From Motherhood to Comedy: Navigating Misconceptions and Building a Comedy Empire

I had a daughter and I kept her. So I’m a feminist. If you, you never had a kid, you know we can’t say that, right? If you never been through what I’ve been through. But the people. Yeah, go back to Kira. People hate me. They would make up story of me stealing jokes, my materials. Nobody can say, I don’t need to steal any mediocre bullshit from some open micer. Yeah, you know, like, it’s just gross people, the things they say about me. But it’s also, also, you know, people hating you is a good sign. Why did you open a comedy club? For myself to go on stage. Yeah. And then why do you keep it now that. Now that you’ve gotten bigger, do you still need it? Because I’m a business person, so I kept it. Uh huh. I have a system. I have two managers and 20 hosts. Rotates. So I don’t really go there at all. Yeah. And I don’t really spend energy there. We don’t make money, we don’t lose money. So it’s such an important part of I already comedy saying that is the most stable open mic place in LA. Everything they opened on Melrose Avenue closed because it’s very hard for comedian to run a business. They don’t know how to do it. They don’t treat people well, they don’t pay people. They don’t understand business is business. They are just artists.