This article is about the 1977 National Lampoon stage show and subsequent album of sketch comedy. For the 2013 book on the history of National Lampoon magazine, see That's Not Funny, That's Sick (book).
That's Not Funny, That's Sick, a spinoff of the humor magazine National Lampoon, was a 1977–1978 stage show[1] and also a 1977 album of American sketch comedy.[2]
Highlights included a condensed, comedic adaptation of Moby-Dick, a spoof of Waiting for Godot,[5] a "brief parody of the songs of the 1950s," an "exaltation of old Colorado," and an "examination of the racial balance in professional sports."[1] The performers transitioned swiftly between skits, covering various scenarios such as an acid-tripped operating-room drama, a blues song about middle-class liberalism, a mock appeal for a "Stamp Out Jerry Lewis Fund," and a humorous sermon on God as a sales opportunity. Other sketches featured life in a singles bar, a confessional, a television pitch for a fictional "School of Dope-Dealing," and a satirical sportscast suggesting Olympic gymnastics should be X-rated.[5]
The That's Not Funny, That's Sick revue received positive reviews from both The Washington Post[5] and The New York Times,[1] with both papers giving particular praise to Bumpass; the Times reviewer wrote, "Mr. Bumpass has a malleable face, a malleable voice, and, apparently, a malleable mind. Like all great comedians, he is basically an actor. Whatever surface effects he may use with that remarkable face and his collection of voices, they are logical extensions of the basic character that he is projecting."[1]
The That's Not Funny, That's Sick album is a collection of sketches, several of which were taken from the National Lampoon Radio Hour, a radio show that was broadcast on 600 radio stations from late 1973 to the end of 1974. The That's Not Funny, That's Sick album was released on vinyl in 1977.
In 2003, the album was released on CD by Uproar Entertainment. In August 2020, a "digitally remastered" version was released on streaming services. The digital release shuffles the track order and omits one track, "Confession".
Track listing
The Squalor Show
Confession
Dick Ballantine Phone Show #1 (Belzer)
Disco Hotline
Dick Ballantine Phone Show #2
Love Birds / Flashanova
Listener Sponsored Radio #1 (Bill Murray)
For $25,000
Gymnasty
Dick Ballantine Phone Show #3
Yiddishco
Listener Sponsored Radio #2
Pulp
For $15,000
Rapeline
Mr. Roberts #1 (Mr. Rogers parody with Guest and Bill Murray)[8]
Stereos and Such
Listener Sponsored Radio #3
Height Report Disco (Bill Murray and Donna Detroit)
^Lancaster, Guy, ed. (2014). "Rodger Bumpass (1951– )". Arkansas in Ink: Gunslingers, Ghosts, and Other Graphic Tales. University of Arkansas Press. p. 156. ISBN9781935106739.