Top 61 Quotes & Sayings by Jonathan Krisel

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American director Jonathan Krisel.
Last updated on November 25, 2024.
Jonathan Krisel

Jonathan Krisel is an American director, producer, writer, editor, and occasional actor. He is best known for co-creating the series Portlandia, and he is also known for the 2016 FX series Baskets. Krisel has collaborated with the comedy duo Tim & Eric, beginning with Tom Goes to the Mayor and later directed most of the episodes of both Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! and Check It Out! with Dr. Steve Brule. He has executive produced several other TV series, including Kroll Show, Man Seeking Woman, and most recently the Showtime series Moonbase 8. He executive produced the Fox pilot Ghosted and has also collaborated with The Lonely Island on several SNL Digital Shorts.

With all the outlets, if you have a strong comedic voice, there's a venue to do your thing. It's a bit of a meritocracy, where the best stuff rises to the top.
There's a good family of actors in 'Portlandia.' It's a small community with people who pop up again and again. The show's a little weird show, and you want to grow with the people who are in it, like Dana who plays the chicken waitress, and Ellen who was the adult babysitter.
I like dry-to-the-bone stuff. I don't know what it is. I was raised on PBS showing weird British comedies. — © Jonathan Krisel
I like dry-to-the-bone stuff. I don't know what it is. I was raised on PBS showing weird British comedies.
The Internet is a good way to try some stuff with no big crew and no money being spent. Since there are no stakes to it, you can try to be a little experimental.
A huge part of making something work is getting along with people you work with. You want them to succeed; you want them to bring their ideas to life as much as possible.
Portland is utopia. My favorite thing would be it's earnestness. I am earnest, too.
You can use cheap technology to get a great look.
My brand of comedy is taking a serious approach to silliness. Small moments of modern life and human behavior make me laugh. At least that's where everything starts, and then my other through line would be a dry absurdity that exponentially spirals out of reality.
One second here and there will make all the difference between something being funny and not being funny. That's why I like going, 'Well, we wrote that six months ago, and it was funny one time we read it, but it's not funny anymore. So what? Just dump it.'
I love working with nonactors.
In Portland, it rains all the time - but who cares? That's not funny. That's not universal.
Everything on TV is perfect, and it's so boring.
I know comedy; I know how to do crazy, off-the-wall stuff that makes me laugh out loud.
My whole thing is, you listen to the actor and help them bring out their best thing. — © Jonathan Krisel
My whole thing is, you listen to the actor and help them bring out their best thing.
You see a lot of comedic content that's not funny, and you can tell that it's supposed to be funny, but it's actually not funny.
I always look at 'Monty Python and the Holy Grail.' They talked about how they wrote this movie with horses, and then they realized that horses are super-expensive and time-consuming. 'Why don't we just change it to coconuts?' That's part of my process.
Nobody sets out to be evil. They're insecure, and they make bad decisions.
I always want to push myself.
There is no 'recycle too much.' That's an oxymoron.
My dad did show me interesting movies at a young age. I remember he showed me 'A Clockwork Orange,' and my mom said, 'I never want to see this movie in my house again.'
I'm a huge 'Twin Peaks' fan.
I think any person who is starting out in a creative endeavor is not going to be good at it right out of the gate.
Things that people are doing constantly but aren't thinking about. That's the ultimate 'Portlandia' concept.
I loved 'Welcome to the Dollhouse.' That was one of the most influential movies ever. You know that genre with the nerdy girl, and she redeems herself in the end. Like 'Napoleon Dynamite.' And in 'Welcome to the Dollhouse,' she doesn't. She sucks. It's like, that's what's real. That's what's heartbreaking.
Comedy is like horror - you have to shock something in the viewer's system to make them feel it.
I know, especially in my family, people's feelings get hurt over the tiniest things. I'm sure that's true in every family. But, for instance, one year, I came a little bit late to Thanksgiving, and I was supposed to bring a salad. And I just brought a bag of lettuce, and put it in a bowl. Five years later, I heard that my mom was incensed.
It's exciting being in the present. You're always reading emails, talking about the future, looking at pictures on Facebook of the past. But living in the present? It's almost a dead medium. I almost want to do a sketch about being in the present.
Louie Anderson thinks my thing is the absurdness of reality. That's what we do on 'Portlandia' all the time. I try to bring that absurdness of reality to everything.
Certain shows, when it's all comedy, it's like when you eat something that's too sweet and it just tastes gross. You need that salted caramel.
I love awesome mixed drinks.
You can tell a lot about a person by what comedians they like.
A lot of the 'Portlandia' characters and a lot of the moments aren't really TV-worthy, but that's what is so refreshing about seeing them.
If you have, especially with siblings, something like the competition for mom's affection, it just never goes away.
I'm never trying to make something esoteric; it just happens.
'Portlandia' is 100 percent improvised, and I came into this business not knowing anything.
I saw Sleater Kinney perform back when I was in college.
It's how you define yourself. It's not Nirvana or Pearl Jam: it's, 'Do you watch 'Portlandia' or 'Amy Schumer'?' It relates to a specific sense of humor. And, 'Do you know the hidden gems?' Like, if you knew the Pixies in the '80s.
There's some moments in your life where you're just like, 'I need something just funny.' That's the noble thing you can do. Make someone forget about their life for 22 minutes.
I love the beige, tan, stucco world where the sun bleaches things out to the point that it can look somewhat ugly. — © Jonathan Krisel
I love the beige, tan, stucco world where the sun bleaches things out to the point that it can look somewhat ugly.
The end goal is to make a piece that everybody has ownership over and everybody's proud of because everybody contributed to it. I think there's a communist, socialist vibe to 'Portlandia' to make it work.
With comedy, I've always had a pretty good sense of what I like and how to execute it well, but drama has its own rules.
When you make a pilot, you've never seen the show before; you don't know what it is.
I want to work with extremely, genuinely charismatic people.
For me, I love and hate Costco. I think it's ruined America and made America great.
When people feel vulnerable, they make slapstick decisions.
I am huge fan of Australian comedy. 'Strictly Ballroom' is one of my favorite movies. Definitely the British Commonwealth's sensibility is where I draw a lot of my influences.
Bands on tour are very good cultivators of what's the avant-garde of comedy.
I definitely feel the pressure to keep things fresh and original.
I look at a show like 'Roseanne.' That's super influential on me. It's very funny, very real, with real problems. That was a big influence, and I don't know if you see that all the time in the network world.
I went to film school, and I came in when video art was king, weird stuff was king, and there, you don't have a script as your bible. — © Jonathan Krisel
I went to film school, and I came in when video art was king, weird stuff was king, and there, you don't have a script as your bible.
Everything else was snarky and high concept, while 'Roseanne' was just a normal family.
On 'Baskets,' I'm not sure what the demographic is.
Once the big lights come in, you can feel self-conscious. How can you capture the scene without ruining it and freezing people up? You keep it small and lean.
There's a thing in comedy where you take one step into a bad idea, but if you take 10, then it becomes a good idea again.
I'm not a big 'scripted comedy' person necessarily. I'm open for wherever comedy can be found.
Portland is a place where everyone closes their eyes and crosses their fingers and hopes for a better community. They keep it small and local, and usually they think if they just make great coffee, it's the best thing for the neighborhood.
'Fawlty Towers' was a huge influence on me. I mean, it was so slapstick, too. 'Are You Being Served?' was on 15 times a day, it seemed like, and I loved it.
In your twenties, you might want to be radical and change the world, but in your thirties, you might just want to be happy and ground yourself.
As the director, you have it in your mind how you want the part done, how you want someone to do it, and so sometimes you just say, 'Why don't I do it myself?' So for a little role, I'll just do it.
Different actors have different rhythms. My goal as a director is to let these guys get their best work out.
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