous special, Bad Comedy for Bad People, itself a solid hour of thoughtful, mostly storytelling comedy.

    Jensen works at a fast pace and has plans to continue to release an album a year. He’s hoping to build a fan base much the way indie rock bands do, rather than take the standard approach in comedy of moving to Los Angeles and getting some TV credits under his belt.

    In 2016, Jensen says, his label, Stand Up! Records, stalled the release of Bad Comedy For Bad People. That in effect delayed the taping of Not For Rehire, and put his plans on hold.

    Amid the frustration, two unexpected things happened: Comedy label 800 Pound Gorilla made a deal with him for a “greatest hits” record, and, even more surprising, he stumbled into a book deal. And now, here we are in the spring of 2018, and it’s all coming out. Bad Comedy For Bad People was released on March 30, Greatest Bits gets released in May (clips have been playing on SiriusXM’s Laugh USA for a few months—he was, “Featured Comic” in February), and his book Punching Nazis: And Other Good Ideas gets released on May 1.

    As for Not For Rehire, Jensen will be performing that at Upstairs at The B on May 12, and it’ll probably be the next special to get taped. This sudden mad release schedule is preferable to Jensen.

    “I want to constantly be putting things out,” he says. “The Beatles made an average of two albums a year. Woody Allen made a movie every year. I can do this. I’m not as polished as some of the comedians that I like. It’s like comparing punk rock to something that’s really polished and well-rehearsed. I like both, but I know what I am, and my stuff’s a little more rough. And I put out a lot of it. I’m Thee Headcoats of comedy (referring to the great British garage-punk band).”

    This onslaught of material finds Jensen at an important moment in his career. At 46, he’s been doing comedy for more than 15 years, and has been the local “it” comic for much of that time, with obvious potential to go big. He’s already developed a cult audience in various U.S. cities, traveled to China to do comedy and had various other accomplishments. (He cites being on George Lopez’s late night show Lopez Tonight, impersonating Chris Rock for Chris Rock, as a personal favorite.)

    He’s also encouraged several local comics who have gone on to big things, including Kiry Shabazz (who made a recent appearance on The Tonight Show), JR de Guzman, and the aforementioned Johnny Taylor Jr., who currently lives in LA and is working on a TV show called Sick Joke with visual artist Anousha Hutton.

    “Keith was really the first person in the scene that gave me a shot,” says Taylor, who started doing comedy in Sacramento about seven years ago. “Keith is such a gifted storyteller. His latest special with Stand Up! Records is his best hour to date in my opinion. With the book and the greatest hits album, it could create Keith-mania! I’m excited for him to be recognized for what an amazing comic he is.”

    NAZI STOPPER

    It’s the summer of 2017, and Jensen can’t believe he’s holding a signed contract and an advance from Skyhorse Publishing—that he’s being paid to write an actual book that people will be able to buy. It also terrifies him, and he spits out the first draft in three months in a state of panic.

    “I can’t stop writing because I have to prove to myself that I can do it,” Jensen recalls. “I need that advance. I’m broke. I’m like, ’Holy shit they’re going to ask for this back.’”

    After submitting the draft and waiting a few days for the editor to get back to him to tell him what she thought of it—she loved it—he nearly fell apart with relief and immense emotion.

    “When I hung up, I went and bought a burrito and sat down and cried,” Jensen says.

    Before Punching Nazis, Jensen had written a few books of first-person stories, but they were limited to small self-publishing runs and a couple of rejection letters. He first had dreams of being a writer in the fourth grade. Many years later, he wrote a book-version of Not For Rehire, which is much different than his stage performance, before he taped his first special To The Moon in 2009.

    Writing has always been important to Jensen. In his younger years, he wrote for punk zine Flipside in high school and contributed to SN&R from 2001-2007; when he interviewed other artists in these pages, he tended to insert himself in the stories quite a bit. He tells me a story with glee about interviewing a band and opening the resulting article by describing the stench of the cat litter box in the basement of the house where they rehearsed, a detail that annoyed the band.

    Punching Nazis is a different kind of a book, and he’s a little uncomfortable with it. About half of it is first-person stories, mostly about his experiences in the late ’80s and early ’90s Sacramento punk and underground art scene, where he dealt first-hand with white supremacists. That part, he’s happy with. The other half contains interviews and persuasive essays.

    “I didn’t want to write this book at all,” Jensen says, immediately acknowledging that, “that’s probably a horrible thing to say to promote it.”

    “I’m a high school dropout and a heterosexual white cisgender male trying to write about social justice,” he says. “I’m not sure that I’m qualified to do that. I’m just waiting for some really cool social justice hero of mine to fucking slam it and tell me what a moron I am.”

    The book deal started out, oddly enough, with a fight on Facebook, something Jensen gets flack for, but feels vindicated about. It began following Trump’s inauguration, when out-and-proud white supremacist Richard Spencer got punched in the face while he was giving an on-camera interview with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. The video clip of this punch went viral, sparking heated debates among liberals as to whether it is OK to punch white supremacists like Spencer, who is credited with coining the term “alt-right.” Jensen argued vehemently in favor of Nazi-punching.

    “I’ve lost several friends over it,” he says. “I’m sorry, but they’re all white guys. Anyone who’s actually faced any kind of racist or bigoted violence is sort of OK with not letting these alt-right guys play the game of being civilized while they build strength. I’m not telling anybody they should personally punch a Nazi, but they should shut the fuck up criticizing Antifa and other people that are punching Nazis.”

    One of his friends, Carrie Poppy, host of skeptic-themed investigative podcast Oh No Ross and Carrie and the Disneyland-oddity podcast Hidden Mickeys, made a comment to Jensen about how he and everyone talking about punching Nazis had never met a Nazi. Jensen replied that—not-so-fast, he’d met quite a few. He’d even seen a guy a few days earlier at a science fiction convention with an exposed Nazi tattoo. No one seemed to notice or care. This guy took pictures with Captain America, who, as Jensen says with much disappointment, was not punching him. (“Not seeing white racism is a feature of white privilege.”)

    Poppy was intrigued.

    “I felt like most people talking about it, myself included, were kind of talking out of our asses,” she says. “We didn’t know what we’d do if we were confronted with that situation. Here was this person that said, ’I’ve been there.’”

    At the time, she was being offered a book deal by Skyhorse, but was too busy with other projects, so she suggested her friend Jensen, who, she said, was working on a book about punching Nazis. The publishers were interested, but Jensen wasn’t sure he was. In fact, he wasn’t actually working on a book about punching Nazis; he was just ranting about it on Facebook. The publishers were interested. But Jensen wasn’t sure he was.

    “At first he was like, ’I really want to write this book about Christmas.’ I was like, ’Keith, don’t write a book about Christmas, whatever you do,’” Poppy says. “It just seemed like he had this really specific, unique thing he could do.”

    Jensen decided to give it a shot and wrote a proposal.

    His book is a unique portal into America’s white supremacy problem, specifically the country’s short-term memory, and it’s done with a lot of humor. When Spencer first broke into the mainstream consciousness sieg heiling to a group of alt-righters and praising Donald Trump, many well-intended liberals were shocked. Even moreso later, when Jason Kessler rallied hundreds of white supremacists from around the country to Charlottesville, who showed up, unashamed, with nothing covering their faces and ready to march in the Unite the Right rally.

    This is a problem that has existed long before Trump took office and Spencer showed up in the mainstream media. The punk scene, oddly, has been a place where Nazis regularly reared their ugly skinheads, despite getting overt push-back from people in that scene. It served as a not-so-gentle reminder of how alive and thriving these toxic ideas actually are and have always been in the history of this country.

    “That’s where fairly-privileged white dudes knew something that other people have been privileged not to,” Jensen says.

    One interview in the book reveals a story in early ’90s when several East Bay punk bands, including Green Day, played a Sacramento show that was overrun by skinheads. It turned into a big fight, and the members of Green Day were chased around the streets. Soon after, their Slappy 7-inch EP came out, with a booklet that included the phrase “Green Day won’t play Sacto.” The band refused to play here until their Dookie record came out years later.

    Many of Jensen’s stories cover a different, but all too familiar topic of American racism: learning that seemingly nice white people might in fact be white supremacists. Jensen writes about meeting an older man in a hotel lobby. They laughed and talked about movies and hit it off. As Jensen was leaving, the old man shocked him by saying something incredibly racist, oh so casually.

    Jensen writes: “This is where I discovered how invisible racism and racists can be to white people. They’re not always sporting white-power tattoos. Sometimes they don’t even have goatees, or hipster Hitler haircuts. Sometimes they’re the sweet old dude who discusses movies with you.”

    OUT IN THE WORLD, AND BACK TO sAC

    Not For Rehire concludes with the first job Jensen ever loved: Working for Spike and Mike’s Festival of Animation (and Spike and Mike’s Twisted Festival of Animation). Not For Rehire ends up being a bit of an homage to Spike and Mike co-founder Mike Gribble, who was the first person to put Jensen in front of a crowd with a microphone—to introduce the show, and tell jokes.

    He traveled with Spike and Mike in 1994 and on and off again for the next decade. It was through this experience that he was inspired to make creative, amazing things happen when he returned to Sacramento.

    He started the Tuesday Night Grindhouse cult movie series at the Colonial Theatre in 1999, which was moved to the Crest Theatre, re-branded and co-created with Christy Savage and Darin Wood as Trash Film Orgy in 2001. Jensen hosted the events, which included sketch comedy, scantily clad women, crazy antics and, of course, B-movies galore.

    “We were driving motorcycles through the theater,” Jensen recalls of the festival’s early days. “We had Mexican wrestling. We had guns go off—they were blanks, but we still got the SWAT team called on us one night. After the move to the Crest, the rules were a little stricter.

    He left Trash Film Orgy in 2003; Savage and Wood continued on without him, and Jensen would make occasional guest appearances. Before leaving, he and some of the Trash Film Orgy cast pursued an idea of his and started the sketch group I Can’t Believe It’s Not Comedy. Somewhere in that time, he also started doing stand-up.

    His first-ever paying gig, after only doing four or five open-mics, was at Laughs Unlimited. He told a single 10-minute story, but it didn’t go well. (“I bombed my dick off.”) So he shied away from storytelling comedy for a while, leaning toward absurd characters instead, including Francois Fly, a house fly who told fly-related jokes.

    He jumped head-first into stand-up after a weekend of shows at the Geary, opening up for cult absurdist comic Brent Weinbach in 2003. It was there that Jensen first started talking on stage about atheism, giving what he felt was an honest expression of his viewpoint and sharing true snippets about himself.

    “That was the night stand-up beat out sketch,” Jensen says. “I did material that was super near and dear to my heart, which is something I always found easier to do in sketch than in stand-up. I really love stand-up, but I love a lot of things. It was the one giving me the immediate reward.”

    The deeper he got into comedy, the more he worked to make Sacramento a comedy town. Weinbach credits Jensen with building the [scene] here.

    “If I wanted to do a show in Sacramento, he was the guy I would turn to,” Weinbach says, “because I knew he was really trying to cultivate a cool comedy scene there. I knew if he was involved with putting on a show in Sacramento, it was going to be a good show. He was definitely a man of the town.”

    Jensen and Weinbach stayed friends. Weinbach gave Jensen a shoutout last year during a game on the TV show @midnight with Chris Hardwick. A while back, Weinbach even tried building a bit around an announcer introducing “Keith Lowell Jensen” several times in variously increasing bizarre and exaggerated ways. (“His name has a ring to it.”)

    On his first special, To The Moon, Jensen retold the 10-minute joke that he bombed on years earlier, and nailed it—the story was also called “To The Moon.” His second record, Cats Made of Rabbits, nearly got picked up by Comedy Central Records, but they took too long making up their mind, so he decided to release it himself in 2011.

    “I’ve got a Jonas Brothers reference in here, Jensen explains. “I kind of have to put it out. It’s expiring.”

    Bad Comedy for Bad People, his fifth record, is another step toward storytelling. “I always loved the old man with stories to tell,” Jensen explains. “I think it’s a good idea for a comedian in his 40s to do a longer produced piece that has a common theme and a plot arc to the whole thing,” Jensen says. “Even in my 20s, I didn’t know if I’d ever have kids, but I wanted to be the uncle with good stories. I guess that’s sort of the uncle I am on stage now.”

    The second half of the Not For Rehire show at Luna’s is rockier than the first, but it’s riveting, even with its flaws. I watch as Jensen struggles through delivering emotional material about his time with Spike and Mike’s Mike Gribble. Jensen cries at one point, recounting Gribble’s death, but it’s the pep talk that Gribble gives him a little before that scene that is its most potent.

    He confronts Jensen about the way he’s half-assing everything in his life. He has him look around at the magic that he is creating—they are traveling around the world showing weird cartoons to eager fans—and invites him to either join his magic full-on or go create his own—but whatever he chose to do, to give it his all, and embrace life 100 percent. This had a profound effect, Jensen says, and fueled his work ethic, focus and drive in all aspects of his life.

    There’s a part of Jensen that feels disappointed at the level his comedy career is at all these years later, but he’s also proud at what he’s created while determinedly not leaving Sacramento for LA, and not living 365 days a year on the road, either, so he could be home with his family. As driven as he is, he never wanted comedy to dominate every aspect of his life, and he’s stubbornly stuck to that creed.

    “I could space them out,” he jokes of everything happening right now. “No. Fuck that. Let’s just throw them all out there. I want to put as much out there as I can before Trump blows the world up or I die. Both of which are coming.”

    What he’s really excited about is more than everything coming out right now, it’s that everything appears lined up for him to have the support so that he can finally be releasing new material on a consistent, annual basis.

    He tells me that he has his next four projects already mapped out, and like Not For Rehire, they are all themed-storytelling concepts. As he tells me about each one in detail, he realizes that, in fact, he has his next five ideas already worked out. But first, he needs to tape Not For Rehire.

  • Brown Paper Ticket
    https://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/857032

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    Keith Lowell Jensen with Nat Towsen, and Joe Dixon
    Keith Lowell Jensen brings his stand up comedy to Long Island for the first time with funny friends Nat Towsen and Joe Dixon.

    Jensen can be seen on the current season of The History Channel's "How The States Got Their Shapes" and in The Coexist Comedy Tour on The Starz Network. He previously appeared as a panhandling expert on Spike TV's Manswers. Jensen also recently appeared on Doug Benson's "Doug Loves Movies", and on Myq Kaplan's "Hang Out With Me".

    Keith Lowell Jensen has three comedy albums out, To The Moon, Cats Made of Rabbits which is also available on DVD, and Elf Orgy. Stand Up! Records will release Atheist Christmas in 2014.

    "Keith never fails to make me laugh and think. Smart, funny and with a healthy dose of heart...he's rapidly become one of my favorite comedians."
    Matt Dillahunty The Atheist Experience

    "Keith Lowell Jensen is drop-dead, laugh-until-you-scream-and-it-hurtsfunny... with humor that relies on intelligence, perspective, andcompassion. That makes him a rare bird. Like the condor, or the Abbott'sBooby. Or something."
    Greta Christina

    "True fact: Every American film of the last two decades would be improved by digitally replacing Keanu Reeves with Keith Lowell Jensen doing a comedy riff. And hot lesbians."
    David Fitzgerald, author of the Complete Heretic's Guide to Western Religion