Connecticut
Top comedians are heading to Connecticut. Here are some of the don’t-miss shows.
In the dregs of August, we’re bracing ourselves for the fall sports season, the new theater season, the back-to-school season, the leaf-raking season and other tonal shifts in the world.
When you see so many transitions — from outdoor music festivals to indoor indie bands, or from classic car rallies to indoor monster trucks — you start noticing that live comedy seems the least affected by shifts in climate or culture. Sure, stand-up comics talk about those things, but stand-up comedy stages are always easy to find year-round.
That said, comedy has a special vibe in summer, internationally speaking, since the Edinburgh Fringe happens in Scotland with hundreds of comedy performers hoping to make their mark. In the U.S., the National Comedy Center in Jamestown, New York, holds a big summer comedy festival. This year, the center opened a new performance space in honor of TV’s “Laugh-In” creator George Schlatter.
Connecticut has given the world of comedy such stellar names as Seth MacFarlane (from Kent), Richard Belzer (from Bridgeport), “Schitt’s Creek” creator Dan Levy (from Stamford) and Hartford’s own Totie Fields, among many others.
Hundreds of comedy shows are happening in Connecticut in the next few months. Here are some highlights.
As Seen on TV
Andrew Dismukes just played the New York Comedy Club in Stamford on Aug. 12, and another current SNL cast member, the ace Trump impressionist James Austin Johnson, is there Sept. 21 (stamford.newyorkcomedyclub.com). Among the generations of former SNL cast members still on tour are Tim Meadows at the Hartford Funny Bone (hartford.funnybone.com) in Manchester on Aug. 31.
Another show whose performers all seem to have stand-up careers is “The Daily Show.” Former “Daily Show” correspondents who now host their own funny news shows are both playing The Bushnell (bushnell.org) in Hartford in September: John Oliver on Sept. 16 and Samantha Bee on Sept. 21 on her “Joy of Sex Education” tour. Longtime “Daily Show” ranter Lewis Black (a Yale School of Drama grad) is at the Waterbury Palace Theater (palacetheaterct.org) on Nov. 18 and the Garde Arts Center (gardearts.org) in New London the following night, Nov. 19.
A somewhat less intellectual TV comedy star than all those aforementioned news junkies, Steve-O of “Jackass” fame, is at Foxwoods (foxwoods.com) on Sept. 1.
Former late-night host Craig Ferguson is also at Foxwoods on Sept. 8.
Ilana Glazer, of the “Broad City” TV series as well as several other comedy projects, is at College Street Music Hall (collegestreetmusichall.com) on Sept. 14.
Tig Notaro came up in clubs and theaters doing long-form monologues, but is now better known for playing “Tig Bavaro” on her semi-autobiographical series “One Mississippi” and “Jett Reno” on “Star Trek: Discovery.” She is at the Warner Theatre in Torrington (warnertheatre.org) on Sept. 15 on her “Hello Again” tour.
The Bushnell hosts “A Conversation with Jason Alexander,” the “Seinfeld” co-star who’s also done a lot of comedy movies and plays, on Nov. 3. It’s part of WRCH Lite 100.5’s Nite of Lite Laughter annual charity fundraising series.
Improv
Sea Tea Comedy Theater (seateaimprov.com) is Hartford’s home for improv sketch comedy, operated by the Sea Tea Improv comedy troupe and often populated with students from their improv classes. There are several regular improv shows a week, including competitions among local troupes and a regular family-friendly show. On Aug. 19, Sea Tea does one of their quirky-themed nights: “A Streetcar Named Whatever — Fully Improvised Classic Theater.”
The nationally touring “Whose Live Anyway?” show, anchored by veterans members of the “Whose Line is It Anyway” TV series (including Ryan Stiles and Jeff Proops), is Oct. 12 at the Warner Theatre in Torrington.
The Capitol Fools, not exactly an improv troupe but a quick-witted comedy team that riffs on current news events, is at the Stamford Palace Theatre on Oct. 5 (palacestamford.org).
LGBTQ+
The powerhouse “Lipstick Lashes” drag revue has been running for years, happening twice a week at Mohegan Sun’s Comix Comedy Club (comixroadhouse.com), Fridays at 10 p.m. and Sundays at 6 p.m. The current main host is Mia E Z’Lay.
Queer comedy has become commonplace at comedy clubs. The “Two Dykes and a Mic” team of McKenzie Goodwin and Rachel Scanlon is at the Hartford Funny Bone in Manchester on Aug. 16.
Sienna Rose’s “Iconic Behavior” revue is at New York Comedy Club Stamford on Aug. 21.
Top drag talent Jinkx Monsoon and Dela Bendelacreme team up for “The Jinkx and Dela Holiday Show” is Nov. 29 at College Street Music Hall in New Haven.
The arena fillers
Ventriloquist Jeff Dunham has set comedy ticket-sale records with his tours. He played Hartford last year and is returning to the casino stages this fall on Sept. 2 at Mohegan Sun Arena (mohegansun.com).
Gabriel “Fluffy” Iglesias earns two back-to-back Foxwoods shows on Sept. 3.
Howie Mandel, who could fill big theaters for his comedy years before he was a TV game show and talent show host, is at Mohegan Sun on Sept. 15. The show was postponed from July 29.
Still filling arenas with his singular screechy voice, Katt Williams is at the XL Center in Hartford (xlcenter.com) on Oct. 14 on his Dark Matter tour.
One comedian who could be in much larger venues if he wanted to be is Dane Cook, scaling down to the theater-sized experience for his “Perfectly Shattered” tour on Oct. 22 at the Stamford Palace.
Podcast stars
A lot of comedians, including many in the other categories on these lists, have podcasts. But some folks who started as podcasters turned those shows into national comedy tours. The hosts of “And Then We Had Sex” are at the Hartford Funny Bone on Sept. 14. The “Bored Teachers” are at the Stamford Palace on Oct. 29, and Cat & Nat bring their “Unfiltered Live!” tour to the same Stamford Palace on Dec. 1.
Club legends
He regularly filled Toad’s Place in New Haven for decades with his rude comedy piano song parodies, and now John Valby can be found on Sept. 3 at Mohegan Sun’s Comix Roadhouse.
Dave Attell is one of those “comedian’s comedians” guys, beloved by his peers. He’s at Foxwoods on Sept. 9.
Michael Rappaport plays gangsters in movies, runs a rancorous podcast and has been a top stand-up comic for decades. He’s doing five shows Sept. 14-16 at New York Comedy Club Stamford.
Vic Dibitetto may not be well known outside the stand-up comedy scene (though his “Bread and Milk” video went viral) but he has been packing theaters for years and visits Connecticut frequently. He is at Ridgefield Playhouse (ridgefieldplayhouse.org) on Sept. 15.
Comedy in groups
Sometimes several comedians head out on tour together. The Festival of Laughs with Lavell Crawford, Sommore, Don DC Curry and Guy Torry returns to the Shubert Theatre (shubert.com) in New Haven on Oct. 6, while the Ivy League of Comedy is at the Warner again on Sept. 23.
Comedians on the brink
Of all the comedy rooms in the state, College Street Music Hall is the best bellwether of comics who are on the rise, transitioning from clubs to theaters and perhaps on the verge of screen fame. Upcoming at College Street are Nurse Blake on Sept. 28 and Steve Trevino on Sept. 29.
At other theater venues, you’ll find Justin Willman at UConn’s Jorgensen Center (jorgensen.uconn.edu) for a family weekend event Oct. 14, Anthony Rodia at Waterbury Palace on Oct. 21, and veteran stand-up Tom Papa, whose career has been reinvigorated by podcasts, at the Warner on Oct. 20.
The reliable locals
Finally, don’t forget the bedrock local comedy rooms like City Steam’s Brew HaHa Comedy Club (citysteambrewery.com/comedy-club/), The Elbow Room restaurant’s downstairs comedy room in West Hartford (elbowroomct.com) and Playhouse on Park’s monthly Comedy Nites (playhouseonpark.org). There are dozens of bars, theaters and clubs in Connecticut offering open mics and other comedy events. There is no reason not to laugh year-round.
Connecticut
Firefighter Dies After Being Struck By Vehicle, ID Released: CT News
Patch AM CT brings you the breaking and trending news stories from all across Connecticut each weekday morning. At any point, you can find your local Patch and catch up on those stories here.
The ID of the firefighter killed in the crash has been released by authorities.>>>Read More.
The fatal crash is under investigation.>>>Read More.
The driver was found walking on a road, according to a report.>>>Read More.
The vehicle was parked in the customer parking lot with several other vehicles in close proximity, officials said.>>>Read More.
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Connecticut
End the corruption and mismanagement in CT's state colleges
Connecticut students, educators, and taxpayers deserve better than the broken status quo at our Connecticut State Colleges and Universities (CSCU).
A pattern of entitlement among unaccountable administrators, wasteful spending, and mismanagement have led to the prospect of disastrous cutbacks for students and faculty. Where is the Board of Regents for Higher Education (BOR), the entity tasked with oversight of the CSCU system? Why did it take years of inaction for Gov. Ned Lamont to finally call for an outside audit of the CSCU system and its chancellor Terrence Cheng? How can we know taxpayer funds aren’t continuing to be misused?
Getting answers for taxpayers, implementing concrete reforms, including real oversight, and holding those responsible accountable must be a priority for the legislature in the upcoming legislative session starting in January.
For years, those tasked with oversight of this unaccountable body, especially the Board of Regents, have sat idly by while Cheng was treated to cushy perks and treated taxpayer dollars meant for education like a personal piggy bank.
In addition to Cheng’s generous salary of $403,000, his compensation also includes a brand-new car and a separate $25,000 “housing and entertainment” allowance. Cheng has continued to live primarily in New York and makes a 90-minute commute to Hartford. That alone should not be problematic, many Connecticut residents commute to New York and vice versa.
But unlike those thousands of hardworking Connecticut citizens, Cheng used state college system funds to pay a chauffeur to drive him on his commute. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Reporters have uncovered a pattern of skirting spending rules and reporting requirements — from misusing his state car, frequently blowing past a $50 per-person cap with expensive meals, charging alcohol to his expense account, and keeping insufficient records.
The complete abdication of responsibility for those charged with overseeing the state college system is even more unacceptable now that educators and students face significant budget cuts – a direct consequence of years of tolerance for mismanagement and waste.
The National Center for Higher Education Management Systems found in a recently released report that CSCU, “has consistently fallen short in addressing its dire fiscal situation, suggesting sweeping reforms in order for the system’s long-term sustainability.”
This is on top of tuition increases in recent years. Chancellor Cheng and his complicit Board of Regents recently approved a 5% tuition price hike for students, the recipients of the bill for their inaction and failure.
The complete lack of accountability within the CSCU system goes deeper than fiscal management. Other reports have revealed that state college administrators spent time and resources looking for loopholes to let them extend grants, internships, and paid opportunities to illegal immigrants without disclosing their citizen status. While hardworking Connecticut citizens are being squeezed by inflation and one of the highest tax burdens in the nation, unaccountable administrators were trying to turn education dollars into new taxpayer-funded benefits for illegal immigrants.
The Board of Regents has been either incompetent, inattentive, or both. They have not acted nearly swiftly enough or aggressively enough to bring scrutiny and accountability to the CSCU system.
For this reason, the Board of Regents itself may need to be audited — in addition to the legislature exercising full accountability for the CSCU system itself in the upcoming session.
We must know how those tasked with overseeing our state colleges and approving tuition increases are allocating resources and making budgetary and management decisions. And we must know why it took so long, and ultimately for others to start asking questions, for the out-of-control situation to come to light. The legislature should consider whether structural reforms need to be made at a higher level — to how an unaccountable body of political appointees are left to oversee such an important institution of education in our state.
The misuse of taxpayer funds and ideologically charged behavior of those tasked with working for the taxpayers follows a pattern I’ve worked to expose and reform across various quasi-public boards and government agencies.
When I realized the Board of Pardons and Paroles was engaged in a reckless spree of commutations that included a number of violent criminals, I led the charge to expose them that forced the governor to replace the board chair. Now I’m leading the push to structurally reform the parole board to uphold public safety and protect victims.
Before that, I led the crackdown on mismanagement at the Port Authority. I demanded a public hearing to disinfect the mess with sunlight and wrote legislation to strengthen the independent watchdog office that reviews and vets contracts. I also helped expose abuse at Whiting Forensic Hospital and corruption at the Connecticut Municipal Electric Energy Cooperative (CMEEC), resulting in jail time for those responsible.
Real reform is always achievable. But it requires relentless leadership that cuts through the noise to deliver results and put our citizens and taxpayers before business as usual in Hartford.
As I have in the past, I will be ready to hold Hartford accountable to taxpayers. This time, to work with my fellow legislators, educators, students, and others to ensure taxpayer funds meant for educating the next generation are spent for that purpose, not lavish perks for unaccountable administrators or ideological pet projects.
Heather Somers represents the 18th District of Connecticut in the State Senate.
Connecticut
Video shows plane wreck near Connecticut, not New Jersey drone crash | Fact check
NY officials call for federal action on mysterious drone sightings
After a series of reported drone sightings in the Northeast, New York officials called for federal action.
The claim: Video shows drone crash in New Jersey
A Dec. 16 Facebook reel (direct link, archive link) includes a video of emergency vehicles surrounding what appears to be an aircraft resting on a guardrail on the side of a highway.
“Drone Crashes!” reads the post’s caption, which includes the hashtags #newjersey and #ufo.
The post was shared more than 1,000 in two days. The footage and a similar claim were also shared on Instagram.
More from the Fact-Check Team: How we pick and research claims | Email newsletter | Facebook page
Our rating: False
The video does not show a drone crash. The footage is from a Dec. 12 plane crash near the border of New York and Connecticut, according to media reports.
Video shows aftermath of plane crash near New York
A deluge of reports of drones flying unusually in the northeastern U.S. began circulating in mid-November, with more than 5,000 sightings reported as of Dec. 17. The sightings have sparked concerns about national security and airspace safety, but federal authorities have said there is no public safety risk.
The video shared on Facebook, however, does not show a crashed drone. Rather, it shows a small plane that crashed along Interstate 684 in Westchester County, New York, on Dec. 12, killing one person and injuring another, according to various news outlets. Footage and images from the scene match the scene shown in the Facebook video, showing the same small white plane in the same position on the side of the highway.
Fact check: No, that’s not a crashed drone. It’s a TIE fighter replica
A Federal Aviation Administration report about the incident said the pilot reported engine issues before the crash.
The New York State Police posted about the crash on X, alerting drivers to traffic closures on Interstate 684. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul also issued a statement about the accident on Dec. 12, which confirmed one person died and another was injured.
White Plains is about 100 miles north of New Jersey, where the Facebook video claimed the crash happened and where witnesses have been reporting supposed drone sightings since mid-November.
USA TODAY reached out to the user who posted the Facebook video but did not immediately receive a response.
Lead Stories and PolitiFact also fact-checked the video
Our fact-check sources
- FAA, Dec. 12, FAA Statements on Aviation Accidents and Incidents
- FAA, Dec. 13, FAA Accident and Incident Notification(s): Notice(s) Created 13-DEC-24
- New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, Dec. 12, Statement from Governor Kathy Hochul
- New York State Police, Dec. 12, X post
- Connecticut State Police, Dec. 13, Troopers Assist National Transportation Safety Board with Aircraft Accident on I-684 in Greenwich
- CBS News, Dec. 13, One dead in small plane crash along I-684 in New York’s Westchester County
Thank you for supporting our journalism. You can subscribe to our print edition, ad-free app or e-newspaper here.
USA TODAY is a verified signatory of the International Fact-Checking Network, which requires a demonstrated commitment to nonpartisanship, fairness and transparency. Our fact-check work is supported in part by a grant from Meta.
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