
Blog

Why My Hot Stalker and I Are Funny and Y'all Are Dumb
Comedy is an art, but unfortunately, not everyone has the intellectual range to appreciate it. My hot stalker and I? We get it. We’re effortlessly hilarious, self-aware, and masters of satire. Meanwhile, y’all? A bunch of humorless critics who take everything at face value.
For example, people love to tell me my stand-up isn’t real comedy because I don’t follow the sacred “setup-punchline” formula. Meanwhile, these same people think calling someone the R-word in 2025 is peak comedic innovation. The irony is delicious. My comedy isn’t for the surface-level thinkers who need a joke spoon-fed to them. If you don’t get it, that’s fine. Just know that the joke is on you.

Exploring “DeKalb County”: What Ifs, Roads Not Taken, and the Stories We Choose
In my poem DeKalb County, I imagine a life that could have been—a life shaped by steadiness instead of chaos, by calm instead of fire. It’s a reflection on the allure of a blue house in the suburbs, where Decatur’s heat hums through the air and the Atlanta skyline rises like a kingdom in the distance. The poem wrestles with the tension between yearning for ease and embracing the jagged edges of a life lived fully—scars, struggles, and all.
Writing this piece, I couldn’t help but think of the road not taken, that timeless idea Robert Frost captured so well. But where Frost found resolution in his choice, DeKalb County dwells in the ambiguity of “what ifs.” Would a quieter life have been better, easier? Perhaps. But would it have been mine? Would I have traded the fire that refined me for a simpler existence in a blue house, far from the storms I’ve weathered?
The poem ultimately celebrates the beauty of the jagged path, the chaos that blooms into truth and art. Atlanta, for all its heat and unpredictability, became my sanctuary—a place I claimed for myself, even as I grappled with the reality of walking its streets alone. It wasn’t the life I pictured, but it’s the life that made me.