Subject: Stand-up comedy
Near the beginning of I Am Comic, Dave Attell wonders why comedy documentaries have to be so fucking serious. Jordan Brady seems to have taken his cue from that comment - there's not much discussion of the sad clownery and non-quiet desperation that goes into being a successful stand-up comedian. There's instead loose stories about bad clubs, bad hecklers, joke theft, drug use, and so forth.
I Am Comic spends its first half generally interviewing comedians about their experiences, then switches during the second half as a guy who was run out of the business at the end of the comedy boom tries to regain his stage presence. I think watching him struggle is supposed to demonstrate just how difficult it is to go on stage and tell jokes to crowds of strangers. Still, there didn't seem to be very much at stake here, and the documentary seems to leave off with no conclusion to this tale. Regardless, it ties together something that would just be 80 minutes of talking heads. I recommend it, but only if one is interested in stand-up comedy.