
Insights from recent episode analysis
Audience Interest
Podcast Focus
Publishing Consistency
Platform Reach
Insights are generated by CastFox AI using publicly available data, episode content, and proprietary models.
Total monthly reach
Estimated from 6 chart positions in 6 markets.
By chart position
- 🇩🇪DE · Stand-Up#6230K to 100K
- 🇬🇧GB · Stand-Up#9430K to 100K
- 🇦🇺AU · Stand-Up#1125K to 30K
- 🇺🇸US · Stand-Up#1805K to 30K
- 🇳🇱NL · Stand-Up#5410K to 30K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
45K to 160K🎙 ~2x weekly·61 episodes·Last published 1w ago - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
90K to 320K🇩🇪31%🇬🇧31%🇦🇺9%+3 more - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
36K to 128K
Market Insights
Platform Distribution
Reach across major podcast platforms, updated hourly
Total Followers
—
Total Plays
—
Total Reviews
—
* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
Recent episodes
A Post-Bomb Recovery Plan
Jun 15, 2026
52m 22s
So You Want to be a Comedy Club Host?
May 28, 2026
45m 39s
We Serve Only Bait and Switch
May 21, 2026
43m 49s
Blue Printing One Comic's Multiple Humor Heightening Devices
May 14, 2026
48m 55s
Comedy Coaching and Bit Blueprinting
May 11, 2026
46m 35s
Social Links & Contact
Official channels & resources
Official Website
Login
RSS Feed
Login
| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/15/26 | ![]() A Post-Bomb Recovery Plan | What do you do after a bomb? This week, Mike breaks down the difference between a joke bombing, an open mic bombing, and a full-scale set meltdown in front of a real audience, sharing the lessons he's learned from all three. We talk about the productive and unproductive ways to dwell on failure, how long you should let it bother you, and when it's time to stop sulking, start analyzing, get blue-printing and turn disaster into improvement. | 52m 22s | ||||||
| 5/28/26 | ![]() So You Want to be a Comedy Club Host? | Fresh off a weekend hosting at the Dallas Comedy Club, Mike breaks down the hidden skills required to become a great comedy club host. Surprisingly, being funny is only part of the job. We talk about reading crowds, managing energy, supporting the headliner, and why professionalism matters more than comics think. If you’ve ever wondered why some hilarious comics never get hosting work while others become club favorites, this episode explains why. | 45m 39s | ||||||
| 5/21/26 | ![]() We Serve Only Bait and Switch | In this episode of the Funny Muscle Podcast, Mike and Chris break down the comedy of Anthony Jeselnik—a comic who, on paper, “shouldn’t work” by our own rules. While we’ve been preaching the power of stacking multiple heightening devices, Jeselnik leans almost entirely on bait-and-switch… and still absolutely crushes. The fellows dissect several of Jeselnik’s bits to show how his exceptional writing does the heavy lifting—and how his exceptional tightly controlled persona does the rest. | 43m 49s | ||||||
| 5/14/26 | ![]() Blue Printing One Comic's Multiple Humor Heightening Devices | In this episode of the Funny Muscle Podcast, Mike and Chris break down the deceptively simple comedy of Nate Bargatze by Humor Blue-Printing several of Nate’s best bits. The fellows dig into the subtle setup mechanics, hidden assumptions, quiet misdirections, and extra humor tools Bargatze layers underneath his laid-back delivery to make his punchlines land so hard without ever sounding like he’s “trying” to be funny. If you’ve ever wondered why Nate can get huge laughs from stories that sound almost casual, this episode shows the tiny structural choices doing the heavy lifting. | 48m 55s | ||||||
| 5/11/26 | ![]() Comedy Coaching and Bit Blueprinting | In this episode of the Funny Muscle Podcast, Mike jumps into comedy teacher mode and workshops several of Chris’s developing bits, helping tighten setups, sharpen punchlines, and uncover the hidden comedic engines underneath the material. Then the fellows break down clips and jokes from professional comics, reverse-engineering the premise structures, emotions, and humor-heightening devices that turn ordinary observations into killer stand-up. | 46m 35s | ||||||
| 4/30/26 | ![]() Producing a Comedy Special with Michael Pasvar | Dallas comedian Michael Pasvar joins the fellows to break down his new comedy special Blended Feathers (now on YouTube). The special is a perfect case study in the Funny Muscle methodology—built on a clear, consistent comedy lens that carries through every bit. We dive into the process of producing a special, shaping material to fit your persona, and the role vulnerability plays in making jokes hit harder. It’s part comedy breakdown, part behind-the-scenes, and part reminder that the best material usually comes from the stuff you’re slightly afraid to say out loud. | 1h 09m 37s | ||||||
| 4/21/26 | ![]() Humor Blueprint Homework | In this episode of Funny Muscle Pod, Mike assigns Chris a deceptively simple task: break down five professional stand-up bits using the full Humor Blueprint—subject, premise, setup, misdirection, norm, punchline—and layer in the humor heightening tools from Mike Lukas’s books. Together, they walk through the answers, revealing the hidden structure behind great jokes, how comics stack multiple techniques seamlessly, and how you can reverse-engineer pro material to sharpen your own writing. If you’ve ever wondered why a joke hits so hard, this episode gives you the blueprint (and the reps) to start doing it yourself. | 1h 00m 39s | ||||||
| 4/1/26 | ![]() Misdirection (Improving Your Set-Ups) | On this episode of FMP, we break down how professional comedians use misdirection to make punchlines hit harder: like highlighting a safe, obvious detail so the audience locks onto the wrong assumption. We look at the exact moment a comic gets the audience leaning one way—through connector words, tone, body language, and subtle framing—then pulls the rug with a completely different meaning. If you’ve ever wondered why one joke feels predictable while another feels like magic, this episode gives you the tools to see the trick as it’s happening and maybe start doing it yourself. | 51m 22s | ||||||
| 3/23/26 | ![]() Traditional Stand-up vs Straight Act Out Comedy | On this episode of Funny Muscle Pod, we break down how professional comedians build laughs using the Funny Muscle Humor Blueprint and why the structure of stand-up is quietly evolving. We dig into the difference between traditional joke writing (setup, misdirection, punchline) and the more modern move where comics skip the setup entirely and jump straight into act-outs, often improvisationally. If you’ve ever wondered why some comics feel like they’re telling jokes while others feel like they’re just being funny, this episode gives you the tools to see exactly what’s happening. | 47m 10s | ||||||
| 2/26/26 | ![]() Enhance Your Bits with Emotion (How the Pros Do It) | In this episode, Mike goes into full Comedy Teacher Mode, the kind of mode where you half expect a pop quiz. We break down how to transform a topic into a real premise by adding emotion---the missing ingredient that makes audiences care before they laugh. Then we run pro comics’ bits through the Humor Blueprint, dissecting how they get laughs, identifying the humor heightening devices at work, and circling the emotional engine that drives connection. If you’ve ever had ideas that felt close but not quite funny yet, this is the structural fix. | 35m 03s | ||||||
Want analysis for the episodes below?Free for Pro Submit a request, we'll have your selected episodes analyzed within an hour. Free, at no cost to you, for Pro users. | |||||||||
| 2/11/26 | ![]() Diagramming Humor Heightening Devices | In this episode of The Funny Muscle Pod, we diagram pro comics’ bits by circling the underlying structure, then highlighting the specific techniques—what we call Humor Heightening Devices—that pack the laughs in. You’ll hear how the pros stack half a dozen devices inside a single stretch: bait-and-switch, contrast, cut-to, negative-to-positive, act-outs, tags, and more. Think of it like watching scout team film: we’re not just saying “that joke was good.” We’re pointing at the exact moment it worked and why. As you get better at pointing these out, you'll get better at utilizing them in your act. | 38m 53s | ||||||
| 1/4/26 | ![]() The Road to Headlining with CAIN | Dallas comedian CAIN, fresh off winning the 2025 Pervis Wilson Funniest Stand-Up in Dallas Competition, returns to the FMP to discuss the mysterious and lightly regulated sport of comedy competitions. In this episode, CAIN walks us through his third year in comedy, including the high-stakes strategic dilemma faced by every comic in a competition: Do you burn your best jokes early to survive the first round, or save them for later and risk being eliminated by a guy doing crowd work about Crocs? We also get into CAIN’s open-mic strategy, discuss the Dallas comedy club scene, and his journey to his first headlining show occurring January 11th, 2026, at the Addison Improv. | 49m 02s | ||||||
| 12/10/25 | ![]() What Comics can Borrow from Improv with Brittany Taylor | Brittany Taylor---Improv Guru and Instructor---- joins Mike and Chris to yes-and their brains into shape with a crash course in all things improv: the formulas, the frameworks, and the wonderfully weird archetypes (pirates vs. ninjas). Brittany breaks down what happens when people try improv for the first time—those classic beginner pitfalls like freezing, plot-dumping, apologizing, or trying to “be funny” instead of letting the funny happen. She walks us through how improv skills translate directly to stand-up like staying fully committed to the bit even when your brain is whispering “run.” We dig into the mental side of vulnerability, why audiences can feel it when you’re all-in. Brittany also explains the improv techniques every comic should steal. | 1h 05m 43s | ||||||
| 11/18/25 | ![]() Moving the Pen with Sean O’Brien | We sit down with St. Louis comic Sean O’Brien who has opened for legends like Bill Burr, Norm Macdonald, and Nikki Glaser. Sean got his start bartending at the St. Louis Funny Bone, where he met Mike Lukas — and, in true full-circle fashion, Mike’s show ended up becoming Sean’s very first paid gig. In this episode, Sean breaks down his writing process, including his daily habit of “moving the pen” for 30 minutes and then teasing out the small interactions and weird moments that become great material. It’s a masterclass in finding the funny in the ordinary — and trusting the muscle. You can find his recent 15-minute show case on Youtube under Nateland Presents. | 1h 16m 16s | ||||||
| 11/5/25 | ![]() Crowd Work with Michael Halcomb | This pod’s guest is Michael Halcomb — a professor, pastor, comedian, and podcaster from North Carolina, proving once and for all that the best way to handle hecklers is with a sermon, a syllabus, and a punchline. Chris asks Michael and Mike about their jointly-authored article “10 Ways to Upgrade Your Crowd Work” — covering how to turn audience chaos into comedy, why professors secretly make great MCs, and when it’s okay to recycle a drunk guy named Tony from last weekend’s show. They also give adaptable advice like "repeat whatever they say" and "embrace the silence." See more of Michael’s work at MichaelHalcomb.Live and on Substack. | 1h 00m 52s | ||||||
| 10/30/25 | ![]() Two Hours of Funny, Every. Single. Day. With Pete Schwaba | In this episode of The Funny Muscle Podcast, we welcome Pete Schwaba — veteran comedian, screenwriter, actor, and radio host — to prove that comedy isn’t just about punchlines; it’s about endurance, caffeine, and creative chaos. Pete shares war stories from the road, how writing a two-hour daily radio show feels like prepping a stand-up set that never ends, and why curveballs and misdirection are his favorite tools for building jokes. He even drops a heckler-handling trick that uses just two words — and no, it’s not the two you’re thinking of. Tune in to find them out. | 44m 36s | ||||||
| 10/21/25 | ![]() How Comics Think While You Laugh (Inside the Comic's Brain) | Ever wonder what a stand-up is really doing onstage while you’re laughing? This episode breaks down the invisible gears turning inside a comic’s brain — the quick rewrites, subtle pauses, and instinctive callbacks that make a joke feel alive in the room. Mike and Chris explore how great comics read an audience in real time and adjust every beat to create something unrepeatable — a shared moment that feels spontaneous but is secretly engineered like a Rube Goldberg machine that dispenses laughter instead of marbles. | 31m 29s | ||||||
| 9/19/25 | ![]() What Makes an ‘Unlikely Scenario’ Funny? (And Why Comics Love It) | “You never see…” — it’s one of comedy’s favorite springboards into the ridiculous. In this episode of The Funny Muscle Podcast, Mike and Chris grab the metaphorical coach’s playbook and diagram how pros turn that setup into laugh-out-loud gold. Along the way, they break down three humor heightening devices — Uncommon Worlds, Unlikely Scenarios, and Incongruity — showing how comics bend reality, collide worlds, and twist expectations to squeeze every laugh from a premise. | 44m 49s | ||||||
| 9/12/25 | ![]() Comic Timing with Tim Alexander | You’d think comedians would be the ones giving lessons on timing. But this week, we flipped the snare. Our guest is Tim Alexander, the legendary drummer for Blue Man Group and Primus, who joins the Funny Muscle Pod to teach us about timing. Turns out, drummers and comedians share the same secret weapon: the pause. The space between the beats, or between the setups and punchlines, is where the tension builds and where the audience leans in before the payoff. | 52m 04s | ||||||
| 8/27/25 | ![]() Hook, Line, and Punchline: The Science of Bait and Switch | Think you saw the punchline coming? Good comics make sure you don’t. In this Funny Muscle Pod, Mike and Chris break down bait and switch — the move where you’re sure you know the joke’s ending, then wind up face-down in a completely different punchline. We analyze the tape of the Naked Gun’s deadpan reveals, Dave Barry’s elegant sentence swerves, and stand-up jokes from comedians Tom Cotter, Jon Stewart and Jim Jeffries. We show how great comics bait the hook before yanking the rug. Plus, we share tips for crafting setups that make the “switch” land every time. | 37m 32s | ||||||
| 8/11/25 | ![]() Hacking a Small Crowd | Not every room will be packed—sometimes you’re on stage for fewer people than your car’s backseat can handle. In the latest episode of the Funny Muscle Pod, Mike shares battle-tested tips for how to turn a modest crowd into a memorable performance, like boost your pace and go local. We also learn how to say what they’re thinking—lightly. If your audience is thinking, “Is this crowd supposed to be this small?”, Mike teaches how to nudge that thought without making anyone feel self-conscious. | 27m 20s | ||||||
| 7/31/25 | ![]() The "Excellent Choice" Effect: Stand-up Techniques for Public Speaking | Why do we feel so good when a waiter says “excellent choice” after we order the salmon instead of the flank steak? Mike and Chris break down the psychology behind that little dopamine hit and show you how to use the same principle to level up your comedy, corporate communication, public speaking, and even your skills as a great emcee. They also dig into the respective articles they wrote for Finding Your Funny Muscle: How to Strengthen Your Corporate Communication Using the Funny Muscle Method - Finding Your Funny Muscle What Great Comedy MCs Actually Do (Besides Just Not Sucking) - Finding Your Funny Muscle Stand-Up Techniques for Public Speaking: For Professors, Policy Nerds, and People Who Sweat in Blazers - Finding Your Funny Muscle Tune in for practical tips, emcee hacks, a few laughs, and the occasional menu metaphor. | 36m 16s | ||||||
| 6/14/25 | ![]() Feel Something, Say Something: Turning Topics Into Premises Using Emotions | On this episode of Funny Muscle, the team tackles one of the most important — and often overlooked by new comics — steps in joke creation: assigning an emotion to a topic. Because “air travel” isn’t funny. But your deep personal betrayal by a TSA muffin confiscation? That’s a premise. They look at how pros use an emotional POV to instantly transform a generic idea into a living, breathing premise that’s ready for punchlines. | 43m 44s | ||||||
| 5/6/25 | ![]() Hour A Day to Write Comedy? 12 Comics' Advice (part 2) | In this episode, we cornered a dozen comedians—some voluntarily—and asked:“If you had one hour a day to train your comedy off-stage, what would you do?” There’s a wide range of answers. One practices in front of a mirror. One writes down everything that irritates them until they become punchlines. One looks up 20 facts about a topic. And yes—several review their sets like it’s game tape, pausing to say things like “Here’s where I lost Iowa.” This episode will give comedy training ideas for you to try out. | 26m 30s | ||||||
| 4/14/25 | ![]() Work to the Top of Your Intelligence with Jimmy Shubert | Nationally touring comedian, actor, and verbal hurricane Jimmy Shubert stops by the Funny Muscle Pod to talk about his legendary career, offer some top-shelf joke-writing advice, and reveal his secret weapon: the “20 Facts, 20 Jokes” method. Basically, he starts with facts and then writes jokes about them. That’s it. That’s the system. And it works, because he's Jimmy Freakin’ Shubert. Described by some as a “renegade wordsmith who works to the top of his intelligence” Jimmy shares wisdom, war stories, and maybe a few borderline-illegal punchlines. Also, he’s dropped four albums that sound like either comedy specials or monster truck rallies: “Animal Instincts,” “Pandemonium,” “Alive & Kickin’,” and “Zero Tolerance”—plus a Comedy Central special. Take notes. Jimmy did not come here to mess around. | 1h 05m 15s | ||||||
Showing 25 of 68
Sponsor Intelligence
Sign in to see which brands sponsor this podcast, their ad offers, and promo codes.
Chart Positions
6 placements across 6 markets.
Chart Positions
6 placements across 6 markets.

























