Monthly Archives: May 2025

MEET JULIA BERNSTEIN, THE FUNNY LADY BRINGING MEATY COMEDY TO THE L.A. MASSES!

I recently discovered online videos and social media posts from a fab and funny LA-based comedian, Julia Bernstein (pictured below) who’s been presenting a comedy variety show called the Bologna Sandwich Show. She’s wonderfully silly as well as provocative, and she’s building quite the following online. Julia has now created a series of live shows with special comedy guests as well as audience participation – the first show goes up on June 6th at the Glendale Room, just outside of downtown Los Angeles (ticket info/link provided at end of this interview)I reached out to Julia to congratulate her on this ballsy endeavor to present live curated shows and asked her a few questions about her comedy career journey so far …..

Julia, what inspired you to take up comedy for a living and not become, say, a doctor or teacher?  I’ve always known I wanted to entertain people and make them laugh. My mom loves to tell this story—whenever she was going through something tough, I’d start being goofy just to cheer her up. It was my way to heal people! Also, any “normal” job I’ve ever had, all I would think about is how I wished I was doing something entertaining. I’d always keep a notepad of jokes or funny skit or sitcom ideas. In 2007, I did a show at the public access station called, The Boring Show, doing things like read a dishwasher manual for 45 minutes and then have guests come on & be super awkward and funny. I wish I had kept that going and dove into comedy back then, but I think I just didn’t trust the process yet.

 

Who are your comedy heroes or influences?  I’ll give comedian names and my favorite TV shows/movies… Chevy Chase, Martin Short, Will Ferrell, Monty Python, Larry David, Pee-Wee Herman, Airplane the movie, The Three Amigos, and Sasha Baron Cohen.

Your Bologna Sandwich Variety Show has been shared on YouTube and now you’re going live at the fabulous Glendale Room, just outside of LA. Is everything going to be improvised or do you have a scripted outline to help control the anticipated mayhem?

That’s a great question! It’s scripted, in the form of my Bologna Sandwich Public Access Show where I interview a guest, but this time I’m gonna have a couple guests on stage with me and a co-host…So scripted but also allowing room for improvisation. Think Comics Unleashed meets The Eric Andre Show.  I’m going to give out heckle passes & get the audience involved…have them be a part of the show. So yes, controlled chaos, I guess. My good friend Dicey is helping me produce the show, which is good because I am not organized.

 

Now you must tell us why “bologna sandwich” for a title? Where did that come from?

I had been wanting to have a show where I interview people but also have silly funny weird segments involved. I didn’t know what to call it, then I remembered the story about how my mom and dad served bologna sandwiches at their Jewish Pentecostal wedding, and I knew right away that has to be the name of my show – Bologna Sandwich Show! Because life is bologna and I think it’s a perfect name for a show! Plus it pays homage to my family, which is super important to me.

 Are there any guests you would love to invite to your live show such as your favorite actors, comedians….?  You know living in Los Angeles gives me access to so many people that are close by. I would love alumni from SNL days that are in my area to be a part of my show. Giovanni Ribisi – he’s one of my favorite actors. Maria Bamford, she’s one of my favorite local comedians. Any local celebrity and or politician would be fun to have on the show.

 

So Julia, what’s your “end game”? Would you like to eventually have your own comedy chat show on one of the more popular streaming channels or network tv?  Yes, my long-term vision for the show is that it is picked up on a major streaming platform. I want it to be a place to showcase comedians – especially those who have put so much time and work into the craft. Have it be a stepping board or spring board for people to try something new with their comedy. Also involve serious conversations about life. I feel like life is bologna…the good, the bad and the ugly so I want to encompass all of that in my show.

 

BTW, have you ever watched Tiny Chicken Machine Show on YouTube? Created by Mediocre Films, they are my indie heroes from YouTube’s early years.  I just watched it I haven’t heard of it but it’s hilarious that’s absolutely the vein of what I’m thinking for my show a little less wacky but kind of like that. I love the absurdity of that

How can comedy fans find you – is there a website or social media?

Yes, you can follow me @bologna_sandwich_show on both YouTube & Instagram and julia_bernstein on TikTok.

And click on this link to my June 6th show in Glendale:   https://www.eventbrite.com/e/bologna-sandwich-show-friends-of-the-bologna-with-julia-bernstein-tickets-1369322403169

AUTHOR HEATHER BABCOCK CELEBRATES 5 YEARS OF “FILTHY SUGAR”

May 2025 marks the 5th anniversary of Heather Babcock‘s book “Filthy Sugar”. This titillatingly titled book is, in fact, a provocative (and fictional) look at the life and times of a young woman of the 1930s let lose in a city full of colourful characters, gangsters, hoofers and burly-q queens during a time of economic depression and squashed dreams.  As the book’s promo says:

Set in the mid-1930s, Filthy Sugar tells the story of Wanda Whittle, a nineteen-year-old dreamer who models fur coats in an uptown department store, but lives in a crowded rooming house with her hard-working widowed mother and shrewd older sister, in the slums; a world where “death is always close but life is stubborn.” Bored with the daily grind and still in shock from the sudden death of her father, Wanda finds both escapism and inspiration in the celluloid fantasies of the Busby Berkeley musicals, Greta Garbo dramas, and Jean Harlow sex comedies. Strutting up and down the aisles of Blondell’s department store, Wanda fantasizes that she’s Ruby Keeler, the tap-dancing sweetheart from 42nd Street (pictured below) But Wanda wants more than to wear a glamourous woman’s coat—she wants to live inside of her flesh.

Her dreams come true after a chance encounter with the mysterious proprietor of the Apple Bottom burlesque theatre. Suddenly Wanda is thrust into a world of glitter and grit.  Descending from the roof top of the Apple Bottom theatre on a red velvet swing, Wanda Whittle morphs into a dream named Wanda Wiggles; sweeter than a strawberry sundae and tastier than a deep dish apple pie. At the Apple Bottom she meets Lili Belle, a naughty cartoon flapper brought to life, Queenie, a sultry headliner whom Wanda feels drawn to like a bee to a butterfly bush; the sweet and salty club drummer Eddie, and Brock Baxter, the Apple Bottom’s vaudevillian comic whose apple cheeked, pretty boy exterior belies his sinister intentions.
All will have an impact on Wanda’s journey. Cowardly boxers, shady coppers, dime store hoodlums, and painted ladies—Wanda will encounter them all. On her voyage from rags to riches and back again, Wanda experiences a sexual awakening and achieves personal independence as she discovers that a girl doesn’t need a lot of sugar to be sensational!  So, are you intrigued yet? Filthy Sugar is available online (Amazon & other online outlets) plus at your favourite bricks-and-mortar bookstore. I had the opportunity to chat online with the talented author and here’s what Heather shared with me….

Heather, it’s been 5 years since your book, Filthy Sugar, hit the bookstores – how has the journey been for you as an author?  Thank you! Well, it’s been quite the journey! Filthy Sugar is my debut novel and it was released in May of 2020, at the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic. That alone made my journey an unpredictable and unchartered one. I quickly learned to roll with the punches. There are often more lows than highs in this writing business so you’ve got to celebrate every win.

Has your publisher (Inanna Publications) been supportive and encouraging, especially during the Covid years when people were forced to find solo activities and entertainment such as reading?  Definitely! The Covid years presented challenges that were new to everyone in the publishing industry. Everything – events, book sales – that had previously been brick and mortar had to quickly be moved online. The planned book launch was held virtually and was attended by over one-hundred people; most in-person bookstores probably wouldn’t have been able to accommodate such a crowd. Word on the Street (WOTS) was also moved online that year. Renée Knapp, who was Inanna’s publicist and marketing manager at the time, was always on hand to answer any questions I had and to help ease my anxieties – and there were many of them in those early days. Looking back, an unexpected benefit to the pandemic was that because people were stuck at home, and many had more free time and even more money on their hands, they were more likely to buy books. I had many friends who marvelled at how quickly Inanna fulfilled their book order. Remember how much fun it was receiving a package in the mail during the Covid days?

The heroine of your story, Wanda, is a sassy 19yr old with dreams of dancing with Ruby Keeler and hanging out with Garbo and Harlow – her screen idols.  They say “write what you know” so is this era and the B&W films of the time you favourite personal interests?  Yes, my father introduced me to classic movies. He loved all of those great glamorous dames: Greta Garbo, Audrey Hepburn, Elizabeth Taylor. My favourite memories are of watching films like Roman Holiday and A Streetcar Named Desire with him. While researching Filthy Sugar, I immersed myself in the movies of pre-Code Hollywood: films that were made before the enforcement of the Production Code in July of 1934. The 1932 sex comedy Red-Headed Woman, which stars Jean Harlow (pictured below), had a big influence on my novel. I also reference it in the book as it’s one of Wanda’s favourite movies. My father passed away in 2010. I wish he was alive to read Filthy Sugar because I think he’d like it – although he probably wouldn’t approve of Wanda’s raunchier antics!

And what inspired the story…are your characters based on personal friends or perhaps the great dames of the screen – Mae West, Barbara Stanwyck, Joan Crawford?  In January of 2015, for no reason at all, or at least no reason that I can remember, I decided that I was going to read as many books written and published in the 1930s as I could. I began with Henry Roth’s 1934 novel Call It Sleep. My partner, noting my new interest in the decade, bought me a second-hand copy of Pierre Berton’s 2001 historical book The Great Depression: 1929-1939. I began to submerge myself in 1930’s history and pop culture. The ambivalence of the decade fascinates me. Although it was a time of great suffering, the 1930s produced some of the most beautiful music, films, literature, fashion & décor and visual art, all of which has had a great influence on future generations. It was also a time of important social upheaval and change: birth control, unions, workers’ rights (including the minimum wage and 40-hour work week) all came into fruition during the decade. The characters in Filthy Sugar are fictional but, like the youth of their day, they themselves are inspired by the stars and characters that they see in the movies. Wanda is obsessed with Jean Harlow and Greta Garbo and I pictured Eddie, the burlesque house’s drummer, as speaking like Jimmy Cagney.

Have you done many in-store book signings and readings? Any coming up?  Because my book was released during the pandemic, I unfortunately didn’t have the chance to do in-store book signings. However, I was able to participate in online readings and when things began to open up again in 2022, I read at the Bright Lit, Big City reading series at Hirut Cafe (pictured below) and later that year, I was invited to speak at the Vintage Film Festival in Port Hope. I spoke on the topic of “Dangerous Dames – Celebrating the Women of Pre-Code Gangster Movies”. It was an amazing experience and I got to share Filthy Sugar with like-minded movie fans. Coming up, I will be presenting “How to Write a Novel When You Don’t Have Time to Write a Novel” at the Toronto Public Library. My presentation will be at the Agincourt branch on Saturday, July 5th at 2pm. Anyone who is interested in attending can call the library at 416-396-8943 to register.

You set the story in 1930’s Toronto as opposed to New York or Chicago…..why?  The city that Filthy Sugar is set in is fictional: it could be any urban city in North America during the 1930s. This was a conscious choice to give me artistic license and freedom. Wanda’s world is Blondell’s Department Store (a fictional store named after Joan Blondell, one of my favourite actresses from the pre-Code period); the Apple Bottom burlesque theatre where she becomes a star and “the World Behind the Market”, which is what she calls the “slum” where she lives.

Has your publisher suggested an appearance and book sales during Word on the Street this fall?  As far as I know, I won’t be at the Word on the Street this fall but I did attend with my publisher in 2023. It was a lovely afternoon of book signings and catching up with friends in the literary scene, many of whom I had not seen since before the pandemic…see photo below

Is there a sequel in the works or are you working on an entirely different concept or plot for your next book?  At this time, there is no sequel in the works but you never know. I am currently working on my second novel, The Memory of Crows, which is a noir inspired tale of sibling rivalry.

So congratulations again to Heather on the past 5 years of Filthy Sugar…hopefully the book will continue to be bought or taken out of the libraries, read online or listened to via audio books. Maybe a film? Reads just like one of those fabulous movies Wanda loved.

Filthy Sugar by Heather Babcock
Inanna Publications – available in paperback, e-book and audio book from all your favourite bookstores, AppleBooks & Amazon.