A Documentary on Three Struggling San Francisco Comedians in the 80s

Published: Oct. 17, 2015, 11:59 p.m.

b'Show #106, Hour 2 | Guests: Comedian Will Durst is a 5 time Emmy nominee; has been fired by PBS three times; told jokes in 14 countries; racked up 7 nominations for Stand-Up of the Year; and his 800+ television appearances include Letterman, HBO, Showtime, CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox News, the BBC and many more. The critically acclaimed Off-Broadway run of his one man show: \\u201cThe All American Sport of Bipartisan Bashing,\\u201d The All American Sport of Bi-Partisan Bashing was subsequently turned into a book of the same name by Ulysses Press. Comedian Johnny Steele began performing comedy in 1984 after quitting graduate school in a move his parents named: Operation $40K Down The Drain. But Johnny quickly got the hang of the craft and was soon performing \\u2013 and drinking for free! \\u2013 at the nation\\u2019s top clubs. In 1997 Johnny left the comedy scene to host San Francisco\\u2019s Live 105 Morning Radio Show. Guests ranged from Carol O\\u2019Conner to David Bowie to city supervisors. In 1999 Johnny\\u2019s career took another turn when he became co-host of KRON/Bay TV\\u2019s THE SHOW. For three years Johnny\\u2019s informal interview style and outrageous ad-lib comments kept everyone laughing. Director Robert Campos is an award-winning journalist, writer and documentary filmmaker. As a staff producer for ABC News he covered the civil wars in Nicaragua and El Salvador. Robert has directed and produced dozens of documentary films for the Discovery Channel, National Geographic and other cable networks on a wide range of topics including: shark conservation, green science, and history. | Show Summary: Comedians Will Durst, Johnny Steele, and Documentary Director Robert Campos discuss 3 Still Standing about three San Francisco comedians striving to make it big in the 1980s.'