Lovers of local comedy wonāt be surprised by the news that Alex Falconeāthe winner of Heliumās Funniest Person 2018, Portlandia guest star, and co-host of the weekly Earthquake Hurricane showāis leaving Portland to seek fame and fortune in Los Angeles. Naturally we requested an āexit interviewā so Alex could answer our questions about his plans, the state of Portland comedy, and his weird, ongoing feud with the Blazersā mascot, Blaze the Trail Cat.
MERCURY: First of all, what did Portland do wrong to make you want to leave? If it was a particular person, name them and theyāll be punished.
ALEX FALCONE: This is the final step in my feud with Blaze the Trail Cat. I offered the city a choice: Either Blaze is publicly shunned, or Iāll move to his most hated city. In the end Portland decided to keep a cat whose tail is literally on fire.
Whose couch will you be sleeping on when you first get to LA? Is your wife okay with sleeping on couches to support your art?
A lot of comics move there at 25 to live on a couch, but we waited too long. Now weāre 35, and our fragile backs wonāt allow us to crash on couches. Thatās why we waited until my wife got a job, and now we get to move down like kings. (I believe anybody with health insurance and a full-sized refrigerator is a king.)
I always worry about pets who are forced to move. Do you have any pets, what are their names, and what sort of psychological reassurance are you giving them?
No pets. But our house plants are going to be so stoked to finally see what the sun is like.
Your success in Los Angeles is a given. But whatās your game plan when you get there?
Iām going because I want to write, but itās not an either/or. The writing credits help you tour as a standup, so Iāll do both all the time.
What type of writing credits are you hoping for?
Iāve always wanted to work in late night [talk shows]. I love the challenge of writing a lot of jokes really fast. Iāve also written a couple pilots, so Iāll be shopping those around. The challenge is that there are 16 jobs and two million comics who are all incredibly funny and many who have more experience than me. So Iām basically trying to make it to the NBA at 5ā6ā.
Will you be taking advice from former Portland comedians who also made the jump?
They pretty much all said not to move thereābut I assume itās because theyāre worried Iāll take all the success.
In all seriousness, youāre one of the hardest working people in Portland comedy. Is this devotion to your craft the reason youāve waited to pursue a larger market?
Absolutely. LA is super hard, and Portland has so many great opportunities to get on stage and work on jokes. I wanted to make sure I was really ready. Iāve been visiting four or five times a year for the last several years, building up the connections I needed to have a soft landing. Plus, I knew I wanted some kind of credit to help me stand out, and I just taped my late-night debut on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert [air date TBD]. That was the moment I felt like I was there.
Got any advice for people wanting to get started in Portland comedy (and eventually move on to Stephen Colbert)?
Take a class. Iām gone, but I still help run the program at Helium, so itāll keep doing really great work helping people get started.
How are you spending your last days in Portland?
Iāve been visiting all my favorite places in the city one last time, like the Arboretum, Tanner Springs Park, and the Moda Center, where I made one final attempt to get my money back from Blaze the Trail Cat. (He conned me out of several thousand dollars by promising heād give my rap demo to Damian Lillard, which he did not do.)
Other than obsessing over Blaze the Trail Cat, what are the things youāll miss most about Portland?
The trite answer, thatās still completely true, is the people. One of the hardest things about doing comedy in Portland is people you love get successful and move away. And as excited as I am to reunite with them in LA, Iām so sad to leave my friends behind. Also I really like Pop Bagels, so thatāll be tough.
And what are the things youāre most looking forward to in LA?
Despite all the anti-LA propaganda here, itās a super cool city. I think the thing Iām most excited about, besides the weather (hot Christmas? What?), is having every band ever play a show there. Too many tours I get excited about go to Seattle and San Francisco and just honk as they drive by us. And Iām excited to discover new kinds of bagels.
Give us three things that Portland can do that will make us the greatest city on the planet.
1) Build a shit-ton of affordable housing. 2) Put the MAX underground like God intended. 3) Wait until a big rainstorm where the sewers overflow into the river and then throw Blaze the Trail Cat off a bridge.
You are Portlandās most beloved comedian. How do you expect people to go on after you move?
If I thought people could go on, I would be devastated. So please stay sad.
Helium Presents: Alex Falconeās Going Away Show, Sun Nov 24, 7 pm, Helium Comedy Club, 1510 SE 9th, $12, w/Curtis Cook, Mohanad Elshieky, Katie Nguyen, Steven Wilber, Hunter Donaldson, and Kirsten Kuppenbender








